| Literature DB >> 32577860 |
Sonia Hasan1, Alfredo Megaro2, Marta Cenciarini2, Lorena Coretti2, Fabio Massimo Botti2, Paola Imbrici3, Harry W M Steinbusch4, Therese Hunter5, Gary Hunter5, Mauro Pessia5,6, Maria Cristina D'Adamo7.
Abstract
Investigating the Shaker-related K+ channel Kv1.1, the dysfunction of which is responsible for episodic ataxia 1 (EA1), at the functional and molecular level provides valuable understandings on normal channel dynamics, structural correlates underlying voltage-gating, and disease-causing mechanisms. Most studies focused on apparently functional amino acid residues composing voltage-gated K+ channels, neglecting the simplest ones. Glycine at position 311 of Kv1.1 is highly conserved both evolutionarily and within the Kv channel superfamily, is located in a region functionally relevant (the S4-S5 linker), and results in overt disease when mutated (p.G311D). By mutating the G311 residue to aspartate, we show here that the channel voltage-gating, activation, deactivation, inactivation, and window currents are markedly affected. In silico, modeling shows this glycine residue is strategically placed at one end of the linker helix which must be free to both bend and move past other portions of the protein during the channel's opening and closing. This is befitting of a glycine residue as its small neutral side chain allows for movement unhindered by interaction with any other amino acid. Results presented reveal the crucial importance of a distinct glycine residue, within the S4-S5 linker, in the voltage-dependent electromechanical coupling that control channel gating.Entities:
Keywords: Episodic ataxia type 1; KCNA1; Kv; Kv1.1; S4-S5 linker; Xenopus laevis
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32577860 DOI: 10.1007/s00424-020-02414-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pflugers Arch ISSN: 0031-6768 Impact factor: 3.657