The membrane dipole potential (Ψ) constitutes one of three electrical potentials generated by cell membranes. Ψ arises from the unfavorable parallel alignment of phospholipid and water dipoles, and varies in magnitude both longitudinally and laterally across the bilayer according to membrane composition and phospholipid packing density. In this work, we propose that dynamic counter-balancing between Ψ and the transmembrane potential (ΔΨ) governs the conformational state transitions of voltage-gated ion channels. Ψ consists of 1) static outer, and dynamic inner leaflet components (Ψ and Ψ, respectively); and 2) a transmembrane component (ΔΨ), ariing from differences in intra- and extracellular leaflet composition. Ψ, which transitions between high and low energy states (Ψ and Ψ) as a function of channel conformation, is transduced by the pore domain. ΔΨ is transduced by the voltage-sensing (VS) domain in summation with ΔΨ. Potentiation of voltage-gated ion channels is of interest for the treatment of cardiac, neuronal, and other disorders arising from inherited/acquired ion channel dysfunction. Potentiators are widely believed to alter the rates and voltage-dependencies of channel gating transitions by binding to pockets in the membrane-facing and other regions of ion channel targets. Here, we propose that potentiators alter Ψ and/or Ψ, thereby increasing or decreasing the energy barriers governing channel gating transitions. We used quantum mechanical and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to predict the overall Ψ-modulating effects of a series of published positive hERG potentiators partitioned into model DOPC bilayers. Our findings suggest a strong correlation between the magnitude of Ψ-lowering and positive hERG potentiation across the series.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbamem.2016.11.005 | DOI Listing |
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