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1.
Cell ; 169(1): 85-95.e8, 2017 03 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28340353

RESUMO

The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) is an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter that uniquely functions as an ion channel. Here, we present a 3.9 Å structure of dephosphorylated human CFTR without nucleotides, determined by electron cryomicroscopy (cryo-EM). Close resemblance of this human CFTR structure to zebrafish CFTR under identical conditions reinforces its relevance for understanding CFTR function. The human CFTR structure reveals a previously unresolved helix belonging to the R domain docked inside the intracellular vestibule, precluding channel opening. By analyzing the sigmoid time course of CFTR current activation, we propose that PKA phosphorylation of the R domain is enabled by its infrequent spontaneous disengagement, which also explains residual ATPase and gating activity of dephosphorylated CFTR. From comparison with MRP1, a feature distinguishing CFTR from all other ABC transporters is the helix-loop transition in transmembrane helix 8, which likely forms the structural basis for CFTR's channel function.


Assuntos
Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/química , Transportadores de Cassetes de Ligação de ATP/química , Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Animais , Bovinos , Microscopia Crioeletrônica , Humanos , Hidrólise , Modelos Moleculares , Domínios Proteicos , Xenopus laevis , Peixe-Zebra , Proteínas de Peixe-Zebra/química
2.
Physiol Rev ; 99(1): 707-738, 2019 01 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30516439

RESUMO

The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) belongs to the ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter superfamily but functions as an anion channel crucial for salt and water transport across epithelial cells. CFTR dysfunction, because of mutations, causes cystic fibrosis (CF). The anion-selective pore of the CFTR protein is formed by its two transmembrane domains (TMDs) and regulated by its cytosolic domains: two nucleotide binding domains (NBDs) and a regulatory (R) domain. Channel activation requires phosphorylation of the R domain by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), and pore opening and closing (gating) of phosphorylated channels is driven by ATP binding and hydrolysis at the NBDs. This review summarizes available information on structure and mechanism of the CFTR protein, with a particular focus on atomic-level insight gained from recent cryo-electron microscopic structures and on the molecular mechanisms of channel gating and its regulation. The pharmacological mechanisms of small molecules targeting CFTR's ion channel function, aimed at treating patients suffering from CF and other diseases, are briefly discussed.


Assuntos
Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/química , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/metabolismo , Ativação do Canal Iônico/fisiologia , Animais , Ânions/metabolismo , Humanos , Mutação/genética , Fosforilação/fisiologia
3.
Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol ; 10(5): 344-52, 2009 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19339978

RESUMO

The incessant traffic of ions across cell membranes is controlled by two kinds of border guards: ion channels and ion pumps. Open channels let selected ions diffuse rapidly down electrical and concentration gradients, whereas ion pumps labour tirelessly to maintain the gradients by consuming energy to slowly move ions thermodynamically uphill. Because of the diametrically opposed tasks and the divergent speeds of channels and pumps, they have traditionally been viewed as completely different entities, as alike as chalk and cheese. But new structural and mechanistic information about both of these classes of molecular machines challenges this comfortable separation and forces its re-evaluation.


Assuntos
Canais Iônicos/fisiologia , Bombas de Íon/fisiologia , Animais , Humanos , Canais Iônicos/química , Canais Iônicos/metabolismo , Bombas de Íon/química , Bombas de Íon/metabolismo , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína
4.
PLoS Genet ; 13(5): e1006763, 2017 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28472154

RESUMO

Mutations in the neuron-specific α3 isoform of the Na+/K+-ATPase are found in patients suffering from Rapid onset Dystonia Parkinsonism and Alternating Hemiplegia of Childhood, two closely related movement disorders. We show that mice harboring a heterozygous hot spot disease mutation, D801Y (α3+/D801Y), suffer abrupt hypothermia-induced dystonia identified by electromyographic recordings. Single-neuron in vivo recordings in awake α3+/D801Y mice revealed irregular firing of Purkinje cells and their synaptic targets, the deep cerebellar nuclei neurons, which was further exacerbated during dystonia and evolved into abnormal high-frequency burst-like firing. Biophysically, we show that the D-to-Y mutation abolished pump-mediated Na+/K+ exchange, but allowed the pumps to bind Na+ and become phosphorylated. These findings implicate aberrant cerebellar activity in α3 isoform-related dystonia and add to the functional understanding of the scarce and severe mutations in the α3 isoform Na+/K+-ATPase.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação , Distúrbios Distônicos/genética , Hemiplegia/genética , Mutação , Doença de Parkinson/genética , Células de Purkinje/metabolismo , ATPase Trocadora de Sódio-Potássio/genética , Animais , Distúrbios Distônicos/etiologia , Hemiplegia/etiologia , Heterozigoto , Hipotermia/complicações , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Contração Muscular , Doença de Parkinson/etiologia , Células de Purkinje/fisiologia , Sódio/metabolismo , Xenopus
5.
Nature ; 456(7220): 413-6, 2008 Nov 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18849964

