Unwinding and spiral sliding of S4 and domain rotation of VSD during the electromechanical coupling in Nav1.7

Author:

Huang Gaoxingyu12,Wu Qiurong3,Li Zhangqiang3,Jin Xueqin3,Huang Xiaoshuang3,Wu Tong3,Pan Xiaojing3,Yan Nieng3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Westlake Laboratory of Life Sciences and Biomedicine, Key Laboratory of Structural Biology of Zhejiang Province, School of Life Sciences, Westlake University, Hangzhou 310024, China

2. Institute of Biology, Westlake Institute for Advanced Study, Hangzhou 310024, China

3. State Key Laboratory of Membrane Biology, Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Structural Biology, Tsinghua-Peking Joint Center for Life Sciences, School of Life Sciences, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China

Abstract

Voltage-gated sodium (Nav) channel Nav1.7 has been targeted for the development of nonaddictive pain killers. Structures of Nav1.7 in distinct functional states will offer an advanced mechanistic understanding and aid drug discovery. Here we report the cryoelectron microscopy analysis of a human Nav1.7 variant that, with 11 rationally introduced point mutations, has a markedly right-shifted activation voltage curve with V1/2reaching 69 mV. The voltage-sensing domain in the first repeat (VSDI) in a 2.7-Å resolution structure displays a completely down (deactivated) conformation. Compared to the structure of WT Nav1.7, three gating charge (GC) residues in VSDIare transferred to the cytosolic side through a combination of helix unwinding and spiral sliding of S4Iand ∼20° domain rotation. A conserved WNФФD motif on the cytoplasmic end of S3I stabilizes the down conformation of VSDI. One GC residue is transferred in VSDIImainly through helix sliding. Accompanying GC transfer in VSDIand VSDII, rearrangement and contraction of the intracellular gate is achieved through concerted movements of adjacent segments, including S4-5I, S4-5II, S5II, and all S6 segments. Our studies provide important insight into the electromechanical coupling mechanism of the single-chain voltage-gated ion channels and afford molecular interpretations for a number of pain-associated mutations whose pathogenic mechanism cannot be revealed from previously reported Navstructures.

Funder

BMSTC | Beijing Nova Program

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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