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Ion currents through Kir potassium channels are gated by anionic lipids

Authors :
Paul Johnson
Peter M. Colman
Jani Reddy Bolla
Jacqueline M. Gulbis
Ruitao Jin
Brian J. Smith
Oliver B. Clarke
Agalya Periasamy
Di Wu
Peter E. Czabotar
Sitong He
Derek R. Laver
Ahmad Wardak
Carol V. Robinson
Katrina A. Black
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Ion currents through potassium channels are gated. Constriction of the ion conduction pathway at the inner helix bundle, the textbook ‘gate’ of Kir potassium channels, has been shown to be an ineffective permeation control, creating a rift in our understanding of how these channels are gated. Here we present the first evidence that anionic lipids act as interactive response elements sufficient to gate potassium conduction. We demonstrate the limiting barrier to K+ permeation lies within the ion conduction pathway and show that this ‘gate’ is operated by the fatty acyl tails of lipids that infiltrate the conduction pathway via fenestrations in the walls of the pore. Acyl tails occupying a surface groove extending from the cytosolic interface to the conduction pathway provide a potential means of relaying cellular signals, mediated by anionic lipid head groups bound at the canonical lipid binding site, to the internal gate.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........fdda3d0f0828013151fa8d078f10e0ef
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.09.21.461288