NMR structure of inactivation gates from mammalian voltage-dependent potassium channels

被引:0
作者
Christof Antz
Matthias Geyer
Bernd Fakler
Markus K. Schott
H. Robert Guy
Rainer Frank
Johann Peter Ruppersberg
Hans Robert Kalbitzer
机构
[1] University of Tübingen,Institute of Physiology
[2] Max-Planck-Institute for Medical Research,Department of Biophysics
[3] National Institute of Health,Laboratory of Mathematical Biology
[4] Im Neuenheimer Feld,Zentrum für Molekulare Biologie
来源
Nature | 1997年 / 385卷
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摘要
The electrical signalling properties of neurons originate largely from the gating properties of their ion channels. N-type inactivation of voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channels is the best-understood gating transition in ion channels, and occurs by a 'ball-and-chain' type mechanism. In this mechanism an N-terminal domain (inactivation gate), which is tethered to the cytoplasmic side of the channel protein by a protease-cleavable chain, binds to its receptor at the inner vestibule of the channel, thereby physically blocking the pore1,2. Even when synthesized as a peptide, ball domains restore inactivation in Kv channels whose inactivation domains have been deleted2,3. Using high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, we analysed the three-dimensional structure of the ball peptides from two rapidly inactivating mammalian Kv channels (Raw3 (Kv3.4) and RCK4 (Kvl.4)). The inactivation peptide of Raw3 (Raw3-IP) has a compact structure that exposes two phosphorylation sites and allows the formation of an intramolecular disulphide bridge between two spatially close cysteine residues. Raw3-IP exhibits a characteristic surface charge pattern with a positively charged, a hydrophobic, and a negatively charged region. The RCK4 inactivation peptide (RCK4-IP) shows a similar spatial distribution of charged and uncharged regions, but is more flexible and less ordered in its amino-terminal part.
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页码:272 / 275
页数:3
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