Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Novel Dimeric hHv1 Model and Structural Bioinformatic Analysis Reveal an ATP-Binding Site Resulting in a Channel Activating Effect

Manuel A. Llanos, Clara Ventura, Pedro Martin, Juan I. Felice, Luciana Gavernet, Veronica Milesi, Nicolas Enrique

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL INFORMATION AND MODELING(2022)

Cited 3|Views28
No score
Abstract
The human voltage-gated proton channel (hHv1) is a highly selective ion channel codified by the HVCN1 gene. It plays a fundamental role in several physiological processes such as innate and adaptive immunity, insulin secretion, and sperm capacitation. Moreover, in humans, a higher hHv1 expression/function has been reported in several types of cancer cells. Here we report a multitemplate homology model of the hHv1 channel, built and refined as a dimer in Rosetta. The model was then subjected to extensive Gaussian accelerated molecular dynamics (GaMD) for enhanced conformational sampling, and representative snapshots were extracted by clustering analysis. Combining different structure- and sequence-based methodologies, we predicted a putative ATP-binding site located on the intracellular portion of the channel. Furthermore, GaMD simulations of the ATP-bound dimeric hHv1 model showed that ATP interacts with a cluster of positively charged residues from the cytoplasmic N and C terminal segments. According to the in silico predictions, we found that 3 mM intracellular ATP significantly increases the H+ current mediated by the hHv1 channel expressed in HEK293 cells and measured by the patch-clamp technique in an inside-out configuration (2.86 +/- 0.63 fold over control at +40 mV). When ATP was added on the extracellular side, it was not able to activate the channel supporting the idea that the ATP-binding site resides in the intracellular face of the hHV1 channel. In a physiological and pathophysiological context, this ATP-mediated modulation could integrate the cell metabolic state with the H+ efflux, especially in cells where hHv1 channels are relevant for pH regulation, such as pancreatic beta-cells, immune cells, and cancer cells.
More
Translated text
Key words
structural bioinformatic analysis,atp-binding
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined