4.6 Article

Contribution of transmembrane regions to ATP-gated P2X2 channel permeability dynamics

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 280, Issue 7, Pages 6118-6129

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M411324200

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ATP-gated P2X(2) channels undergo activation-dependent permeability increases as they proceed from the selective I-1 state to the I-2 state that is readily permeable to organic cations. There are two main models about how permeability changes may occur. The first proposes that permeability change-competent P2X channels are clustered or redistribute to form such regions in response to ATP. The second proposes that permeability changes occur because of an intrinsic conformational change in P2X channels. In the present study we experimentally tested these views with total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy, electrophysiology, and mutational perturbation analysis. We found no evidence for clusters of P2X(2) channels within the plasma membrane or for cluster formation in response to ATP, suggesting that channel clustering is not an obligatory requirement for permeability changes. We next sought to identify determinants of putative intrinsic conformational changes in P2X(2) channels by mapping the transmembrane domain regions involved in the transition from the relatively selective I-1 state to the dilated I-2 state. Initial channel opening to the I-1 state was only weakly affected by Ala substitutions, whereas dramatic effects were observed for the higher permeability I-2 state. Ten residues appeared to perturb only the I-1-I-2 transition (Phe(31), Arg(34), Gln(37), Lys(53), Ile(32)8, Ile(332), Ser(340), Gly(342), Trp(350), Leu(352)), The data favor the hypothesis that permeability changes occur because of permissive motions at the interface between first and second transmembrane domains of neighboring subunits in pre-existing P2X(2) channels.

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