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Intrinsically disordered C-terminal segments of voltage-activated potassium channels: a possible fishing rod-like mechanism for channel binding to scaffold proteins
41
Citations
14
References
2006
Year
Biophysical ModelingMolecular BiologyCytoskeletonCellular PhysiologyChannel BindingKv ChannelsKv Channel InactivationProtein FoldingKv Channel FamilyIntercellular CommunicationBiophysicsProtein FunctionMolecular PhysiologyBiochemistryIon ChannelsCell BiologyBiophysical AspectChannelopathiesC-terminal SegmentsSignal TransductionNatural SciencesVoltage-activated Potassium ChannelsElectrophysiologySystems BiologyMedicine
Membrane-embedded voltage-activated potassium channels (Kv) bind intracellular scaffold proteins, such as the Post Synaptic Density 95 (PSD-95) protein, using a conserved PDZ-binding motif located at the channels' C-terminal tip. This interaction underlies Kv-channel clustering, and is important for the proper assembly and functioning of the synapse. Here we demonstrate that the C-terminal segments of Kv channels adjacent to the PDZ-binding motif are intrinsically disordered. Phylogenetic analysis of the Kv channel family reveals a cluster of channel sequences belonging to three out of the four main channel families, for which an association is demonstrated between the presence of the consensus terminal PDZ-binding motif and the intrinsically disordered nature of the immediately adjacent C-terminal segment. Our observations, combined with a structural analogy to the N-terminal intra-molecular ball-and-chain mechanism for Kv channel inactivation, suggest that the C-terminal disordered segments of these channel families encode an inter-molecular fishing rod-like mechanism for K(+) channel binding to scaffold proteins.
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