4.8 Article

Cross-linking of Orai1 channels by STIM proteins

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1720810115

Keywords

calcium signals; Orai channels; STIM1 protein; STIM2.1 protein; calcium oscillation

Funding

  1. NIH R01 Grant [GM120783, GM109279]
  2. NIH F31 Predoctoral Fellowship [GM125376]
  3. Penn State University Junior Faculty Development Program grant
  4. [DFG-SFB894/A2]
  5. NATIONAL HEART, LUNG, AND BLOOD INSTITUTE [R01HL123364, R01HL097111] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  6. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES [F31GM125376, R01GM120783, R01GM109279] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  7. NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING [R21AG050072] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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The transmembrane docking of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+-sensing STIM proteins with plasma membrane (PM) Orai Ca2+ channels is a critical but poorly understood step in Ca2+ signal generation. STIM1 protein dimers unfold to expose a discrete STIM-Orai activating region (SOAR1) that tethers and activates Orai1 channels within discrete ER-PM junctions. We reveal that each monomer within the SOAR dimer interacts independently with single Orai1 subunits to mediate cross-linking between Orai1 channels. Superresolution imaging and mobility measured by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching reveal that SOAR dimer cross-linking leads to substantial Orai1 channel clustering, resulting in increased efficacy and cooperativity of Orai1 channel function. A concatenated SOAR1 heterodimer containing one monomer point mutated at its critical Orai1 binding residue (F394H), although fully activating Orai channels, is completely defective in cross-linking Orai1 channels. Importantly, the naturally occurring STIM2 variant, STIM2.1, has an eight-amino acid insert in its SOAR unit that renders it functionally identical to the F394H mutant in SOAR1. Contrary to earlier predictions, the SOAR1-SOAR2.1 heterodimer fully activates Orai1 channels but prevents cross-linking and clustering of channels. Interestingly, combined expression of full-length STIM1 with STIM2.1 in a 5: 1 ratio causes suppression of sustained agonist-induced Ca2+ oscillations and protects cells from Ca2+ overload, resulting from high agonist-induced Ca2+ release. Thus, STIM2.1 exerts a powerful regulatory effect on signal generation likely through preventing Orai1 channel crosslinking. Overall, STIM-mediated cross-linking of Orai1 channels is a hitherto unrecognized functional paradigm that likely provides an organizational microenvironment within ER-PM junctions with important functional impact on Ca2+ signal generation.

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