Yoni Haitin1, Anne E Carlson, William N Zagotta. 1. Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA.
Abstract
The KCNH voltage-dependent potassium channels (ether-à-go-go, EAG; EAG-related gene, ERG; EAG-like channels, ELK) are important regulators of cellular excitability and have key roles in diseases such as cardiac long QT syndrome type 2 (LQT2), epilepsy, schizophrenia and cancer. The intracellular domains of KCNH channels are structurally distinct from other voltage-gated channels. The amino-terminal region contains an eag domain, which is composed of a Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) domain and a PAS-cap domain, whereas the carboxy-terminal region contains a cyclic nucleotide-binding homology domain (CNBHD), which is connected to the pore through a C-linker domain. Many disease-causing mutations localize to these specialized intracellular domains, which underlie the unique gating and regulation of KCNH channels. It has been suggested that the eag domain may regulate the channel by interacting with either the S4-S5 linker or the CNBHD. Here we present a 2 Å resolution crystal structure of the eag domain-CNBHD complex of the mouse EAG1 (also known as KCNH1) channel. It displays extensive interactions between the eag domain and the CNBHD, indicating that the regulatory mechanism of the eag domain primarily involves the CNBHD. Notably, the structure reveals that a number of LQT2 mutations at homologous positions in human ERG, in addition to cancer-associated mutations in EAG channels, localize to the eag domain-CNBHD interface. Furthermore, mutations at the interface produced marked effects on channel gating, demonstrating the important physiological role of the eag domain-CNBHD interaction. Our structure of the eag domain-CNBHD complex of mouse EAG1 provides unique insights into the physiological and pathophysiological mechanisms of KCNH channels.
The KCNH voltage-dependent potassium channels (ether-à-go-go, EAG; EAG-related gene, ERG; EAG-like channels, ELK) are important regulators of cellular excitability and have key roles in diseases such as cardiac long QT syndrome type 2 (LQT2), epilepsy, schizophrenia and cancer. The intracellular domains of KCNH channels are structurally distinct from other voltage-gated channels. The amino-terminal region contains an eag domain, which is composed of a Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) domain and a PAS-cap domain, whereas the carboxy-terminal region contains a cyclic nucleotide-binding homology domain (CNBHD), which is connected to the pore through a C-linker domain. Many disease-causing mutations localize to these specialized intracellular domains, which underlie the unique gating and regulation of KCNH channels. It has been suggested that the eag domain may regulate the channel by interacting with either the S4-S5 linker or the CNBHD. Here we present a 2 Å resolution crystal structure of the eag domain-CNBHD complex of the mouseEAG1 (also known as KCNH1) channel. It displays extensive interactions between the eag domain and the CNBHD, indicating that the regulatory mechanism of the eag domain primarily involves the CNBHD. Notably, the structure reveals that a number of LQT2 mutations at homologous positions in humanERG, in addition to cancer-associated mutations in EAG channels, localize to the eag domain-CNBHD interface. Furthermore, mutations at the interface produced marked effects on channel gating, demonstrating the important physiological role of the eag domain-CNBHD interaction. Our structure of the eag domain-CNBHD complex of mouseEAG1 provides unique insights into the physiological and pathophysiological mechanisms of KCNH channels.
KCNH channels have two large intracellular regions which underlie the specialized
gating and regulation of this channel family[9] (Fig. 1a). The CNBHD in the
carboxy-terminal region shares similarity with the cyclic nucleotide-binding domains of
cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) and hyperpolarization-activated cyclic
nucleotide-modulated (HCN) channels[11,12]. The CNBHD of KCNH channels, however,
does not bind cyclic nucleotides and regulates KCNH channel gating in a cyclic
nucleotide-independent manner[13]. The
amino-terminal region contains an eag domain, not present in CNG and HCN channels, which
also plays a key role in channel gating. Comprised of a 110-amino acid PAS domain
preceded by a highly conserved 25-amino acid PAS-cap (Fig.
1a and supplementary Fig.