RESUMO

P-type ATPases pump ions across membranes, generating steep electrochemical gradients that are essential for the function of all cells. Access to the ion-binding sites within the pumps alternates between the two sides of the membrane to avoid the dissipation of the gradients that would occur during simultaneous access. In Na(+),K(+)-ATPase pumps treated with the marine agent palytoxin, this strict alternation is disrupted and binding sites are sometimes simultaneously accessible from both sides of the membrane, transforming the pumps into ion channels (see, for example, refs 2, 3). Current recordings in these channels can monitor accessibility of introduced cysteine residues to water-soluble sulphydryl-specific reagents. We found previously that Na(+),K(+) pump-channels open to the extracellular surface through a deep and wide vestibule that emanates from a narrower pathway between transmembrane helices 4 and 6 (TM4 and TM6). Here we report that cysteine scans from TM1 to TM6 reveal a single unbroken cation pathway that traverses palytoxin-bound Na(+),K(+) pump-channels from one side of the membrane to the other. This pathway comprises residues from TM1, TM2, TM4 and TM6, passes through ion-binding site II, and is probably conserved in structurally and evolutionarily related P-type pumps, such as sarcoplasmic- and endoplasmic-reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPases and H(+),K(+)-ATPases.


Assuntos
ATPase Trocadora de Sódio-Potássio/química , ATPase Trocadora de Sódio-Potássio/metabolismo , Acrilamidas/metabolismo , Acrilamidas/farmacologia , Animais , Sítios de Ligação , Membrana Celular/metabolismo , Venenos de Cnidários , Sequência Conservada , Cisteína/genética , Cisteína/metabolismo , Condutividade Elétrica , Transporte de Íons/efeitos dos fármacos , Modelos Moleculares , Conformação Proteica/efeitos dos fármacos , ATPase Trocadora de Sódio-Potássio/antagonistas & inibidores , Xenopus
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 108(51): 20556-61, 2011 Dec 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22143771

RESUMO

The Na(+)/K(+) pump is a nearly ubiquitous membrane protein in animal cells that uses the free energy of ATP hydrolysis to alternatively export 3Na(+) from the cell and import 2K(+) per cycle. This exchange of ions produces a steady-state outwardly directed current, which is proportional in magnitude to the turnover rate. Under certain ionic conditions, a sudden voltage jump generates temporally distinct transient currents mediated by the Na(+)/K(+) pump that represent the kinetics of extracellular Na(+) binding/release and Na(+) occlusion/deocclusion transitions. For many years, these events have escaped a proper thermodynamic treatment due to the relatively small electrical signal. Here, taking the advantages offered by the large diameter of the axons from the squid Dosidicus gigas, we have been able to separate the kinetic components of the transient currents in an extended temperature range and thus characterize the energetic landscape of the pump cycle and those transitions associated with the extracellular release of the first Na(+) from the deeply occluded state. Occlusion/deocclusion transition involves large changes in enthalpy and entropy as the ion is exposed to the external milieu for release. Binding/unbinding is substantially less costly, yet larger than predicted for the energetic cost of an ion diffusing through a permeation pathway, which suggests that ion binding/unbinding must involve amino acid side-chain rearrangements at the site.


Assuntos
Axônios/fisiologia , Sódio/química , Trifosfato de Adenosina/química , Animais , Decapodiformes , Difusão , Eletrofisiologia/métodos , Hidrólise , Íons , Cinética , Ligação Proteica , ATPase Trocadora de Sódio-Potássio/química , Temperatura , Termodinâmica
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 107(3): 1241-6, 2010 Jan 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19966305

RESUMO

CFTR, the ABC protein defective in cystic fibrosis, functions as an anion channel. Once phosphorylated by protein kinase A, a CFTR channel is opened and closed by events at its two cytosolic nucleotide binding domains (NBDs). Formation of a head-to-tail NBD1/NBD2 heterodimer, by ATP binding in two interfacial composite sites between conserved Walker A and B motifs of one NBD and the ABC-specific signature sequence of the other, has been proposed to trigger channel opening. ATP hydrolysis at the only catalytically competent interfacial site is suggested to then destabilize the NBD dimer and prompt channel closure. But this gating mechanism, and how tightly CFTR channel opening and closing are coupled to its catalytic cycle, remains controversial. Here we determine the distributions of open burst durations of individual CFTR channels, and use maximum likelihood to evaluate fits to equilibrium and nonequilibrium mechanisms and estimate the rate constants that govern channel closure. We examine partially and fully phosphorylated wild-type CFTR channels, and two mutant CFTR channels, each bearing a deleterious mutation in one or other composite ATP binding site. We show that the wild-type CFTR channel gating cycle is essentially irreversible and tightly coupled to the ATPase cycle, and that this coupling is completely destroyed by the NBD2 Walker B mutation D1370N but only partially disrupted by the NBD1 Walker A mutation K464A.


