Inwardly rectifying potassium channels (version 2019.4) in the IUPHAR/BPS Guide to Pharmacology Database
IUPHAR/BPS Guide to Pharmacology CITE University of Edinburgh 2019:4 (2019)
A heuristic derived from analysis of the ion channel structural proteome permits the rapid identification of hydrophobic gates
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences National Academy of Sciences (2019)
Abstract:
Ion channel proteins control ionic flux across biological membranes through conformational changes in their transmembrane pores. An exponentially increasing number of channel structures captured in different conformational states are now being determined; however, these newly resolved structures are commonly classified as either open or closed based solely on the physical dimensions of their pore, and it is now known that more accurate annotation of their conductive state requires additional assessment of the effect of pore hydrophobicity. A narrow hydrophobic gate region may disfavor liquid-phase water, leading to local dewetting, which will form an energetic barrier to water and ion permeation without steric occlusion of the pore. Here we quantify the combined influence of radius and hydrophobicity on pore dewetting by applying molecular dynamics simulations and machine learning to nearly 200 ion channel structures. This allows us to propose a simple simulation-free heuristic model that rapidly and accurately predicts the presence of hydrophobic gates. This not only enables the functional annotation of new channel structures as soon as they are determined, but also may facilitate the design of novel nanopores controlled by hydrophobic gates.CHAP: A Versatile Tool for the Structural and Functional Annotation of Ion Channel Pores.
Journal of molecular biology (2019)
Abstract:
The control of ion channel permeation requires the modulation of energetic barriers or "gates" within their pores. However, such barriers are often simply identified from the physical dimensions of the pore. Such approaches have worked well in the past,but there is now evidence that the unusual behaviour of water within narrow hydrophobic pores can produce an energetic barrier to permeation without requiring steric occlusion of the pathway. Many different ion channels have now been shown to exploit "hydrophobic gating" to regulate ion flow, and it is clear that new tools are required for more accurate functional annotation of the increasing number of ion channel structures becoming available. We have previously shown how molecular dynamics simulations of water can be used as a proxy to predict hydrophobic gates, and we now present a new and highly versatile computational tool, the Channel Annotation Package (CHAP) that implements this methodology.A pharmacological master key mechanism that unlocks the selectivity filter gate in K+ channels
Science American Association for the Advancement of Science 363:6429 (2019) 875-880
Abstract:
A Pharmacological Masterkey Mechanism to Unlock the Selectivity Filter Gate in K+ Channels
Biophysical Journal Elsevier 116:3 (2019) 301a-302a