Two atomic constraints unambiguously position the S4 segment relative to S1 and S2 segments in the closed state of Shaker K channel
- 8 May 2007
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 104 (19) , 7904-7909
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0702638104
Abstract
It is now well established that the voltage-sensing S4 segment in voltage-dependent ion channels undergoes a conformational change in response to varying membrane potential. However, the magnitude of the movement of S4 relative to the membrane and the rest of the protein remains controversial. Here, by using histidine scanning mutagenesis in the Shaker K channel, we identified mutants I241H (S1 segment) and I287H (S2 segment) that generate inward currents at hyperpolarized potentials, suggesting that these residues are part of a hydrophobic plug that separates the water-accessible crevices. Additional experiments with substituted cysteine residues showed that, at hyperpolarized potentials, both I241C and I287C can spontaneously form disulphide and metal bridges with R362C, the position of the first charge-carrying residue in S4. These results constrain unambiguously the closed-state positions of the S4 segment with respect to the S1 and S2 segments, which are known to undergo little or no movement during gating. To satisfy these constraints, the S4 segment must undergo an axial rotation of ≈180° and a transmembrane (vertical) movement of ≈6.5 Å at the level of R362 in going from the open to the closed state of the channel, moving the gating charge across a focused electric field.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- The twisted ion-permeation pathway of a resting voltage-sensing domainNature, 2006
- Intracellular gate opening in Shaker K+ channels defined by high-affinity metal bridgesNature, 2004
- A proton pore in a potassium channel voltage sensor reveals a focused electric fieldNature, 2004
- The principle of gating charge movement in a voltage-dependent K+ channelNature, 2003
- A Fluorometric Approach to Local Electric Field Measurements in a Voltage-Gated Ion ChannelNeuron, 2003
- Tight Steric Closure at the Intracellular Activation Gate of a Voltage-Gated K+ ChannelNeuron, 2001
- Periodic perturbations in Shaker K + channel gating kinetics by deletions in the S3–S4 linkerProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001
- Histidine Scanning Mutagenesis of Basic Residues of the S4 Segment of the Shaker K+ ChannelThe Journal of general physiology, 2001
- Atomic scale movement of the voltage-sensing region in a potassium channel measured via spectroscopyNature, 1999
- Biophysical and Molecular Mechanisms of Shaker Potassium Channel InactivationScience, 1990