Assuntos
Canais de Cloreto/metabolismo , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/metabolismo , Ativação do Canal Iônico , Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Animais , Biocatálise , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/genética , Feminino , Hidrólise , Funções Verossimilhança , Mutação , Técnicas de Patch-Clamp , Fosforilação , Xenopus laevis
8.
Nature ; 443(7110): 470-4, 2006 Sep 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17006516

RESUMO

P-type ATPase pumps generate concentration gradients of cations across membranes in nearly all cells. They provide a polar transmembrane pathway, to which access is strictly controlled by coupled gates that are constrained to open alternately, thereby enabling thermodynamically uphill ion transport (for example, see ref. 1). Here we examine the ion pathway through the Na+,K+-ATPase, a representative P-type pump, after uncoupling its extra- and intracellular gates with the marine toxin palytoxin. We use small hydrophilic thiol-specific reagents as extracellular probes and we monitor their reactions, and the consequences, with cysteine residues introduced along the anticipated cation pathway through the pump. The distinct effects of differently charged reagents indicate that a wide outer vestibule penetrates deep into the Na+,K+-ATPase, where the pathway narrows and leads to a charge-selectivity filter. Acidic residues in this region, which are conserved to coordinate pumped ions, allow the approach of cations but exclude anions. Reversing the charge at just one of those positions converts the pathway from cation selective to anion selective. Close structural homology among the catalytic subunits of Ca2+-, Na+,K+- and H+,K+-ATPases argues that their extracytosolic cation exchange pathways all share these physical characteristics.


Assuntos
Potássio/metabolismo , ATPase Trocadora de Sódio-Potássio/química , ATPase Trocadora de Sódio-Potássio/metabolismo , Sódio/metabolismo , Acrilamidas/farmacologia , Animais , Cátions Monovalentes/metabolismo , Venenos de Cnidários , Transporte de Íons/efeitos dos fármacos , Modelos Moleculares , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , ATPase Trocadora de Sódio-Potássio/genética , Eletricidade Estática , Especificidade por Substrato , Xenopus
9.
Nature ; 440(7083): 477-83, 2006 Mar 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16554808

RESUMO

CFTR chloride channels are encoded by the gene mutated in patients with cystic fibrosis. These channels belong to the superfamily of ABC transporter ATPases. ATP-driven conformational changes, which in other ABC proteins fuel uphill substrate transport across cellular membranes, in CFTR open and close a gate to allow transmembrane flow of anions down their electrochemical gradient. New structural and biochemical information from prokaryotic ABC proteins and functional information from CFTR channels has led to a unifying mechanism explaining those ATP-driven conformational changes.


Assuntos
Transportadores de Cassetes de Ligação de ATP/metabolismo , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/metabolismo , Fibrose Cística/metabolismo , Transportadores de Cassetes de Ligação de ATP/química , Transportadores de Cassetes de Ligação de ATP/genética , Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Animais , Sítios de Ligação , Fibrose Cística/etiologia , Fibrose Cística/genética , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/química , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/genética , Humanos , Hidrólise , Ativação do Canal Iônico , Mutação , Nucleotídeos/metabolismo , Fosforilação , Conformação Proteica , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína
10.
Nature ; 433(7028): 876-80, 2005 Feb 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15729345

RESUMO

ABC (ATP-binding cassette) proteins constitute a large family of membrane proteins that actively transport a broad range of substrates. Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), the protein dysfunctional in cystic fibrosis, is unique among ABC proteins in that its transmembrane domains comprise an ion channel. Opening and closing of the pore have been linked to ATP binding and hydrolysis at CFTR's two nucleotide-binding domains, NBD1 and NBD2 (see, for example, refs 1, 2). Isolated NBDs of prokaryotic ABC proteins dimerize upon binding ATP, and hydrolysis of the ATP causes dimer dissociation. Here, using single-channel recording methods on intact CFTR molecules, we directly follow opening and closing of the channel gates, and relate these occurrences to ATP-mediated events in the NBDs. We find that energetic coupling between two CFTR residues, expected to lie on opposite sides of its predicted NBD1-NBD2 dimer interface, changes in concert with channel gating status. The two monitored side chains are independent of each other in closed channels but become coupled as the channels open. The results directly link ATP-driven tight dimerization of CFTR's cytoplasmic nucleotide-binding domains to opening of the ion channel in the transmembrane domains. This establishes a molecular mechanism, involving dynamic restructuring of the NBD dimer interface, that is probably common to all members of the ABC protein superfamily.


