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Mechanical activation opens a lipid-lined pore in OSCA ion channels.

Authors :
Han, Yaoyao
Zhou, Zijing
Jin, Ruitao
Dai, Fei
Ge, Yifan
Ju, Xisan
Ma, Xiaonuo
He, Sitong
Yuan, Ling
Wang, Yingying
Yang, Wei
Yue, Xiaomin
Chen, Zhongwen
Sun, Yadong
Corry, Ben
Cox, Charles D.
Zhang, Yixiao
Source :
Nature; Apr2024, Vol. 628 Issue 8009, p910-918, 9p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

OSCA/TMEM63 channels are the largest known family of mechanosensitive channels1–3, playing critical roles in plant4–7 and mammalian8,9 mechanotransduction. Here we determined 44 cryogenic electron microscopy structures of OSCA/TMEM63 channels in different environments to investigate the molecular basis of OSCA/TMEM63 channel mechanosensitivity. In nanodiscs, we mimicked increased membrane tension and observed a dilated pore with membrane access in one of the OSCA1.2 subunits. In liposomes, we captured the fully open structure of OSCA1.2 in the inside-in orientation, in which the pore shows a large lateral opening to the membrane. Unusually for ion channels, structural, functional and computational evidence supports the existence of a ‘proteo-lipidic pore’ in which lipids act as a wall of the ion permeation pathway. In the less tension-sensitive homologue OSCA3.1, we identified an ‘interlocking’ lipid tightly bound in the central cleft, keeping the channel closed. Mutation of the lipid-coordinating residues induced OSCA3.1 activation, revealing a conserved open conformation of OSCA channels. Our structures provide a global picture of the OSCA channel gating cycle, uncover the importance of bound lipids and show that each subunit can open independently. This expands both our understanding of channel-mediated mechanotransduction and channel pore formation, with important mechanistic implications for the TMEM16 and TMC protein families.The molecular basis of OSCA/TMEM63 channel mechanosensitivity was investigated by determining 44 cryogenic electron microscopy structures of channels in different environments, expanding understanding of channel-mediated mechanotransduction and pore formation, with implications for two protein families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
628
Issue :
8009
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176885466
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07256-9