The β3‐subunit modulates the effect of venom peptides ProTx‐II and OD1 on NaV1.7 gating

Author:

Salvage Samantha C.1ORCID,Rahman Taufiq2ORCID,Eagles David A.34ORCID,Rees Johanna S.1ORCID,King Glenn F.34ORCID,Huang Christopher L‐H.15ORCID,Jackson Antony P.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

2. Department of Pharmacology University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

3. Institute of Molecular Bioscience University of Queensland Brisbane QLD Australia

4. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Innovations in Peptide and Protein Science The University of Queensland Brisbane QLD Australia

5. Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

Abstract

AbstractThe voltage‐gated sodium channel NaV1.7 is involved in various pain phenotypes and is physiologically regulated by the NaV‐β3‐subunit. Venom toxins ProTx‐II and OD1 modulate NaV1.7 channel function and may be useful as therapeutic agents and/or research tools. Here, we use patch‐clamp recordings to investigate how the β3‐subunit can influence and modulate the toxin‐mediated effects on NaV1.7 function, and we propose a putative binding mode of OD1 on NaV1.7 to rationalise its activating effects. The inhibitor ProTx‐II slowed the rate of NaV1.7 activation, whilst the activator OD1 reduced the rate of fast inactivation and accelerated recovery from inactivation. The β3‐subunit partially abrogated these effects. OD1 induced a hyperpolarising shift in the V1/2 of steady‐state activation, which was not observed in the presence of β3. Consequently, OD1‐treated NaV1.7 exhibited an enhanced window current compared with OD1‐treated NaV1.7‐β3 complex. We identify candidate OD1 residues that are likely to prevent the upward movement of the DIV S4 helix and thus impede fast inactivation. The binding sites for each of the toxins and the predicted location of the β3‐subunit on the NaV1.7 channel are distinct. Therefore, we infer that the β3‐subunit influences the interaction of toxins with NaV1.7 via indirect allosteric mechanisms. The enhanced window current shown by OD1‐treated NaV1.7 compared with OD1‐treated NaV1.7‐β3 is discussed in the context of differing cellular expressions of NaV1.7 and the β3‐subunit in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons. We propose that β3, as the native binding partner for NaV1.7 in DRG neurons, should be included during screening of molecules against NaV1.7 in relevant analgesic discovery campaigns.

Funder

British Heart Foundation

Isaac Newton Trust

Australian Government

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Clinical Biochemistry,Physiology

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