Peptide neurotoxins are powerful tools for research, diagnosis, and treatment of disease. Limiting broader use, most receptors lack an identified toxin that binds with high affinity and specificity. This paper describes isolation of toxins for one such orphan target, KcsA, a potassium channel that has been fundamental to delineating the structural basis for ion channel function. A phage-display strategy is presented whereby ∼1.5 million novel and natural peptides are fabricated on the scaffold present in ShK, a sea anemone type I (SAK1) toxin stabilized by three disulfide bonds. We describe two toxins selected by sorting on purified KcsA, one novel (Hui1, 34 residues) and one natural (HmK, 35 residues). Hui1 is potent, blocking single KcsA channels in planar lipid bilayers half-maximally (Ki) at 1 nM. Hui1 is also specific, inhibiting KcsA-Shaker channels in Xenopus oocytes with a Ki of 0.5 nM whereas Shaker, Kv1.2, and Kv1.3 channels are blocked over 200-fold less well. HmK is potent but promiscuous, blocking KcsA-Shaker, Shaker, Kv1.2, and Kv1.3 channels with Ki of 1-4 nM. As anticipated, one Hui1 blocks the KcsA pore and two conserved toxin residues, Lys21 and Tyr22, are essential for high-affinity binding. Unexpectedly, potassium ions traversing the channel from the inside confer voltage sensitivity to the Hui1 off-rate via Arg23, indicating that Lys21 is not in the pore. The 3D structure of Hui1 reveals a SAK1 fold, rationalizes KcsA inhibition, and validates the scaffold-based approach for isolation of high-affinity toxins for orphan receptors.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1514728112 | DOI Listing |
Biochem Biophys Res Commun
December 2024
Department of Mechanics, College of Architecture & Environment, & Failure Mechanics and Engineering Disaster Prevention, Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, Sichuan University, Chengdu, 610065, China. Electronic address:
Potassium channels are essential for regulating cellular excitability by controlling K ion flow. In voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channels, C-type inactivation modulates action potentials and holds significant physiological and clinical importance. The selectivity filter (SF) of potassium channels functions as the C-type inactivation gate by alternating between conductive and non-conductive states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Nano
November 2024
Biomedical Imaging Research Center, University of Fukui, Fukui 910-1193, Japan.
The biological membrane is not just a platform for information processing but also a field of mechanics. The lipid bilayer that constitutes the membrane is an elastic body, generating stress upon deformation, while the membrane protein embedded therein deforms the bilayer through structural changes. Among membrane-protein interplays, various channel species act as tension-current converters for signal transduction, serving as elementary processes in mechanobiology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiophys J
November 2024
Department of Electrical, Electronic and Information Engineering "Guglielmo Marconi", University of Bologna, via dell'Università 50, Cesena (FC), Italy. Electronic address:
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of biological processes has always been a challenging task due to the long timescales of the processes involved and the large amount of output data to handle. Markov state models (MSMs) have been introduced as a powerful tool in this area of research, as they provide a mechanistically comprehensible synthesis of the large amount of MD data and, at the same time, can be used to rapidly estimate experimental properties of biological processes. Herein, we propose a method for building MSMs of ion channel permeation from MD trajectories, which directly evaluates the current flowing through the channel from the model's transition matrix (T), which is crucial for comparing simulations and experimental data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
August 2024
Key Laboratory of Bio-inspired Materials and Interfacial Science, Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100190, China.
Biological ion channels usually conduct the high-flux transport of 10 ~ 10 ions·s; however, the underlying mechanism is still lacking. Here, by applying the KcsA potassium channel as a typical example, and performing multitimescale molecular dynamics simulations, we demonstrate that there is coherence of the K ions confined in biological channels, which determines transport. The coherent oscillation state of confined K ions with a nanosecond-level lifetime in the channel dominates each transport event, serving as the physical basis for the high flux of ~10 ions∙s.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNatl Sci Rev
August 2024
Key Laboratory for Intelligent Nano Materials and Devices of the Ministry of Education, State Key Laboratory of Mechanics and Control for Aerospace Structures, Institute for Frontier Science, Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Nanjing 210016, China.
Reproducing the outstanding selectivity achieved by biological ion channels in artificial channel systems can revolutionize applications ranging from membrane filtration to single-molecule sensing technologies, but achieving this goal remains a challenge. Herein, inspired by the selectivity filter structure of the KcsA potassium channel, we propose a design of biomimetic potassium nanochannels by functionalizing the wall of carbon nanotubes with an array of arranged carbonyl oxygen atoms. Our extensive molecular dynamics simulations show that the biomimetic nanochannel exhibits a high K permeation rate along with a high K/Na selectivity ratio.
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