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Inactivation of Mechanically Activated Piezo1 Ion Channels Is Determined by the C-Terminal Extracellular Domain and the Inner Pore Helix. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Piezo proteins are ion channels that help us sense light touch, body position, and blood flow, but they quickly inactivate when activated by mechanical forces.
  • The inactivation process is important because it affects our sensitivity to touch and ability to filter repetitive stimuli, and it’s linked to several human diseases.
  • Researchers discovered that a specific part of the Piezo protein structure is crucial for its inactivation timing and voltage dependence, suggesting a mechanism involving conformational changes in the protein due to voltage shifts.

Article Abstract

Piezo proteins form mechanically activated ion channels that are responsible for our sense of light touch, proprioception, and vascular blood flow. Upon activation by mechanical stimuli, Piezo channels rapidly inactivate in a voltage-dependent manner through an unknown mechanism. Inactivation of Piezo channels is physiologically important, as it modulates overall mechanical sensitivity, gives rise to frequency filtering of repetitive mechanical stimuli, and is itself the target of numerous human disease-related channelopathies that are not well understood mechanistically. Here, we identify the globular C-terminal extracellular domain as a structure that is sufficient to confer the time course of inactivation and a single positively charged lysine residue at the adjacent inner pore helix as being required for its voltage dependence. Our results are consistent with a mechanism for inactivation that is mediated through voltage-dependent conformations of the inner pore helix and allosteric coupling with the C-terminal extracellular domain.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5938756PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2017.10.120DOI Listing

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