1), the eag domain regulates activation and inactivation in EAG1, and
deactivation in hERG1 channels[9,14]. Moreover, many of the human mutations
that cause LQT2 and cancer localize to the conserved eag domain[15-17]. In
addition, high expression of a primate-specific isoform of ERG (KCNH2-3.1), missing most
of the eag domain, was shown to correlate with risk for schizophrenia[6]. The mechanism underlying KCNH channel regulation
by the eag domain remains unclear. Two competing hypothesis have emerged. Some evidence
suggests that the eag domain interacts with the S4-S5 linker and directly regulates the
movement of the S4 voltage sensor[10,18]. By contrast, other evidence favors
the CNBHD as the interaction partner of the eag domain[9,14,19]. Using fluorescence we found that the
eag domain interacts directly with the CNBHD with an affinity of 13.2 ± 2.3
μM (supplementary Fig.
2).
Figure 1
Structure of the eag domain-CNBHD complex of mEAG1
a, Cartoon of a cross section of a KCNH channel. Transmembrane
domains are in grey, the amino-terminal eag domains are in green, the C-linkers
are in orange and the CNBHD domains in blue. The intrinsic ligand motifs are
highlighted in yellow, and the post-CNBHD in red. b, Structure of
the eag domain-CNBHD complex. Color corresponds to panel a. c,
Disease-causing mutations at the interface of eag domain and CNBHD. LQT2
mutations are shown in yellow. Cancer-associated mutations are shown in red. Y44
is involved in both LQT2 and cancer and is shown in red.
To uncover the mechanism for how the eag domain regulates the channel, we solved
the X-ray crystal structure of the eag domain-CNBHD complex to 2.0 Å resolution
(supplementary Table 1).
There were eight chains in the asymmetric unit, four eag domains and four CNBHDs. The
spatial arrangement of the eag domains and CNBHDs within the asymmetric unit showed
three different eag domain-CNBHD interactions, termed interaction A, B and C (supplementary Fig. 3).
Interaction A, however, had significantly greater buried surface area than the other
interactions (supplementary Table
2) and was confirmed by mutagenesis experiments in the intact channel (see
Fig. 3 below). Therefore interaction A was
designated as the biological unit.
Figure 3
A salt bridge between the eag domain and the CNBHD
a, Cartoon and surface representation of the primary interaction
interface (interaction A) of the eag domain-CNBHD complex (left). Eag domain is
shown in green, CNBHD in blue, and interface residues in red. A detailed
illustration of the R57-D642 salt bridge in shown on the right, overlaid with
2Fo-Fc composite ‘omit’ map contoured
at 1σ (grey mesh). b, Summary of time to 90%
maximum current amplitude for wild-type and mutants (error bars indicate SEM,
n=6-10 cells, P < 0.005, Student's
t-test).
Fig. 1b shows the structure of the eag
domain-CNBHD complex in the biological unit. The structure of the CNBHD (residues
552-720) includes the last 35 amino acids of the C-linker, the CNBHD, and 22 amino acids
of the post-CNBD region (Fig. 1b and supplementary Fig. 1). The
structure of the eag domain (residues 16-136) includes the PAS domain and the last 10
amino acids of the PAS-cap domain. These structures share many similarities to
structures of CNBHDs and eag-domains crystallized alone. The CNBHD is similar to the
isolated structures of mEAG1 (RMSD=0.53 Å)[12], mosquito ERG (RMSD=1.05
Å)[20], and zebrafish
ELK (RMSD=1.39 Å)[11].
