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  4. A KcsA/MloK1 Chimeric Ion Channel Has Lipid-dependent Ligand-binding Energetics
 
research article

A KcsA/MloK1 Chimeric Ion Channel Has Lipid-dependent Ligand-binding Energetics

McCoy, Jason G.
•
Rusinova, Radda
•
Kim, Dorothy M.
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February 10, 2014
Journal of Biological Chemistry

Background: The mechanism of ligand gating in physiologically important cyclic nucleotide-modulated channels is unknown. Results: We constructed and purified a chimeric ion channel with activity modulated by cAMP and used it to measure ligand-binding energetics. Conclusion: cAMP binds with high lipid-dependent affinity to the chimeric channel. Significance: The availability of a good protein preparation enables assays that shed light on ligand gating.Cyclic nucleotide-modulated ion channels play crucial roles in signal transduction in eukaryotes. The molecular mechanism by which ligand binding leads to channel opening remains poorly understood, due in part to the lack of a robust method for preparing sufficient amounts of purified, stable protein required for structural and biochemical characterization. To overcome this limitation, we designed a stable, highly expressed chimeric ion channel consisting of the transmembrane domains of the well characterized potassium channel KcsA and the cyclic nucleotide-binding domains of the prokaryotic cyclic nucleotide-modulated channel MloK1. This chimera demonstrates KcsA-like pH-sensitive activity which is modulated by cAMP, reminiscent of the dual modulation in hyperpolarization-activated and cyclic nucleotide-gated channels that display voltage-dependent activity that is also modulated by cAMP. Using this chimeric construct, we were able to measure for the first time the binding thermodynamics of cAMP to an intact cyclic nucleotide-modulated ion channel using isothermal titration calorimetry. The energetics of ligand binding to channels reconstituted in lipid bilayers are substantially different from those observed in detergent micelles, suggesting that the conformation of the chimera's transmembrane domain is sensitive to its (lipid or lipid-mimetic) environment and that ligand binding induces conformational changes in the transmembrane domain. Nevertheless, because cAMP on its own does not activate these chimeric channels, cAMP binding likely has a smaller energetic contribution to gating than proton binding suggesting that there is only a small difference in cAMP binding energy between the open and closed states of the channel.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1074/jbc.M113.543389
Author(s)
McCoy, Jason G.
Rusinova, Radda
Kim, Dorothy M.
Kowal, Julia
Banerjee, Sourabh
Cartagena, Alexis Jaramillo
Thompson, Ameer N.
Kolmakova-Partensky, Ludmila
Stahlberg, Henning  orcid-logo
Andersen, Olaf S.
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Date Issued

2014-02-10

Publisher

American Society for Biochemistry & Molecular Biology (ASBMB)

Published in
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume

289

Issue

14

Start page

9535

End page

9546

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LBEM  
Available on Infoscience
February 13, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/165469
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