| Literature DB >> 28778926 |
M Lourdes Renart1, Estefanía Montoya1, A Marcela Giudici1, José A Poveda1, Asia M Fernández1, Andrés Morales2, José M González-Ros3.
Abstract
The selectivity filter in potassium channels, a main component of the ion permeation pathway, configures a stack of binding sites (sites S1-S4) to which K+ and other cations may bind. Specific ion binding to such sites induces changes in the filter conformation, which play a key role in defining both selectivity and permeation. Here, using the potassium channel KcsA as a model, we contribute new evidence to reinforce this assertion. First, ion binding to KcsA blocked by tetrabutylammonium at the most cytoplasmic site in the selectivity filter (S4) suggests that such a site, when in the nonconductive filter conformation, has a higher affinity for cation binding than the most extracellular S1 site. This filter asymmetry, along with differences in intracellular and extracellular concentrations of K+versus Na+ under physiological conditions, should strengthen selection of the permeant K+ by the channel. Second, we used different K+ concentrations to shift the equilibrium between nonconductive and conductive states of the selectivity filter in which to test competitive binding of Na+ These experiments disclosed a marked decrease in the affinity of Na+ to bind the channel when the conformational equilibrium shifts toward the conductive state. This finding suggested that in addition to the selective binding of K+ and other permeant species over Na+, there is a selective exclusion of nonpermeant species from binding the channel filter, once it reaches a fully conductive conformation. We conclude that selective binding and selective exclusion of permeant and nonpermeant cations, respectively, are important determinants of ion channel selectivity.Entities:
Keywords: biophysics; ion binding; membrane protein; potassium channel; protein stability; selectivity filter conformations; structure-function
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28778926 PMCID: PMC5602411 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M117.795807
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157