Assuntos
Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Trifosfato de Adenosina/farmacologia , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/química , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/metabolismo , Ativação do Canal Iônico/efeitos dos fármacos , Domínio Catalítico , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/genética , Dimerização , Eletrofisiologia , Humanos , Hidrólise , Mutação/genética , Ligação Proteica , Estrutura Quaternária de Proteína/efeitos dos fármacos , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína/efeitos dos fármacos , Termodinâmica
11.
J Gen Physiol ; 130(1): 41-54, 2007 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17562821

RESUMO

Palytoxin binds to Na(+)/K(+) pumps in the plasma membrane of animal cells and opens an electrodiffusive cation pathway through the pumps. We investigated properties of the palytoxin-opened channels by recording macroscopic and microscopic currents in cell bodies of neurons from the giant fiber lobe, and by simultaneously measuring net current and (22)Na(+) efflux in voltage-clamped, internally dialyzed giant axons of the squid Loligo pealei. The conductance of single palytoxin-bound "pump-channels" in outside-out patches was approximately 7 pS in symmetrical 500 mM [Na(+)], comparable to findings in other cells. In these high-[Na(+)], K(+)-free solutions, with 5 mM cytoplasmic [ATP], the K(0.5) for palytoxin action was approximately 70 pM. The pump-channels were approximately 40-50 times less permeable to N-methyl-d-glucamine (NMG(+)) than to Na(+). The reversal potential of palytoxin-elicited current under biionic conditions, with the same concentration of a different permeant cation on each side of the membrane, was independent of the concentration of those ions over the range 55-550 mM. In giant axons, the Ussing flux ratio exponent (n') for Na(+) movements through palytoxin-bound pump-channels, over a 100-400 mM range of external [Na(+)] and 0 to -40 mV range of membrane potentials, averaged 1.05 +/- 0.02 (n = 28). These findings are consistent with occupancy of palytoxin-bound Na(+)/K(+) pump-channels either by a single Na(+) ion or by two Na(+) ions as might be anticipated from other work; idiosyncratic constraints are needed if the two Na(+) ions occupy a single-file pore, but not if they occupy side-by-side binding sites, as observed in related structures, and if only one of the sites is readily accessible from both sides of the membrane.


Assuntos
Acrilamidas/farmacologia , Ativação do Canal Iônico/efeitos dos fármacos , ATPase Trocadora de Sódio-Potássio/metabolismo , Sódio/metabolismo , Animais , Venenos de Cnidários , Loligo , Neurônios/efeitos dos fármacos , Neurônios/metabolismo , Ouabaína/farmacologia , Potássio/metabolismo
13.
J Gen Physiol ; 128(5): 523-33, 2006 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17043148

RESUMO

CFTR is the only ABC (ATP-binding cassette) ATPase known to be an ion channel. Studies of CFTR channel function, feasible with single-molecule resolution, therefore provide a unique glimpse of ABC transporter mechanism. CFTR channel opening and closing (after regulatory-domain phosphorylation) follows an irreversible cycle, driven by ATP binding/hydrolysis at the nucleotide-binding domains (NBD1, NBD2). Recent work suggests that formation of an NBD1/NBD2 dimer drives channel opening, and disruption of the dimer after ATP hydrolysis drives closure, but how NBD events are translated into gate movements is unclear. To elucidate conformational properties of channels on their way to opening or closing, we performed non-equilibrium thermodynamic analysis. Human CFTR channel currents were recorded at temperatures from 15 to 35 degrees C in inside-out patches excised from Xenopus oocytes. Activation enthalpies(DeltaH(double dagger)) were determined from Eyring plots. DeltaH(double dagger) was 117 +/- 6 and 69 +/- 4 kJ/mol, respectively, for opening and closure of partially phosphorylated, and 96 +/- 6 and 73 +/- 5 kJ/mol for opening and closure of highly phosphorylated wild-type (WT) channels. DeltaH(double dagger) for reversal of the channel opening step, estimated from closure of ATP hydrolysis-deficient NBD2 mutant K1250R and K1250A channels, and from unlocking of WT channels locked open with ATP+AMPPNP, was 43 +/- 2, 39 +/- 4, and 37 +/- 6 kJ/mol, respectively. Calculated upper estimates of activation free energies yielded minimum estimates of activation entropies (DeltaS(double dagger)), allowing reconstruction of the thermodynamic profile of gating, which was qualitatively similar for partially and highly phosphorylated CFTR. DeltaS(double dagger) appears large for opening but small for normal closure. The large DeltaH(double dagger) and DeltaS(double dagger) (TDeltaS(double dagger) >/= 41 kJ/mol) for opening suggest that the transition state is a strained channel molecule in which the NBDs have already dimerized, while the pore is still closed. The small DeltaS(double dagger) for normal closure is appropriate for cleavage of a single bond (ATP's beta-gamma phosphate bond), and suggests that this transition state does not require large-scale protein motion and hence precedes rehydration (disruption) of the dimer interface.


