The long-term goal of the laboratory is to gain a structural understanding of the molecular organization and function of biological macromolecules at the biological membrane interface. Our focus of this study is to understand physical mechanisms of ion selectivity, conductance regulation, channel gating of ion channel proteins, and the structural basis of molecular specificity for oligomerization by X-ray crystallography. The first specific goal is to determine the three-dimensional structure of the tetramerization domain of Shaker potassium channel. We have obtained three-dimensional crystals of the soluble domain of this channel that diffract X-ray beyond 2.0 Angstroms. Crystals belong to the space group I4 with one subunit molecule per asymmetric unit. We have also obtained three-dimensional crystals of the soluble, domain of a channel from a different subfamily of potassium channel Shaw that diffract X-ray to about 3.0 Angstroms. The second specific goal is to determine the atomic structure of an inwardly rectifying potassium channel ROMK1 from rat kidney. Towards this goal, the underlying hypothesis of our novel strategy is that the lipid- facing exterior of a channel protein can be mutated systematically without perturbing its channel function. Site-directed mutagenesis was used as a perturbation method in order to identify the lipid-facing residues. Based on this study, simultaneous changes have been introduced at sites in its transmembrane lipid-facing exterior of the channel, which do not alter the channel function. The surface of this exterior-modified channel has a sequence motif known to form a specific helix-to-helix interaction, through which the exterior-modified channel itself is solubilized by binding of synthetic amphipathic peptides to the channel exterior in the aqueous phase without the use of detergents. Understanding the structural basis for tetramerization will provide an essential knowledge on the physical nature of channel diversity. From the atomic model of the ROMK1 channel, we seek to establish the exterior- modification strategy that will be generally applicable to structural studies of a variety of integral membrane proteins such as ion channels and transmembrane receptors.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01GM056653-01
Application #
2439703
Study Section
Physical Biochemistry Study Section (PB)
Project Start
1997-03-01
Project End
1999-02-28
Budget Start
1997-03-01
Budget End
1998-02-28
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
1997
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Salk Institute for Biological Studies
Department
Type
DUNS #
005436803
City
La Jolla
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
92037
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Aryal, Prafulla; Dvir, Hay; Choe, Senyon et al. (2009) A discrete alcohol pocket involved in GIRK channel activation. Nat Neurosci 12:988-95
Kuo, Mario Meng-Chiang; Maslennikov, Innokentiy; Molden, Brent et al. (2008) The desensitization gating of the MthK K+ channel is governed by its cytoplasmic amino terminus. PLoS Biol 6:e223
Baker, Kent A; Tzitzilonis, Christos; Kwiatkowski, Witek et al. (2007) Conformational dynamics of the KcsA potassium channel governs gating properties. Nat Struct Mol Biol 14:1089-95
Roosild, Tarmo P; Choe, Senyon (2005) Redesigning an integral membrane K+ channel into a soluble protein. Protein Eng Des Sel 18:79-84
Roosild, Tarmo P; Greenwald, Jason; Vega, Mark et al. (2005) NMR structure of Mistic, a membrane-integrating protein for membrane protein expression. Science 307:1317-21
Zhou, Wei; Qian, Yan; Kunjilwar, Kumud et al. (2004) Structural insights into the functional interaction of KChIP1 with Shal-type K(+) channels. Neuron 41:573-86
Nanao, Max H; Zhou, Wei; Pfaffinger, Paul J et al. (2003) Determining the basis of channel-tetramerization specificity by x-ray crystallography and a sequence-comparison algorithm: Family Values (FamVal). Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 100:8670-5
Roosild, Tarmo P; Miller, Samantha; Booth, Ian R et al. (2002) A mechanism of regulating transmembrane potassium flux through a ligand-mediated conformational switch. Cell 109:781-91

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