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Voltage-dependent activation in EAG channels follows a ligand-receptor rather than a mechanical-lever mechanism

25

Citations

40

References

2019

Year

Abstract

Ether-a-go-go family (EAG) channels play a major role in many physiological processes in humans, including cardiac repolarization and cell proliferation. Cryo-EM structures of two of them, K<sub>V</sub>10.1 and human ether-a-go-go-related gene (hERG or K<sub>V</sub>11.1), have revealed an original nondomain-swapped structure, suggesting that the mechanism of voltage-dependent gating of these two channels is quite different from the classical mechanical-lever model. Molecular aspects of hERG voltage-gating have been extensively studied, indicating that the S4-S5 linker (S4-S5<sub>L</sub>) acts as a ligand binding to the S6 gate (S6 C-terminal part, S6<sub>T</sub>) and stabilizes it in a closed state. Moreover, the N-terminal extremity of the channel, called N-Cap, has been suggested to interact with S4-S5<sub>L</sub> to modulate channel voltage-dependent gating, as N-Cap deletion drastically accelerates hERG channel deactivation. In this study, using COS-7 cells, site-directed mutagenesis, electrophysiological measurements, and immunofluorescence confocal microscopy, we addressed whether these two major mechanisms of voltage-dependent gating are conserved in K<sub>V</sub>10.2 channels. Using cysteine bridges and S4-S5<sub>L</sub>-mimicking peptides, we show that the ligand/receptor model is conserved in K<sub>V</sub>10.2, suggesting that this model is a hallmark of EAG channels. Truncation of the N-Cap domain, Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) domain, or both in K<sub>V</sub>10.2 abolished the current and altered channel trafficking to the membrane, unlike for the hERG channel in which N-Cap and PAS domain truncations mainly affected channel deactivation. Our results suggest that EAG channels function via a conserved ligand/receptor model of voltage gating, but that the N-Cap and PAS domains have different roles in these channels.

References

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