Assuntos
Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/química , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/fisiologia , Ativação do Canal Iônico/fisiologia , Termodinâmica , Transportadores de Cassetes de Ligação de ATP/fisiologia , Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Animais , Proteínas Quinases Dependentes de AMP Cíclico , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/genética , Feminino , Humanos , Hidrólise , Mutação/genética , Oócitos/citologia , Oócitos/fisiologia , Técnicas de Patch-Clamp , Fosforilação , Conformação Proteica , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína/genética , Temperatura , Xenopus laevis
14.
J Gen Physiol ; 125(1): 43-55, 2005 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15596536

RESUMO

The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), encoded by the gene mutated in cystic fibrosis patients, belongs to the family of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) proteins, but, unlike other members, functions as a chloride channel. CFTR is activated by protein kinase A (PKA)-mediated phosphorylation of multiple sites in its regulatory domain, and gated by binding and hydrolysis of ATP at its two nucleotide binding domains (NBD1, NBD2). The recent crystal structure of NBD1 from mouse CFTR (Lewis, H.A., S.G. Buchanan, S.K. Burley, K. Conners, M. Dickey, M. Dorwart, R. Fowler, X. Gao, W.B. Guggino, W.A. Hendrickson, et al. 2004. EMBO J. 23:282-293) identified two regions absent from structures of all other NBDs determined so far, a "regulatory insertion" (residues 404-435) and a "regulatory extension" (residues 639-670), both positioned to impede formation of the putative NBD1-NBD2 dimer anticipated to occur during channel gating; as both segments appeared highly mobile and both contained consensus PKA sites (serine 422, and serines 660 and 670, respectively), it was suggested that their phosphorylation-linked conformational changes might underlie CFTR channel regulation. To test that suggestion, we coexpressed in Xenopus oocytes CFTR residues 1-414 with residues 433-1480, or residues 1-633 with 668-1480, to yield split CFTR channels (called 414+433 and 633+668) that lack most of the insertion, or extension, respectively. In excised patches, regulation of the resulting CFTR channels by PKA and by ATP was largely normal. Both 414+433 channels and 633+668 channels, as well as 633(S422A)+668 channels (lacking both the extension and the sole PKA consensus site in the insertion), were all shut during exposure to MgATP before addition of PKA, but activated like wild type (WT) upon phosphorylation; this indicates that inhibitory regulation of nonphosphorylated WT channels depends upon neither segment. Detailed kinetic analysis of 414+433 channels revealed intact ATP dependence of single-channel gating kinetics, but slightly shortened open bursts and faster closing from the locked-open state (elicited by ATP plus pyrophosphate or ATP plus AMPPNP). In contrast, 633+668 channel function was indistinguishable from WT at both macroscopic and microscopic levels. We conclude that neither nonconserved segment is an essential element of PKA- or nucleotide-dependent regulation.


Assuntos
Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/química , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/metabolismo , Ativação do Canal Iônico/fisiologia , Potenciais da Membrana/fisiologia , Nucleotídeos/química , Nucleotídeos/metabolismo , Oócitos/fisiologia , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Substituição de Aminoácidos , Animais , Sítios de Ligação , Células Cultivadas , Sequência Conservada , Humanos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Ligação Proteica , Conformação Proteica , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , Proteínas Recombinantes/química , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismo , Homologia de Sequência de Aminoácidos , Relação Estrutura-Atividade , Xenopus laevis
15.
J Gen Physiol ; 125(2): 171-86, 2005 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15657296

