4.3 Article

Determinants of ion selectivity in ASIC1a-and ASIC2a-containing acid-sensing ion channels

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 152, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1085/jgp.201812297

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Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council [APP1104259, APP1141974]
  2. National Institutes of Health [U01-HL126273-01/02/03]
  3. Australian Research Council [DP170101732]
  4. National Computational Initiative [dd7]
  5. Medical Advances Without Animals Trust
  6. Lundbeckfonden [R171-2014-558, R139-2012-12390]
  7. Danish Council for Independent Research [4092-00348B]
  8. Carlsbergfondet [2013_01_0439]

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Trimeric acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs) contribute to neuronal signaling by converting extracellular acidification into excitatory sodium currents. Previous work with homomeric ASIC1a implicates conserved leucine (L79) and consecutive glycine-alanine-serine (GAS belt) residues near the middle, and conserved negatively charged (E189) residues at the bottom of the pore in ion permeation and/or selectivity. However, a conserved mechanism of ion selectivity throughout the ASIC family has not been established. We therefore explored the molecular determinants of ion selectivity in heteromeric ASIC1a/ASIC2a and homomeric ASIC2a channels using site-directed mutagenesis, electrophysiology, and molecular dynamics free energy simulations. Similar to ASIC1a, E189 residues create an energetic preference for sodium ions at the lower end of the pore in ASIC2a-containing channels. However, and in contrast to ASIC1a homomers, ion permeation through ASIC2a-containing channels is not determined by L79 side chains in the upper part of the channel. This may be, in part, due to ASIC2a-specific negatively charged residues (E59 and E62) that lower the energy of ions in the upper pore, thus making the GAS belt more important for selectivity. This is confirmed by experiments showing that the L79A mutation has no effect in ASIC2a, in contrast to ASIC1a, where it eliminated selectivity. ASIC2a triple mutants eliminating both L79 and upper charges did not lead to large changes in selectivity, suggesting a different role for L79 in ASIC2a compared with ASIC1a channels. In contrast, we observed measurable changes in ion selectivity in ASIC2a-containing channels with GAS belt mutations. Our results suggest that ion conduction and selectivity in the upper part of the ASIC pore may differ between subtypes, whereas the essential role of E189 in ion selectivity is conserved. Furthermore, we demonstrate that heteromeric channels containing mutations in only one of two ASIC subtypes provide a means of functionally testing mutations that render homomeric channels nonfunctional.

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