Interactions between selectivity filter and pore helix control filter gating in the MthK channel

Author:

Kopec Wojciech1ORCID,Thomson Andrew S.2ORCID,de Groot Bert L.1ORCID,Rothberg Brad S.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Computational Biomolecular Dynamics Group, Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences 1 , Göttingen, Germany

2. Temple University Lewis Katz School of Medicine 2 Department of Medical Genetics and Molecular Biochemistry, , Philadelphia, PA, USA

Abstract

K+ channel activity can be limited by C-type inactivation, which is likely initiated in part by dissociation of K+ ions from the selectivity filter and modulated by the side chains that surround it. While crystallographic and computational studies have linked inactivation to a “collapsed” selectivity filter conformation in the KcsA channel, the structural basis for selectivity filter gating in other K+ channels is less clear. Here, we combined electrophysiological recordings with molecular dynamics simulations, to study selectivity filter gating in the model potassium channel MthK and its V55E mutant (analogous to KcsA E71) in the pore-helix. We found that MthK V55E has a lower open probability than the WT channel, due to decreased stability of the open state, as well as a lower unitary conductance. Simulations account for both of these variables on the atomistic scale, showing that ion permeation in V55E is altered by two distinct orientations of the E55 side chain. In the “vertical” orientation, in which E55 forms a hydrogen bond with D64 (as in KcsA WT channels), the filter displays reduced conductance compared to MthK WT. In contrast, in the “horizontal” orientation, K+ conductance is closer to that of MthK WT; although selectivity filter stability is lowered, resulting in more frequent inactivation. Surprisingly, inactivation in MthK WT and V55E is associated with a widening of the selectivity filter, unlike what is observed for KcsA and reminisces recent structures of inactivated channels, suggesting a conserved inactivation pathway across the potassium channel family.

Funder

German Research Foundation

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Physiology

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