The PAS domain is similar to the isolated structures of mEAG1 (RMSD=0.32
Å)[21], hERG1
(RMSD=0.71 Å)[8,21], and fruit-fly ELK (RMSD=0.62
Å)[21], and also to the
solution NMR structures of hERG1[19,22].The interface between the eag domain and CNBHD in the co-crystal structure,
however, is entirely novel. When we mapped the positions of disease-causing mutations in
KCNH channels onto the structure of the eag domain-CNBHD complex, an unexpected trend
emerged: many LQT2 mutations (at homologous positions in hERG1) and cancer-associated
mutations (in hEAG1) are located at the interface between the eag domain and CNBHD
(Fig. 1c, supplementary Fig. 4). These mutations,
which alter channel gating as well as trafficking to the membrane[9,14], result
in prolongation of the cardiac action potential (in hERG1) and were documented in
several primary cancer types (in hEAG1)[15]. For example, position N34 in the eag domain, which forms hydrogen
bonds with V634 of the CNBHD, was shown to cause LQT2 (hERG1N33T). In addition, Y44 of
the eag domain forms an interaction with I637 and G639 of the CNBHD. Y44H in hEAG1 is a
mutation known to be correlated with large intestine carcinoma[15], and mutation at the equivalent position in
hERG1 (Y43C) causes LQT2[23] (Fig. 1c). G639 is a known LQT2 position (hERG1G800W)[23]. These observations
suggest that perturbation of the interaction between the eag domain and the CNBHD
underlies part of the pathophysiology of KCNH-related diseases. Moreover, the clustering
of so many mutations at the eag domain-CNBHD interface is consistent with this interface
found in the crystal representing the physiological architecture of KCNH channels.The interface between the eag domain and the CNBHD is extensive, with an average
buried solvent accessible surface area of ∼1400 Å2 (supplementary Table 2). The
interface consists of three sub-regions: (i) the intrinsic ligand motif of the CNBHD
interacts with the αB helix in the PAS domain, (ii) the βA and
βB strands of the PAS domain interact with the post-CNBHD segment of the CNBHD,
and (iii) an amphipathic helix (αCAP) in the PAS-cap domain forms an interaction
with the β-roll of the CNBHD (Fig. 1a and
b).The interaction of the PAS domain (residues 57-61) directly with the intrinsic
ligand motif of the CNBHD was particularly surprising (Fig. 2a and 2b). Previous structures of isolated CNBHD from mEAG1[12] and zebrafish ELK (zELK)[11] showed a short loop (residues 697-701)
following the αC helix occupies the space filled by cyclic nucleotides in
canonical cyclic nucleotide-binding domains (supplementary Fig. 1). This short loop was
therefore called the “intrinsic ligand”. Mutations in this intrinsic
ligand were shown to regulate channel activity, shifting the voltage dependence and
kinetics of activation and deactivation. Interestingly, mutations in the eag domain of
KCNH channels result in similar alterations[9,14,16]. The interaction between the eag domain and the
intrinsic ligand, and the functional similarities between mutations in these domains,
suggests that the intrinsic ligand motif may be a critical determinant of the regulation
of KCNH channels by the eag domain.
Figure 2
The various interfaces between the eag domain and CNBHD, and different
confomers in the asymmetric unit
a, Cartoon and surface representation of the eag domain-CNBHD
complex. Interaction surface of the eag domain and the CNBHD is shown in green
and blue, respectively. The intrinsic ligand and post-CNBHD region are in yellow
and red, respectively. The non-interacting parts of the structure are in grey.
Red and purple rectangles define regions detailed in b (intrinsic
ligand) and c (post-CNBHD region). d, Cartoon and
surface representation of the asymmetric unit complexes related by
non-crystallographic symmetry in the same conformation. Two-fold symmetry axis
indicated. e, Comparison of the structures of the two confomers of the complex,
color coded as in d. Dashed red lines show distances between D47 of the eag
domain and E578 of the CNBHD.
Another surprising site of interaction of the eag domain is the post-CNBHD region
(beginning with residue 702). This region, immediately C-terminal to the intrinsic
ligand, has been shown to mediate the regulation of KCNH channel function by a variety
of cellular signaling events, including phosphorylation, and interaction with kinases,
integrins, and Ca2+-calmodulin[24-26]. The eag domain-CNBHD
structure shows that the post-CNBHD region interacts with the βA-βB loop
of the eag domain (Fig. 2a and 2c, supplementary Fig. 1). The interaction
between the eag domain and the post-CNBHD region suggests that KCNH channel regulation
through the post-CNBHD region may involve its interaction interface with the eag
domain.The crystal contains two different conformations of the eag domain-CNBHD complex.
The asymmetric unit is composed of four copies of the complex, related by a two-fold
non-crystallographic symmetry (Fig. 2d). This
results in two pairs of the complex (‘type I’ and ‘type
II’ complexes) that are in a similar conformation within each pair (average RMSD
= 0.16 Å), but a different conformation and B-factor distribution
between pairs (RMSD = 0.96 Å) (Fig.
2d, supplementary Fig.