RESUMO

CFTR (cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator), the protein whose dysfunction causes cystic fibrosis, is a chloride ion channel whose gating is controlled by interactions of MgATP with CFTR's two cytoplasmic nucleotide binding domains, but only after several serines in CFTR's regulatory (R) domain have been phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). Whereas eight R-domain serines have previously been shown to be phosphorylated in purified CFTR, it is not known how individual phosphoserines regulate channel gating, although two of them, at positions 737 and 768, have been suggested to be inhibitory. Here we show, using mass spectrometric analysis, that Ser 768 is the first site phosphorylated in purified R-domain protein, and that it and five other R-domain sites are already phosphorylated in resting Xenopus oocytes expressing wild-type (WT) human epithelial CFTR. The WT channels have lower activity than S768A channels (with Ser 768 mutated to Ala) in resting oocytes, confirming the inhibitory influence of phosphoserine 768. In excised patches exposed to a range of PKA concentrations, the open probability (P(o)) of mutant S768A channels exceeded that of WT CFTR channels at all [PKA], and the half-maximally activating [PKA] for WT channels was twice that for S768A channels. As the open burst duration of S768A CFTR channels was almost double that of WT channels, at both low (55 nM) and high (550 nM) [PKA], we conclude that the principal mechanism by which phosphoserine 768 inhibits WT CFTR is by hastening the termination of open channel bursts. The right-shifted P(o)-[PKA] curve of WT channels might explain their slower activation, compared with S768A channels, at low [PKA]. The finding that phosphorylation kinetics of WT or S768A R-domain peptides were similar provides no support for an alternative explanation, that early phosphorylation of Ser 768 in WT CFTR might also impair subsequent phosphorylation of stimulatory R-domain serines. The observed reduced sensitivity to activation by [PKA] imparted by Ser 768 might serve to ensure activation of WT CFTR by strong stimuli while dampening responses to weak signals.


Assuntos
Proteínas Quinases Dependentes de AMP Cíclico/farmacologia , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/metabolismo , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/fisiologia , Ativação do Canal Iônico/fisiologia , Serina/metabolismo , Transportadores de Cassetes de Ligação de ATP/fisiologia , Animais , Autorradiografia , Feminino , Humanos , Cinética , Espectrometria de Massas , Oócitos , Fosforilação , Xenopus
16.
J Gen Physiol ; 123(4): 357-76, 2004 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15024043

RESUMO

Palytoxin binds to Na/K pumps to generate nonselective cation channels whose pore likely comprises at least part of the pump's ion translocation pathway. We systematically analyzed palytoxin's interactions with native human Na/K pumps in outside-out patches from HEK293 cells over a broad range of ionic and nucleotide conditions, and with or without cardiotonic steroids. With 5 mM internal (pipette) [MgATP], palytoxin activated the conductance with an apparent affinity that was highest for Na(+)-containing (K(+)-free) external and internal solutions, lowest for K(+)-containing (Na(+)-free) external and internal solutions, and intermediate for the mixed external Na(+)/internal K(+), and external K(+)/internal Na(+) conditions; with Na(+) solutions and MgATP, the mean dwell time of palytoxin on the Na/K pump was about one day. With Na(+) solutions, the apparent affinity for palytoxin action was low after equilibration of patches with nucleotide-free pipette solution. That apparent affinity was increased in two phases as the equilibrating [MgATP] was raised over the submicromolar, and submillimolar, ranges, but was increased by pipette MgAMPPNP in a single phase, over the submillimolar range; the apparent affinity at saturating [MgAMPPNP] remained approximately 30-fold lower than at saturating [MgATP]. After palytoxin washout, the conductance decay that reflects palytoxin unbinding was accelerated by cardiotonic steroid. When Na/K pumps were preincubated with cardiotonic steroid, subsequent activation of palytoxin-induced conductance was greatly slowed, even after washout of the cardiotonic steroid, but activation could still be accelerated by increasing palytoxin concentration. These results indicate that palytoxin and a cardiotonic steroid can simultaneously occupy the same Na/K pump, each destabilizing the other. The palytoxin-induced channels were permeable to several large organic cations, including N-methyl-d-glucamine(+), suggesting that the narrowest section of the pore must be approximately 7.5 A wide. Enhanced understanding of palytoxin action now allows its use for examining the structures and mechanisms of the gates that occlude/deocclude transported ions during the normal Na/K pump cycle.


Assuntos
Acrilamidas/farmacologia , Ativação do Canal Iônico/efeitos dos fármacos , Miócitos Cardíacos/metabolismo , ATPase Trocadora de Sódio-Potássio/metabolismo , Trifosfato de Adenosina/farmacologia , Animais , Cardiotônicos/farmacologia , Células Cultivadas , Venenos de Cnidários , Interações Medicamentosas , Condutividade Elétrica , Cobaias , Humanos , Rim/citologia , Ligantes , Miócitos Cardíacos/citologia , Ouabaína/farmacologia , Técnicas de Patch-Clamp , Fosforilação , Potássio/farmacocinética , Sódio/farmacocinética
17.
J Gen Physiol ; 121(1): 17-36, 2003 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12508051

