Litcius/Paper detail

Dissection of the structure–function relationship of Na <sub>v</sub> channels

Zhangqiang Li, Qiurong Wu, Gaoxingyu Huang, Xueqin Jin, Jiaao Li, Xiaojing Pan, Nieng Yan

2024Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Voltage-gated sodium channels (Na v ) undergo conformational shifts in response to membrane potential changes, a mechanism known as the electromechanical coupling. To delineate the structure–function relationship of human Na v channels, we have performed systematic structural analysis using human Na v 1.7 as a prototype. Guided by the structural differences between wild-type (WT) Na v 1.7 and an eleven mutation-containing variant, designated Na v 1.7-M11, we generated three additional intermediate mutants and solved their structures at overall resolutions of 2.9–3.4 Å. The mutant with nine-point mutations in the pore domain (PD), named Na v 1.7-M9, has a reduced cavity volume and a sealed gate, with all voltage-sensing domains (VSDs) remaining up. Structural comparison of WT and Na v 1.7-M9 pinpoints two residues that may be critical to the tightening of the PD. However, the variant containing these two mutations, Na v 1.7-M2, or even in combination with two additional mutations in the VSDs, named Na v 1.7-M4, failed to tighten the PD. Our structural analysis reveals a tendency of PD contraction correlated with the right shift of the static inactivation I–V curves. We predict that the channel in the resting state should have a “tight” PD with down VSDs.

Topics & Concepts

MutantPoint mutationMutationBiophysicsChemistryCrystallographyIntermediate stateWild typeMembrane potentialSodium channelSodiumGeneBiologyPhysicsBiochemistryOrganic chemistryAtomic physicsIon channel regulation and functionAdvanced Memory and Neural ComputingNeuroscience and Neural Engineering