5). Alignment of the two conformations reveals that the angle between the eag
domain and the CNBHD differs by 5° and the distance between the two domains
differs by 1.8 Å (between D47 of the eag domain and E578 of the CNBHD) (Fig. 2e and supplementary video 1). In addition, the
αP helix (residues 649-651, supplementary Fig. 1) undergoes a significant rearrangement between the two
conformations, possibly due, at least in part, to variation in the local crystal
contacts (Fig. 2e and supplementary video 1). These two
conformations, if present in the intact channel, suggest that the eag domain-CNBHD
complex is not static and represent a possible rearrangement associated with the gating
regulation of the channel by the eag domain.To determine the functional role of the eag domain-CNBHD interaction, we mutated
the interaction interface between the eag domain and the CNBHD in intact mEAG1 channels.
The interface contains a salt bridge between R57 in the αB helix of the PAS
domain and D642 in the β6 strand of the CNBHD (Fig. 3a and supplementary
Fig. 4). This salt bridge is present in both conformations of the biological
unit and is not present in the other eag domain-CNBHD interactions in the crystal.
Notably, R57 and D642 are conserved throughout the KCNH family (supplementary Fig. 1), and mutation of the
R57 position in hERG1 (hERG1R56Q) causes LQT2[16]. mEAG1 channels with mutations in the salt bridge were
expressed in Xenopus oocytes and their currents were recorded.
Individually the eag domain R57D mutation and the CNBHDD642R mutation each produced a
slowing of activation with voltage steps to +50 mV (supplementary Fig. 6). This resulted
primarily from a new slow component to the activation time course and produced a three
to five fold delay of the time to 90% current amplitude when compared to
wild-type channels (Fig. 3b) (R57D, 225 ±
42 ms; D642R, 340 ± 25 ms; wild type, 71 ± 15 ms, P
< 0.01, n = 9-10). No changes in other biophysical properties of the
channels were noted (supplementary
Table 3). Importantly, in the double charge reversal mutant,
R57D+D642R, the time course of channel activation was similar to wild-type (68
± 23 ms, P > 0.05, n = 6), suggesting the salt
bridge was restored (Fig. 3b). These results
indicate that the R57-D642 salt bridge is present in the intact channel, consistent with
interaction A being the biological unit. Additionally, these results indicate that the
eag domain regulates the activation of mEAG1 channels by interaction with the CNBHD.A third important region of interaction with the CNBHD is with the PAS-cap
domain. The PAS-cap domain constitutes the first 25 amino acids of the eag domain. This
domain is highly conserved within the KCNH family (supplementary Fig. 1) and has been shown to
be crucial for proper activation and inactivation gating in KCNH channels[9,27]. Strikingly, our structure of the eag domain-CNBHD complex reveals
that an amphipathic helix (αCAP) of the PAS-cap domain of mEAG1 interacts
directly with the CNBHD (Fig. 4a). The structure
shows that αCAP is nestled between a hydrophobic patch of the PAS domain and the
β4-β5 strands and β8-β9 loop of the CNBHD. The structure
of the PAS-cap domain was previously assessed using NMR of isolated eag domain from
hERG1[10,19,22].
Structural alignment reveals that the PAS-cap domain in our eag domain-CNBHD complex is
in a very different orientation from the NMR structures (Fig. 4b). The orientation, however, is very similar to recent X-ray
crystallography structures of isolated eag domains from hERG1 and ELK[21]. We propose that the spatial
organization of the PAS-cap domain within the eag domain-CNBHD complex recapitulates the
native conformation of this domain in the intact channel, and that the PAS-cap domain
exerts its functional effects through its interaction with the CNBHD.
Figure 4
PAS-cap interaction with the CNBHD, and predicted tetramer of the eag
domain-CNBHD complex
a, Cartoon representation of the PAS-cap region. The PAS domain and
the CNBHD are shown as surface (green and blue, respectively) with the PAS-cap
regions shown as cartoon and position E627 as orange sticks. b,
Alignment of the eag domain (green) with representative hERG1 eag domain NMR
structures. The X-ray structures of the eag domain-CNBHD complex of mEAG1 and
the isolated eag-domain of hERG1 (PDB code 4HP9) are shown as green and orange
cartoons, respectively, and the NMR structures are in yellow (PDB code 2L0W),
cyan (PDB code 2L4R), and purple (PDB code 2L1M). The PAS domains are
represented as grey ribbons. c, Normalized conductance plotted as a
function of the test voltages for mEAG1 wild-type and mutant channels (error
bars indicate SEM, n=3-68 cells, P < 0.001,
Student's t-test). d, Alignment of the eag domain-CNBHD
complex with the CNBD of mHCN2 (PDB 1Q5O), color coded as in Fig. 1b.