RESUMO

CFTR, the product of the gene mutated in cystic fibrosis, is an ATPase that functions as a Cl(-) channel in which bursts of openings separate relatively long interburst closed times (tauib). Channel gating is controlled by phosphorylation and MgATP, but the underlying molecular mechanisms remain controversial. To investigate them, we expressed CFTR channels in Xenopus oocytes and examined, in excised patches, how gating kinetics of phosphorylated channels were affected by changes in [MgATP], by alterations in the chemical structure of the activating nucleotide, and by mutations expected to impair nucleotide hydrolysis and/or diminish nucleotide binding affinity. The rate of opening to a burst (1/tauib) was a saturable function of [MgATP], but apparent affinity was reduced by mutations in either of CFTR's nucleotide binding domains (NBDs): K464A in NBD1, and K1250A or D1370N in NBD2. Burst duration of neither wild-type nor mutant channels was much influenced by [MgATP]. Poorly hydrolyzable nucleotide analogs, MgAMPPNP, MgAMPPCP, and MgATPgammaS, could open CFTR channels, but only to a maximal rate of opening approximately 20-fold lower than attained by MgATP acting on the same channels. NBD2 catalytic site mutations K1250A, D1370N, and E1371S were found to prolong open bursts. Corresponding NBD1 mutations did not affect timing of burst termination in normal, hydrolytic conditions. However, when hydrolysis at NBD2 was impaired, the NBD1 mutation K464A shortened the prolonged open bursts. In light of recent biochemical and structural data, the results suggest that: nucleotide binding to both NBDs precedes channel opening; at saturating nucleotide concentrations the rate of opening to a burst is influenced by the structure of the phosphate chain of the activating nucleotide; normal, rapid exit from bursts occurs after hydrolysis of the nucleotide at NBD2, without requiring a further nucleotide binding step; if hydrolysis at NBD2 is prevented, exit from bursts occurs through a slower pathway, the rate of which is modulated by the structure of the NBD1 catalytic site and its bound nucleotide. Based on these and other results, we propose a mechanism linking hydrolytic and gating cycles via ATP-driven dimerization of CFTR's NBDs.


Assuntos
Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/genética , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/metabolismo , Ativação do Canal Iônico/fisiologia , Trifosfato de Adenosina/farmacologia , Animais , Sítios de Ligação/efeitos dos fármacos , Sítios de Ligação/fisiologia , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/química , Relação Dose-Resposta a Droga , Feminino , Humanos , Ativação do Canal Iônico/efeitos dos fármacos , Mutação/efeitos dos fármacos , Mutação/fisiologia , Xenopus laevis
18.
J Gen Physiol ; 122(3): 333-48, 2003 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12939393

RESUMO

CFTR, the protein defective in cystic fibrosis, functions as a Cl- channel regulated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). CFTR is also an ATPase, comprising two nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) thought to bind and hydrolyze ATP. In hydrolyzable nucleoside triphosphates, PKA-phosphorylated CFTR channels open into bursts, lasting on the order of a second, from closed (interburst) intervals of a second or more. To investigate nucleotide interactions underlying channel gating, we examined photolabeling by [alpha32P]8-N3ATP or [gamma32P]8-N3ATP of intact CFTR channels expressed in HEK293T cells or Xenopus oocytes. We also exploited split CFTR channels to distinguish photolabeling at NBD1 from that at NBD2. To examine simple binding of nucleotide in the absence of hydrolysis and gating reactions, we photolabeled after incubation at 0 degrees C with no washing. Nucleotide interactions under gating conditions were probed by photolabeling after incubation at 30 degrees C, with extensive washing, also at 30 degrees C. Phosphorylation of CFTR by PKA only slightly influenced photolabeling after either protocol. Strikingly, at 30 degrees C nucleotide remained tightly bound at NBD1 for many minutes, in the form of nonhydrolyzed nucleoside triphosphate. As nucleotide-dependent gating of CFTR channels occurred on the time scale of seconds under comparable conditions, this suggests that the nucleotide interactions, including hydrolysis, that time CFTR channel opening and closing occur predominantly at NBD2. Vanadate also appeared to act at NBD2, presumably interrupting its hydrolytic cycle, and markedly delayed termination of channel open bursts. Vanadate somewhat increased the magnitude, but did not alter the rate, of the slow loss of nucleotide tightly bound at NBD1. Kinetic analysis of channel gating in Mg8-N3ATP or MgATP reveals that the rate-limiting step for CFTR channel opening at saturating [nucleotide] follows nucleotide binding to both NBDs. We propose that ATP remains tightly bound or occluded at CFTR's NBD1 for long periods, that binding of ATP at NBD2 leads to channel opening wherupon its hydrolysis prompts channel closing, and that phosphorylation acts like an automobile clutch that engages the NBD events to drive gating of the transmembrane ion pore.


