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Determining structural transitions that occur upon gating a bacterial mechanosensitive channelBartlett, Jessica Louise. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.) -- University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, 2006. / Embargoed. Vita. Bibliography: 134-139.
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Characterization of histidine-tagged NaChBac ion channelsKhatchadourian, Rafael Aharon. January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Insights into the structural nature of the transition state in the Kir channel gating pathwayFowler, P.W., Bollepalli, M.K., Rapedius, M., Nematian-Ardestani, E., Shang, Lijun, Sansom, M.S.P., Tucker, S.J., Baukrowitz, T. 2014 October 1930 (has links)
Yes / In a previous study we identified an extensive gating network within the inwardly rectifying Kir1.1 (ROMK) channel by combining systematic scanning mutagenesis and functional analysis with structural models of the channel in the closed, pre-open and open states. This extensive network appeared to stabilize the open and pre-open states, but the network fragmented upon channel closure. In this study we have analyzed the gating kinetics of different mutations within key parts of this gating network. These results suggest that the structure of the transition state (TS), which connects the pre-open and closed states of the channel, more closely resembles the structure of the pre-open state. Furthermore, the G-loop, which occurs at the center of this extensive gating network, appears to become unstructured in the TS because mutations within this region have a 'catalytic' effect upon the channel gating kinetics. / Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft,
the Wellcome Trust (083547/
Z/07/Z and 092970/Z/10/Z) and the
British Heart Foundation (PG/09/016/
26992).
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Functional remodeling of the cardiac glycome throughout the developing myocardium /Montpetit, Marty L. January 2008 (has links)
Dissertation (Ph.D.)--University of South Florida, 2008. / Includes vita. Also available online. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 121-140).
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Sigma receptors modulation of voltage-gated ion channels in rat autonomic neurons /Zhang, Hongling, January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of South Florida, 2005. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 128-144). Also available online.
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Molecular determinants of gating at the potassium channel selectivity filterCordero-Morales, Julio F. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Virginia, 2008. / Title from title page. Includes bibliographical references. Also available online through Digital Dissertations.
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Gating of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) chloride channels by nucleoside triphosphatesZeltwanger, Shawn January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri--Columbia, 1998. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (l. 140-148). Also available on the Internet.
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Structural and Functional Studies of the KCNQ1-KCNE K<sup>+</sup> Channel Complex: A DissertationGage, Steven D. 09 September 2008 (has links)
KCNQ1 is a homotetrameric voltage-gated potassium channel expressed in cardiomyocytes and epithelial tissues. However, currents arising from KCNQ1 have never been physiologically observed. KCNQ1 is able to provide the diverse potassium conductances required by these distinct cell types through coassembly with and modulation by type I transmembrane β-subunits of the KCNE gene family.
KCNQ1-KCNE K+ channels play important physiological roles. In cardiac tissues the association of KCNQ1 with KCNE1 gives rise to IKs, the slow delayed outwardly rectifying potassium current. IKs is in part responsible for repolarizing heart muscle, and is therefore crucial in maintaining normal heart rhymicity. IKschannels help terminate each action potential and provide cardiac repolarization reserve. As such, mutations in either subunit can lead to Romano-Ward Syndrome or Jervell and Lange-Nielsen Syndrome, two forms of Q-T prolongation. In epithelial cells, KCNQ1-KCNE1, KCNQ1-KCNE2 and KCNQ1-KCNE3 give rise to potassium currents required for potassium recycling and secretion. These functions arise because the biophysical properties of KCNQ1 are always dramatically altered by KCNE co-expression.
We wanted to understand how KCNE peptides are able to modulate KCNQ1. In Chapter II, we produce partial truncations of KCNE3 and demonstrate the transmembrane domain is necessary and sufficient for both assembly with and modulation of KCNQ1. Comparing these results with published results obtained from chimeric KCNE peptides and partial deletion mutants of KCNE1, we propose a bipartite modulation residing in KCNE peptides. Transmembrane modulation is either active (KCNE3) or permissive (KCNE1). Active transmembrane KCNE modulation masks juxtamembranous C-terminal modulation of KCNQ1, while permissive modulation allows C-terminal modulation of KCNQ1 to express. We test our hypothesis, and demonstrate C-terminal Long QT point mutants in KCNE1 can be masked by active trasnsmembrane modulation.
Having confirmed the importance the C-terminus of KCNE1, we continue with two projects designed to elucidate KCNE1 C-terminal structure. In Chapter III we conduct an alanine-perturbation scan within the C-terminus. C-terminal KCNE1 alanine point mutations result in changes in the free energy for the KCNQ1-KCNE1 channel complex. High-impact point mutants cluster in an arrangement consistent with an alphahelical secondary structure, "kinked" by a single proline residue. In Chapter IV, we use oxidant-mediated disulfide bond formation between non-native cysteine residues to demonstrate amino acid side chains residing within the C-terminal domain of KCNE1 are close and juxtaposed to amino acid side chains on the cytoplasmic face of the KCNQ1 pore domain. Many of the amino acids identified as high impact through alanine perturbation correspond with residues identified as able to form disulfide bonds with KCNQ1. Taken together, we demonstrate that the interaction between the C-terminus of KCNE1 and the pore domain of KCNQ1 is required for the proper modulation of KCNQ1 by KCNE1, and by extension, normal IKs function and heart rhymicity.
