4.8 Article

A voltage-gated proton-selective channel lacking the pore domain

Journal

NATURE
Volume 440, Issue 7088, Pages 1213-1216

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature04700

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Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Funding Source: Medline
  2. NHLBI NIH HHS [T32 HL007572] Funding Source: Medline

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Voltage changes across the cell membrane control the gating of many cation-selective ion channels. Conserved from bacteria to humans(1), the voltage-gated-ligand superfamily of ion channels are encoded as polypeptide chains of six transmembrane-spanning segments (S1-S6). S1-S4 functions as a self-contained voltage-sensing domain (VSD), in essence a positively charged lever that moves in response to voltage changes. The VSD 'ligand' transmits force via a linker to the S5-S6 pore domain 'receptor'(2), thereby opening or closing the channel. The ascidian VSD protein Ci-VSP gates a phosphatase activity rather than a channel pore, indicating that VSDs function independently of ion channels(3). Here we describe a mammalian VSD protein (H(V)1) that lacks a discernible pore domain but is sufficient for expression of a voltage-sensitive proton-selective ion channel activity. H(v)1 currents are activated at depolarizing voltages, sensitive to the transmembrane pH gradient, H+-selective, and Zn2+-sensitive. Mutagenesis of H(v)1 identified three arginine residues in S4 that regulate channel gating and two histidine residues that are required for extracellular inhibition of H(v)1 by Zn2+. H(v)1 is expressed in immune tissues and manifests the characteristic properties of native proton conductances (G(vH+)). In phagocytic leukocytes(4), G(vH+) are required to support the oxidative burst that underlies microbial killing by the innate immune system(4,5). The data presented here identify H(v)1 as a long-sought voltage-gated H+ channel and establish H(v)1 as the founding member of a family of mammalian VSD proteins.

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