The sliding-helix voltage sensor: mesoscale views of a robust structure-function relationship.

Eur Biophys J

Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Miami Computational Biophysics, German Research School for Simulation Sciences, Jülich, Germany.

Published: September 2012

The voltage sensor (VS) domain of voltage-gated ion channels underlies the electrical excitability of living cells. We simulate a mesoscale model of the VS domain to determine the functional consequences of some of its physical elements. Our mesoscale model is based on VS charges, linear dielectrics, and whole-body motion, applied to an S4 "sliding helix." The electrostatics under voltage-clamped boundary conditions are solved consistently using a boundary-element method. Based on electrostatic configurational energy, statistical-mechanical expectations of the experimentally observable relation between displaced charge and membrane voltage are predicted. Consequences of the model are investigated for variations of S4 configuration (α- and 3(10)-helical), countercharge alignment with S4 charges, protein polarizability, geometry of the gating canal, screening of S4 charges by the baths, and fixed charges located at the bath interfaces. The sliding-helix VS domain has an inherent electrostatic stability in the explored parameter space: countercharges present in the region of weak dielectric always retain an equivalent S4 charge in that region but allow sliding movements displacing 3-4 e (0). That movement is sensitive to small energy variations (<2 kT) along the path dependent on a number of electrostatic parameters tested in our simulations. These simulations show how the slope of the relation between displaced charge and voltage could be tuned in a channel.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3448954PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00249-012-0847-zDOI Listing

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