Literature DB >> 32414918

Functional stability of water wire-carbonyl interactions in an ion channel.

Joana Paulino1, Myunggi Yi2, Ivan Hung1, Zhehong Gan1, Xiaoling Wang1, Eduard Y Chekmenev3,4,5,6, Huan-Xiang Zhou7,8, Timothy A Cross9,10,11.   

Abstract

Water wires are critical for the functioning of many membrane proteins, as in channels that conduct water, protons, and other ions. Here, in liquid crystalline lipid bilayers under symmetric environmental conditions, the selective hydrogen bonding interactions between eight waters comprising a water wire and a subset of 26 carbonyl oxygens lining the antiparallel dimeric gramicidin A channel are characterized by 17O NMR spectroscopy at 35.2 T (or 1,500 MHz for 1H) and computational studies. While backbone 15N spectra clearly indicate structural symmetry between the two subunits, single site 17O labels of the pore-lining carbonyls report two resonances, implying a break in dimer symmetry caused by the selective interactions with the water wire. The 17O shifts document selective water hydrogen bonding with carbonyl oxygens that are stable on the millisecond timescale. Such interactions are supported by density functional theory calculations on snapshots taken from molecular dynamics simulations. Water hydrogen bonding in the pore is restricted to just three simultaneous interactions, unlike bulk water environs. The stability of the water wire orientation and its electric dipole leads to opposite charge-dipole interactions for K+ ions bound at the two ends of the pore, thereby providing a simple explanation for an ∼20-fold difference in K+ affinity between two binding sites that are ∼24 Å apart. The 17O NMR spectroscopy reported here represents a breakthrough in high field NMR technology that will have applications throughout molecular biophysics, because of the acute sensitivity of the 17O nucleus to its chemical environment.
Copyright © 2020 the Author(s). Published by PNAS.

Entities:  

Keywords:  17O NMR; gramicidin A; molecular dynamics; ultra-high field NMR; water wire

Year:  2020        PMID: 32414918     DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2001083117

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  8 in total

1.  Field-stepped ultra-wideline NMR at up to 36 T: On the inequivalence between field and frequency stepping.

Authors:  Ivan Hung; Adam R Altenhof; Robert W Schurko; David L Bryce; Oc Hee Han; Zhehong Gan
Journal:  Magn Reson Chem       Date:  2020-12-29       Impact factor: 2.447

2.  Surprising Rigidity of Functionally Important Water Molecules Buried in the Lipid Headgroup Region.

Authors:  Rongfu Zhang; Timothy A Cross; Xinhua Peng; Riqiang Fu
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2022-04-19       Impact factor: 16.383

3.  17 O NMR Studies of Yeast Ubiquitin in Aqueous Solution and in the Solid State.

Authors:  Binyang Lin; Ivan Hung; Zhehong Gan; Po-Hsiu Chien; Holly L Spencer; Steven P Smith; Gang Wu
Journal:  Chembiochem       Date:  2020-11-06       Impact factor: 3.164

4.  Polarization Effects in Water-Mediated Selective Cation Transport across a Narrow Transmembrane Channel.

Authors:  Van Ngo; Hui Li; Alexander D MacKerell; Toby W Allen; Benoît Roux; Sergei Noskov
Journal:  J Chem Theory Comput       Date:  2021-02-04       Impact factor: 6.006

5.  Polymorphic Forms of Valinomycin Investigated by NMR Crystallography.

Authors:  Jiří Czernek; Jiří Brus
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2020-07-11       Impact factor: 5.923

6.  Atomistic Characterization of Gramicidin Channel Formation.

Authors:  Delin Sun; Stewart He; W F Drew Bennett; Camille L Bilodeau; Olaf S Andersen; Felice C Lightstone; Helgi I Ingólfsson
Journal:  J Chem Theory Comput       Date:  2020-12-30       Impact factor: 6.006

7.  Solid-state 17O NMR study of α-d-glucose: exploring new frontiers in isotopic labeling, sensitivity enhancement, and NMR crystallography.

Authors:  Jiahui Shen; Victor Terskikh; Jochem Struppe; Alia Hassan; Martine Monette; Ivan Hung; Zhehong Gan; Andreas Brinkmann; Gang Wu
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2022-01-03       Impact factor: 9.825

8.  Protons in Gating the Kv1.2 Channel: A Calculated Set of Protonation States in Response to Polarization/Depolarization of the Channel, with the Complete Proposed Proton Path from Voltage Sensing Domain to Gate.

Authors:  Alisher M Kariev; Michael E Green
Journal:  Membranes (Basel)       Date:  2022-07-20
  8 in total

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