Although the PAS-cap domain itself does not contain any known LQT2 mutations and
only one cancer-associated mutation (hEAG1, E19D), its surroundings are rich in
pathological loci, including hERG1LQT2 mutation E788D[28] (E627 in EAG1) in the β4 strand of the
CNBHD[9,15]. These mutations may alter the gating properties
of the channel by destabilizing the PAS-cap domain interaction with the CNBHD. To test
this hypothesis, we measured the currents from mEAG1 channels mutated in the PAS-cap
domain (R7A-R8A and R7E-R8E) and in the CNBHD region where the PAS-cap is bound (E627A
and E627R). These positions are highly conserved within the KCNH family (supplementary Fig. 1). The voltage
dependence of activation of the PAS-cap mutations R7A-R8A and R7E-R8E were significantly
shifted to more depolarized potentials, compared to wild-type channels (Fig. 4c, supplementary table 4). The CNBHD mutations also showed a robust
depolarizing shift, similar to that of the R7E-R8E mutant (Fig. 4c, supplementary
table 4). Together, these results suggest that the interaction between the
PAS-cap domain and the CNBHD regulates KCNH channel gating.To model the orientation of the eag domain-CNBHD complex in the context of a
four-fold symmetrical ion channel, we aligned the CNBHD of the complex with the
homologous C-linker/CNBD of the mHCN2 channel (PDB code 1Q5O), which shares 35%
sequence similarity with the CNBHD of mEAG1 (supplementary Fig. 1). The C-linker/CNBD in
the mHCN2 structure assembles as a tetramer with a four-fold axis of rotational
symmetry, in which the C-linker domains form most of the inter-subunit
interactions[29]. While our
structure of the mEAG1CNBHD lacks most of C-linker, the alignment resulted in a
concentric arrangement of the eag domain-CNBHD complex, where the eag domains are
positioned at the periphery of the C-linker/CNBHD tetramer (Fig. 4d). The post-CNBHD region points away from the center
and may be accessible for interaction with other proteins, such as kinases and
Ca2+-calmodulin, thought to regulate KCNH channels through sites
in the post-CNBHD[26]. Mutagenesis
studies in hERG1 channels suggest that this arrangement may exhibit domain swapping
where the eag domain of one subunit interacts with the CNBHD of a neighboring
subunit[9].The eag domain and the CNBHD have been shown to be important regulatory domains
of the KCNH channel family. Mutations found in these regions lead to LQT2 and are
associated with cancer. The structure of the eag domain-CNBHD complex of mEAG1
demonstrates that the interaction interface between the two domains serves as a hotspot
for many of these mutations and provides a framework to better understand the mechanisms
of gating and regulation of KCNH channels. Furthermore, understanding the molecular
interactions within the KCNH channel complex, and their disruption in disease, may
enable design of novel therapies for these devastating conditions.
Methods summary
The mouseEAG1eag domain (residues 6-136) and CNBHD (residues 552-724) were
subcloned into a pETM11 vector containing an amino-terminal hexa-histidine affinity
tag followed by a TEV cleavage site. The proteins were expressed in BL21 (DE3)
Escherichia coli cells as previously described[11], purified on a
Ni2+ affinity column and then on an ion-exchange (CNBHD) or
size exclusion column (eag domain), following an overnight cleavage with TEV at
4°C. The proteins were concentrated to about 475 μM, flash-frozen
and store at −80°C until use. The eag domain and the CNBHD were
mixed in a 1:1 molar ratio prior to experimentation. Crystals were grown at
20°C using sitting-drop vapor diffusion by mixing a 2:1 (v/v) ratio of
protein mixture and a reservoir solution containing 18% (w/v) PEG 3350,
1.8% (v/v) Tacsimate, 10 mM MnCl2 and 90 mM HEPES, pH 7.5. The
crystals diffracted to 1.995 Å and belong to space group P65
(supplementary Table 1,
supplementary Fig. 7). The structure was solved by molecular replacement
using the mouseEAG1CNBHD (PDB accession 4F8A) as the search model. The final model
was refined to a resolution of 1.995 Å with Rwork = 0.167
and Rfree = 0.197. Electrophysiology recordings were performed
using the inside-out configuration of the patch-clamp technique on
Xenopus oocytes expressing wild-type and mutant channels as
previously described[11].