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K+ channels : gating mechanisms and lipid interactionsSchmidt, Matthias Rene January 2013 (has links)
Computational methods, including homology modelling, in-silico dockings, and molecular dynamics simulations have been used to study the functional dynamics and interactions of K<sup>+</sup> channels. Molecular models were built of the inwardly rectifying K<sup>+</sup> channel Kir2.2, the bacterial homolog K<sup>+</sup> channel KirBac3.1, and the twin pore (K2P) K<sup>+</sup> channels TREK-1 and TRESK. To investigate the electrostatic energy profile of K<sup>+</sup> permeating through these homology models, continuum electrostatic calculations were performed. The primary mechanism of KirBac3.1 gating is believed to involve an opening at the helix bundle crossing (HBC). However, simulations of Kir channels have not yet revealed opening at the HBC. Here, in simulations of the new KirBac3.1-S129R X-ray crystal structure, in which the HBC was trapped open by the S129R mutation in the inner pore-lining helix (TM2), the HBC was found to exhibit considerable mobility. In a simulation of the new KirBac3.1-S129R-S205L double mutant structure, if the S129R and the S205L mutations were converted back to the wild-type serine, the HBC would close faster than in the simulations of the KirBac3.1-S129R single mutant structure. The double mutant structure KirBac3.1-S129R-S205L therefore likely represents a higher-energy state than the single mutant KirBac3.1-S129R structure, and these simulations indicate a staged pathway of gating in KirBac channels. Molecular modelling and MD simulations of the Kir2.2 channel structure demonstrated that the HBC would tend to open if the C-linker between the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domain was modelled helical. The electrostatic energy barrier for K<sup>+</sup> permeation at the helix bundle crossing was found to be sensitive to subtle structural changes in the C-linker. Charge neutralization or charge reversal of the PIP2-binding residue R186 on the C-linker decreased the electrostatic barrier for K<sup>+</sup> permeation through the HBC, suggesting an electrostatic contribution to the PIP2-dependent gating mechanism. Multi-scale simulations determined the PIP2 binding site in Kir2.2, in good agreement with crystallographic predictions. A TREK-1 homology model was built, based on the TRAAK structure. Two PIP2 binding sites were found in this TREK-1 model, at the C-terminal end, in line with existing functional data, and between transmembrane helices TM2 and TM3. The TM2-TM3 site is in reasonably good agreement with electron density attributed to an acyl tail in a recently deposited TREK-2 structure.
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Biophysical Studies On The Plastic And Cooperative Properties Of Single Voltage Gated Na+ And Leak K+ Ion ChannelsNayak, Tapan Kumar 11 1900 (has links)
Ion channels are fundamental molecules in the nervous system that catalyze the flux of ions across the cell membrane. There are mounting evidences suggesting that the kinetic properties of ion channels undergo activity-dependent changes in various pathophysiological conditions. Here such activity-dependent changes were studied in case of two different ion channels; the rat brain derived voltage-gated Na+ channel, rNav1.2 and the human background leak K+ channel, hTREK1 using the single channel patch-clamp technique. Our results on the voltage-gated Na+ channel (Chapter III) illustrated that sustained membrane depolarization, as seen in pathophysiological conditions like epilepsy, induced a defined non-linear variation in the unitary conductance, activation, inactivation and recovery kinetic properties of the channel. Signal processing tools attributed a pseudo-oscillatory nature to the non-linearity observed in the channel properties. Prolonged membrane depolarization also induced a “molecular memory” phenomenon, characterized by clustering of dwell time events and strong autocorrelation in the dwell time series. The persistence of such molecular memory was found to be dependent on the duration of depolarization.
Similar plastic changes were observed in case of the hTREK1 channel in presence of saturating concentrations of agonist, trichloroethanol (TCE) (Chapter IV). TREK1 channel behaves similar to single enzyme molecules with a single binding site for the substrate K+ ion whereas TCE acts as an allosteric activator of the channel. We observed that with increasing concentration of TCE (10 M to 10 mM) the catalytic turnover rate exhibited progressive departure from monoexponential to multi-exponential distribution suggesting the presence of ‘dynamic disorder’ analogous to single enzyme molecules. In addition, we observed the induction of strong correlation in successive waiting times and flux intensities, exemplified by distinct mode switching between high and low flux activity, which implied the induction of memory in single ion channel. Our observation of such molecular memory in two different ion channels in different experimental conditions highlights the importance and generality of the phenomenon which is normally hidden under the ensemble behaviour of ion channels. In the final part of the work (chapter V) we observed strong negative cooperativity and half-of-sites saturation kinetics in the interaction of local anesthetic, lidocaine with hTREK1 channel. We also mapped the specific anesthetic binding site in the c-terminal domain of the channel. Further, single channel analysis and the heterodimer studies enabled us to propose a model for this interaction and provide a plausible paradigm for the inhibitory action of lidocaine on hTREK1.
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