4.4 Article

Anomalous proton selectivity in a large channel: Colicin A

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 47, Issue 6, Pages 1778-1788

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi701900x

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM 29210] Funding Source: Medline

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Some of the bactericidal proteins known as colicins exert their toxic action by forming a large, nonselective channel in the inner membrane of target bacteria. The structure of this channel is unknown. It conducts large ions but has a much smaller conductance than would be expected for a channel of its deduced size. Here we report that the colicin channel, particularly the colicin A channel, is selective for protons over other cations (and anions) by many orders of magnitude. This was deduced from measurements of reversal potentials in pH gradients across planar lipid bilayers containing these channels. For example, in symmetric 0.1 M KC1 with a pH 5/pH 8 gradient across the membrane, the reversal potential of colicin A is -21 mV, rather than 0. Such a result would be unremarkable for a narrow channel but is beyond explanation by current understanding of permeation for a channel of its diameter. For this reason, we re-examined the issue of the diameter of the channel lumen and confirmed that the lumen is indeed too large (similar to 10 angstrom) to select for protons by the amount that we measure. We are thus compelled to propose that an unorthodox mechanism is at work in this protein.

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