Methods
Cloning, expression and purification
MouseEAG1 (mEAG1) (accession codes NP034730.1 and GI:6754422) eag
domain (residues 6-136) and CNBHD (residues 552-712, 552-724 and 552-752) were
subcloned using 5′ NcoI and 3′
HindIII sites into a pETM11 vector containing an
amino-terminal hexa-histidine affinity tag followed by a Tobacco Etch Virus
protease (TEV) cleavage site. The internal NcoI restriction
site in the CNBHD was removed via a silent mutation. Final CNBHD boundaries were
selected based of small-scale expression and purification experiments (residues
552-724). All constructs had a GAM(G) cloning artifact sequence introduced at
the N-terminus. Full-length cDNA of mEAG1 was subcloned into the high-expression
pGH19 vector for expression in Xenopus oocytes. The proteins
were expressed in BL21 (DE3) Escherichia coli cells as
previously described[1].
Bacterial cultures were grown to mid-log phase and induced with 1 mM IPTG
overnight at 18 °C. The cultures were spun down and resuspended in 150
mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris-HCl and 1 mM TCEP, pH 8.0, containing 1 mM AEBSF, 2.5
μg ml–1 DNAse and cOmplete protease inhibitor tablets (Roche).
Cells were lysed with an EmulsiFlex C-5 homogenizer (Avestin), and the lysate
was cleared by centrifugation at 131,000×g for 45 min at 4 °C.
The proteins were then purified on a Ni2+ affinity resin
column (HisTrap HP, GE Healthcare). The hexa-histidine tag was removed by TEV
cleavage overnight at 4 °C. The CNBHD was further purified by anion
exchange chromatography (HiTrap Q HP, GE Healthcare) after 10-fold dilution with
buffer containing 20 mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM TCEP, pH 8.0. The protein eluted with a
shallow linear NaCl gradient as one well-separated peak. The TEV digested eag
domain was concentrated and further purified by gel filtration (Superdex 200, GE
Healthcare) with buffer containing 150 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris-HCl, 5 mM DTT, pH 8.
Both proteins were concentrated to about 475 μM using 10 kD MWCO
concentrators (Millipore), flash-frozen in liquid N2 and store at
-80°C until use. Fluorescein labeling of the endogenous cysteines of the
eag domain (FL-eag) was done as previously described[2]. Briefly, TEV digested, gel filtered
purified protein was incubated with 100 μM fluorescein-5-maleimide
(Invitrogen) for 1 hour at room temperature, in the above gel filtration buffer,
without DTT. The labeled protein was separated from unincorporated dye by gel
filtration and concentrated to 50 μM.
FSEC[3] and fluorescence
anisotropy
For FSEC experiments, FL-eag was mixed in a 1:1 molar ratio with
purified CNBHD and the mixture was loaded on a Superdex 75 10/300 GL column (GE
Healthcare) mounted on an HPLC system (Shimadzu) with a fluorescence detector
set for detection of fluorescein fluorescence. Fluorescence anisotropy was
recorded using a Fluorolog 3 spectrophotometer (HORIBA, Jobin Yvon). 100 nM
FL-eag was placed in a quartz cuvette, and anisotropy was measured with
increasing concentrations of CNBHD. Anisotropy experiments with 492 nm
excitation and 514 nm emission were performed as previously described[4]. To estimate binding affinity,
plots of the anisotropy versus total CNBHD concentration were fit using the
following first-order reaction scheme:where R, L, and RL
are concentrations of the free receptor and ligand and receptor-ligand complex,
respectively. R and L
are total receptor and ligand concentrations, K is
the ligand-binding affinity, and α and β are a scaling factor
and an offset factor, respectively.