Assuntos
Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Canais de Cloreto/metabolismo , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/metabolismo , Ativação do Canal Iônico , Difosfato de Adenosina/análogos & derivados , Difosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Trifosfato de Adenosina/análogos & derivados , Alanina/genética , Animais , Azidas/metabolismo , Linhagem Celular , Canais de Cloreto/efeitos dos fármacos , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/genética , Humanos , Cinética , Lisina/genética , Mutação , Oócitos , Concentração Osmolar , Fragmentos de Peptídeos/metabolismo , Fosforilação , Isoformas de Proteínas/metabolismo , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , Temperatura , Fatores de Tempo , Vanadatos/farmacologia , Xenopus laevis
19.
J Gen Physiol ; 119(3): 235-49, 2002 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11865020

RESUMO

The properties of the small fraction of tetrodotoxin (TTX)-sensitive Na channels that remain open in the steady state were studied in internally dialyzed voltage clamped squid giant axons. The observed Ussing flux ratio exponent (n') of 0.97 plus minus 0.03 (calculated from simultaneous measurements of TTX-sensitive current and (22)Na efflux) and nonindependent behavior of Na current at high internal [Na] are explained by a one-site ("1s") permeation model characterized by a single effective binding site within the channel pore in equilibrium with internal Na ions (apparent equilibrium dissociation constant K(Nai)(0) = 0.61 +/- 0.08 M). Steady-state open probability of the TTX-sensitive channels can be modeled by the product p(a)p(infinity), where p(a) represents voltage-dependent activation described by a Boltzmann distribution with midpoint V(a) = -7 mV and effective valence z(a) = 3.2 (Vandenberg, C.A., and F. Bezanilla. 1991. BIOPHYS: J. 60:1499--1510) coupled to voltage-independent inactivation by an equilibrium constant (Bezanilla, F., and C.M. Armstrong. 1977. J. Gen. Physiol. 70:549--566) K(eq) = 770. The factor p(infinity) represents voltage-dependent inactivation with empirical midpoint V(infinity)= -83 plus minus 5 mV and effective valence z(infinity) = 0.55 plus minus 0.03. The composite p(a)p(infinity)1s model describes the steady-state voltage dependence of the persistent TTX-sensitive current well.


Assuntos
Axônios/fisiologia , Ativação do Canal Iônico/fisiologia , Canais de Sódio/fisiologia , Anestésicos Locais/farmacologia , Animais , Axônios/efeitos dos fármacos , Axônios/metabolismo , Decapodiformes , Ativação do Canal Iônico/efeitos dos fármacos , Potenciais da Membrana/efeitos dos fármacos , Potenciais da Membrana/fisiologia , Sódio/metabolismo , Canais de Sódio/metabolismo , Tetrodotoxina/farmacologia
20.
J Gen Physiol ; 119(6): 545-59, 2002 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12034762

RESUMO

The roles played by ATP binding and hydrolysis in the complex mechanisms that open and close cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) Cl(-) channels remain controversial. In this work, the contributions made by ATP and Mg(2+) ions to the gating of phosphorylated cardiac CFTR channels were evaluated separately by measuring the rates of opening and closing of single channels in excised patches exposed to solutions in which [ATP] and [Mg(2+)] were varied independently. Channel opening was found to be rate-limited not by the binding of ATP alone, but by a Mg(2+)-dependent step that followed binding of both ATP and Mg(2+). Once a channel had opened, sudden withdrawal of all Mg(2+) and ATP could prevent it from closing for tens of seconds. But subsequent exposure of such an open channel to Mg(2+) ions alone could close it, and the closing rate increased with [Mg(2+)] over the micromolar range (half maximal at approximately 50 microM [Mg(2+)]). A simple interpretation is that channel closing is stoichiometrically coupled to hydrolysis of an ATP molecule that remains tightly associated with the open CFTR channel despite continuous washing. If correct, that ATP molecule appears able to reside for over a minute in the catalytic site that controls channel closing, implying that the site must entrap, or have an intrinsically high apparent affinity for, ATP, even without a Mg(2+) ion. Such stabilization of the open-channel conformation of CFTR by tight binding, or occlusion, of an ATP molecule echoes the stabilization of the active conformation of a G protein by GTP.


Assuntos
Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/fisiologia , Ativação do Canal Iônico/efeitos dos fármacos , Magnésio/farmacologia , Miócitos Cardíacos/fisiologia , Trifosfato de Adenosina/farmacologia , Adenilil Imidodifosfato/farmacologia , Animais , Ligação Competitiva/fisiologia , Quelantes/farmacologia , Regulador de Condutância Transmembrana em Fibrose Cística/química , Ácido Egtázico/farmacologia , Cobaias , Ventrículos do Coração/citologia , Cinética , Miocárdio/citologia , Miócitos Cardíacos/citologia , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína
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