4.8 Article

Electromechanical coupling in the hyperpolarization-activated K+ channel KAT1

Journal

NATURE
Volume 583, Issue 7814, Pages 145-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2335-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC) through National Institutes of Health [R01GM116961]
  2. National Cancer Institute's National Cryo-EM Facility at the Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research
  3. Consortium for Membrane Protein Dynamics
  4. [R01GM088406]
  5. [F30MH116647]
  6. [T32GM007281]

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Voltage-gated potassium (K-v) channels coordinate electrical signalling and control cell volume by gating in response to membrane depolarization or hyperpolarization. However, although voltage-sensing domains transduce transmembrane electric field changes by a common mechanism involving the outward or inward translocation of gating charges(1-3), the general determinants of channel gating polarity remain poorly understood(4). Here we suggest a molecular mechanism for electromechanical coupling and gating polarity in non-domain-swapped K-v channels on the basis of the cryo-electron microscopy structure of KAT1, the hyperpolarization-activated K-v channel from Arabidopsis thaliana. KAT1 displays a depolarized voltage sensor, which interacts with a closed pore domain directly via two interfaces and indirectly via an intercalated phospholipid. Functional evaluation of KAT1 structure-guided mutants at the sensor-pore interfaces suggests a mechanism in which direct interaction between the sensor and the C-linker hairpin in the adjacent pore subunit is the primary determinant of gating polarity. We suggest that an inward motion of the S4 sensor helix of approximately 5-7 angstrom can underlie a direct-coupling mechanism, driving a conformational reorientation of the C-linker and ultimately opening the activation gate formed by the S6 intracellular bundle. This direct-coupling mechanism contrasts with allosteric mechanisms proposed for hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated channels(5), and may represent an unexpected link between depolarization- and hyperpolarization-activated channels. The cryo-electron microscopy structure of the hyperpolarization-activated K+ channel KAT1 points to a direct-coupling mechanism between S4 movement and the reorientation of the C-linker.

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