Crystallization and structure determination
Crystals of the eag domain-CNBHD complex were grown at 20°C
using sitting-drop vapor diffusion by mixing a 2:1 ratio (Mosquito, TTP LABTECH)
of protein mixture and a reservoir solution, containing 18% (w/v) PEG
3350, 1.8% (v/v) Tacsimate, 10 mM MnCl2 and 90 mM HEPES, pH
7.5. This condition produced crystals within 3 days, which grow to maximum size
of about 300 μm × 80 μm × 80 μm after 21
days. For diffraction data collection, crystals were immersed in liquid nitrogen
after cryoprotection in 20% glycerol. Data were collected at 110
°K on beamline 8.2.1 at the Advanced Light Source (Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory, Berkeley). Integration, scaling and merging of the
diffraction data were done with the Mosflm program[5]. The crystals belonged to space group
P65 and the unit cell had dimensions of a = b =
162.38 Å and c = 100.44 Å with α =
β = 90° and γ = 120°. The
structure was solved by molecular replacement using the programs
Phaser[6] and
Phenix[7] with the mEAG1CNBHD (PDB accession 4F8A) as the search model. Data collection and refinement
statistics are summarized in supplementary Table 1. Each asymmetric unit contained eight protein
subunits forming four eag domain-CNBHD complexes. Electron density was visible
for most of the protein chains except for a few disordered terminal residues and
the initial 10 and 23 residues of the eag domains of ‘type I’
and ‘type II’ dimers, respectively. Iterative model building and
refinement were carried out in Phenix with manual adjustments using
COOT[8]. The final model
was refined to a resolution of 1.995 Å with
Rwork = 0.167 and
Rfree = 0.197. The majority
(98.2%) of the residues are in the most favored region in the
Ramachandran plot. All structural illustrations were prepared with PYMOL
(http://www.pymol.org).
Electrophysiology
The cDNA encoding the mEAG1 channel in the pGH19 vector was kindly
provided by G. Robertson (University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI). The
cRNA was transcribed using the T7 MEGAscript kit (Ambion). Xenopus
laevis oocytes were defolliculated and injected with the cRNA as
previously described[9].
Following manual removal of the vitelline membrane, currents were recorded in
the inside-out patch configuration[10] with an EPC-10 patch-clamp amplifier (HEKA Elektronik).
Patch pipettes were pulled from borosilicate glass and had resistances of 0.4
– 0.8 MΩ after fire polishing. The intracellular (bath) and
extracellular (pipette) solutions contained 130 mM KCl, 10 mM HEPES, 0.2 mM
EDTA, pH 7.2. For the experiments examining the eag domain-CNBHD salt bridge
(with the R57D, D642R mutations) the mEAG1 currents were elicited by applying a
series of 1-2 s test pulses to voltages ranging from -120 to +50 mV in
10 mV increments from a holding potential of -100 mV, followed by a 0.5 s
voltage pulse to -90 mV. For experiments examining an interaction between the
PAS-cap and CNBHD (with mutations in residues R7-R8 and E627), the mEAG1
currents were elicited by a series of 50 ms test pulses to voltages ranging from
-140 mV to +200 mV in 10 mV increments, from a holding potential of -100
mV, following by a 200 ms voltage pulse to -100 mV. Currents were not leak
subtracted. Data were acquired with Pulse software (HEKA Elektronik) and
analyzed with Igor (WaveMetrics, Inc).To measure the conductance-voltage relationships for all
electrophysiology experiments, peak tail current amplitudes at -90 or -100 mV,
were normalized to the largest peak conductance amplitude. Plots of the
normalized conductance versus the test voltage were fit with a Boltzmann
function:Where V represents the test voltage (mV),
V0.5 is the midpoint activation voltage (mV),
and s is the slope of the relation (mV).
Authors: I Splawski; J Shen; K W Timothy; M H Lehmann; S Priori; J L Robinson; A J Moss; P J Schwartz; J A Towbin; G M Vincent; M T Keating Journal: Circulation Date: 2000-09-05 Impact factor: 29.690
Authors: William N Zagotta; Nelson B Olivier; Kevin D Black; Edgar C Young; Rich Olson; Eric Gouaux Journal: Nature Date: 2003-09-11 Impact factor: 49.962
Authors: Xiaofan Li; Alexandra S Martinson; Michael J Layden; Fortunay H Diatta; Anna P Sberna; David K Simmons; Mark Q Martindale; Timothy J Jegla Journal: J Exp Biol Date: 2015-02-15 Impact factor: 3.312
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