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Ion conduction and conformational flexibility of a bacterial voltage-gated sodium channel

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 18:03 authored by Celine Boiteux, Igor Vorobyov, Toby AllenToby Allen
Voltage-gated Na+ channels play an essential role in electrical signaling in the nervous system and are key pharmacological targets for a range of disorders. The recent solution of X-ray structures for the bacterial channel NavAb has provided an opportunity to study functional mechanisms at the atomic level. This channel's selectivity filter exhibits an EEEE ring sequence, characteristic of mammalian Ca2+, not Na+, channels. This raises the fundamentally important question: just what makes a Na+ channel conduct Na+ ions? Here we explore ion permeation on multimicrosecond timescales using the purpose-built Anton supercomputer. We isolate the likely protonation states of the EEEE ring and observe a striking flexibility of the filter that demonstrates the necessity for extended simulations to study conduction in this channel. We construct free energy maps to reveal complex multi-ion conduction via knock-on and pass-by mechanisms, involving concerted ion and glutamate side chain movements. Simulations in mixed ionic solutions reveal relative energetics for Na+, K+, and Ca2+ within the pore that are consistent with the modest selectivity seen experimentally. We have observed conformational changes in the pore domain leading to asymmetrical collapses of the activation gate, similar to proposed inactivated structures of NavAb, with helix bending involving conserved residues that are critical for slow inactivation. These structural changes are shown to regulate access to fenestrations suggested to be pathways for lipophilic drugs and provide deeper insight into the molecular mechanisms connecting drug activity and slow inactivation.

History

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Volume

111

Issue

9

Start page

3454

End page

3459

Total pages

6

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 National Academy of Sciences

Former Identifier

2006051057

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-04-17

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