A Central Role for the T1 Domain in Voltage-gated Potassium Channel Formation and Function
To interpret the recent atomic structures of the Kv (voltage-dependent potassium) channel T1 domain in a functional context, we must understand both how the T1 domain is integrated into the full-length functional channel protein and what functional roles the T1 domain governs. The T1 domain clearly...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 2001-07, Vol.276 (30), p.28493-28502 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | To interpret the recent atomic structures of the Kv (voltage-dependent potassium) channel T1 domain in a functional context,
we must understand both how the T1 domain is integrated into the full-length functional channel protein and what functional
roles the T1 domain governs. The T1 domain clearly plays a role in restricting Kv channel subunit heteromultimerization. However,
the importance of T1 tetramerization for the assembly and retention of quarternary structure within full-length channels has
remained controversial. Here we describe a set of mutations that disrupt both T1 assembly and the formation of functional
channels and show that these mutations produce elevated levels of the subunit monomer that becomes subject to degradation
within the cell. In addition, our experiments reveal that the T1 domain lends stability to the full-length channel structure,
because channels lacking the T1 containing N terminus are more easily denatured to monomers. The integration of the T1 domain
ultrastructure into the full-length channel was probed by proteolytic mapping with immobilized trypsin. Trypsin cleavage yields
an N-terminal fragment that is further digested to a tetrameric domain, which remains reactive with antisera to T1, and that
is similar in size to the T1 domain used for crystallographic studies. The trypsin-sensitive linkages retaining the T1 domain
are cleaved somewhat slowly over hours. Therefore, they seem to be intermediate in trypsin resistance between the rapidly
cleaved extracellular linker between the first and second transmembrane domains, and the highly resistant T1 core, and are
likely to be partially structured or contain dynamic structure. Our experiments suggest that tetrameric atomic models obtained
for the T1 domain do reflect a structure that the T1 domain sequence forms early in channel assembly to drive subunit protein
tetramerization and that this structure is retained as an integrated stabilizing structural element within the full-length
functional channel. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.M010540200 |