Qufei Li, Sherry Wanderling, Marcin Paduch, David Medovoy, Abhishek Singharoy,
Ryan McGreevy, Carlos Villalba-Galea, Raymond E. Hulse, Benoit Roux, Klaus
Schulten, Anthony Kossiakoff, and Eduardo Perozo.
Structural mechanism of voltage-dependent gating in an isolated
voltage-sensing domain.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, 21:244-252, 2014.
(PMC: 4116111)
LI2014
The transduction of transmembrane electric fields into protein motion plays an essential
role in the generation and propagation of cellular signals. Voltage-sensing domains (VSD)
carry out these functions through reorientations of S4 helix with discrete gating charges.
Here, crystal structures of the VSD from Ci-VSP were determined in both, active (Up) and
resting (Down) conformations. The S4 undergoes a 5 Å displacement along its
main axis accompanied by a 60 rotation, consistent with the helix-screw
gating mechanism. This movement is stabilized by a change in countercharge partners in
helices S1 and S3, generating an estimated net charge transfer of 1 e. Gating
charges move relative to a ``hydrophobic gasket" that electrically divides intra and
extracellular compartments. EPR spectroscopy confirms the limited nature of S4 movement
in a membrane environment. These results provide an explicit mechanism for voltage
sensing and set the basis for electromechanical coupling in voltage-dependent cellular
activities.
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