| Literature DB >> 34162897 |
José J De Jesús-Pérez1, G Arlette Méndez-Maldonado2, Ana E López-Romero1, David Esparza-Jasso1, Irma L González-Hernández2, Víctor De la Rosa3, Roberto Gastélum-Garibaldi2, Jorge E Sánchez-Rodríguez2, Jorge Arreola4.
Abstract
The widely expressed two-pore homodimeric inward rectifier CLC-2 chloride channel regulates transepithelial chloride transport, extracellular chloride homeostasis, and neuronal excitability. Each pore is independently gated at hyperpolarized voltages by a conserved pore glutamate. Presumably, exiting chloride ions push glutamate outwardly while external protonation stabilizes it. To understand the mechanism of mouse CLC-2 opening we used homology modelling-guided structure-function analysis. Structural modelling suggests that glutamate E213 interacts with tyrosine Y561 to close a pore. Accordingly, Y561A and E213D mutants are activated at less hyperpolarized voltages, re-opened at depolarized voltages, and fast and common gating components are reduced. The double mutant cycle analysis showed that E213 and Y561 are energetically coupled to alter CLC-2 gating. In agreement, the anomalous mole fraction behaviour of the voltage dependence, measured by the voltage to induce half-open probability, was strongly altered in these mutants. Finally, cytosolic acidification or high extracellular chloride concentration, conditions that have little or no effect on WT CLC-2, induced reopening of Y561 mutants at positive voltages presumably by the inward opening of E213. We concluded that the CLC-2 gate is formed by Y561-E213 and that outward permeant anions open the gate by electrostatic and steric interactions.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34162897 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-92247-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379