Dalton Cardiovascular Research Center, University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia, MO, USA.
Biophys J. 2013 Feb 19;104(4):786-97. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2012.12.048.
Previous cysteine scanning studies of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) chloride channel have identified several transmembrane segments (TMs), including TM1, 3, 6, 9, and 12, as structural components of the pore. Some of these TMs such as TM6 and 12 may also be involved in gating conformational changes. However, recent results on TM1 seem puzzling in that the observed reactive pattern was quite different from those seen with TM6 and 12. In addition, whether TM1 also plays a role in gating motions remains largely unknown. Here, we investigated CFTR's TM1 by applying methanethiosulfonate (MTS) reagents from both cytoplasmic and extracellular sides of the membrane. Our experiments identified four positive positions, E92, K95, Q98, and L102, when the negatively charged MTSES was applied from the cytoplasmic side. Intriguingly, these four residues reside in the extracellular half of TM1 in previously defined CFTR topology; we thus extended our scanning to residues located extracellularly to L102. We found that cysteines introduced into positions 106, 107, and 109 indeed react with extracellularly applied MTS probes, but not to intracellularly applied reagents. Interestingly, whole-cell A107C-CFTR currents were very sensitive to changes of bath pH as if the introduced cysteine assumes an altered pKa-like T338C in TM6. These findings lead us to propose a revised topology for CFTR's TM1 that spans at least from E92 to Y109. Additionally, side-dependent modifications of these positions indicate a narrow region (L102-I106) that prevents MTS reagents from penetrating the pore, a picture similar to what has been reported for TM6. Moreover, modifications of K95C, Q98C, and L102C exhibit strong state dependency with negligible modification when the channel is closed, suggesting a significant rearrangement of TM1 during CFTR's gating cycle. The structural implications of these findings are discussed in light of the crystal structures of ABC transporters and homology models of CFTR.
先前的囊性纤维化跨膜电导调节因子 (CFTR) 氯离子通道半胱氨酸扫描研究确定了几个跨膜片段 (TMs),包括 TM1、3、6、9 和 12,作为孔的结构组成部分。这些 TMs 中的一些,如 TM6 和 12,也可能参与门控构象变化。然而,最近关于 TM1 的结果令人费解,因为观察到的反应模式与 TM6 和 12 完全不同。此外,TM1 是否也在门控运动中发挥作用仍知之甚少。在这里,我们通过从膜的细胞质侧和细胞外侧应用甲硫磺酸酯 (MTS) 试剂来研究 CFTR 的 TM1。我们的实验确定了四个阳性位置,当带负电荷的 MTSES 从细胞质侧应用时,E92、K95、Q98 和 L102。有趣的是,这四个残基位于先前定义的 CFTR 拓扑结构中 TM1 的细胞外半部分;因此,我们将扫描扩展到位于 L102 细胞外的残基。我们发现,引入位置 106、107 和 109 的半胱氨酸确实与细胞外应用的 MTS 探针反应,但不与细胞内应用的试剂反应。有趣的是,全细胞 A107C-CFTR 电流对浴 pH 的变化非常敏感,就好像引入的半胱氨酸在 TM6 中具有改变的 pKa 样 T338C。这些发现使我们提出了 CFTR TM1 的修订拓扑结构,该结构至少从 E92 延伸到 Y109。此外,这些位置的侧依赖性修饰表明存在一个狭窄的区域(L102-I106),阻止 MTS 试剂穿透孔,这与 TM6 报道的情况类似。此外,当通道关闭时,K95C、Q98C 和 L102C 的修饰具有很强的状态依赖性,修饰程度可忽略不计,这表明在 CFTR 的门控循环中 TM1 发生了重大重排。在讨论这些发现的结构意义时,考虑了 ABC 转运蛋白的晶体结构和 CFTR 的同源模型。