Insights into CLC-0’s Slow-Gating from Intracellular Proton Inhibition

Author:

Kwon Hwoi Chan1,Fairclough Robert H.12,Chen Tsung-Yu123

Affiliation:

1. Biophysics Graduate Program, University of California, Davis, CA 95618, USA

2. Department of Neurology, University of California, Davis, CA 95618, USA

3. Center for Neuroscience, University of California, 1544 Newton Court, Davis, CA 95618, USA

Abstract

The opening of the Torpedo CLC-0 chloride (Cl−) channel is known to be regulated by two gating mechanisms: fast gating and slow (common) gating. The structural basis underlying the fast-gating mechanism is better understood than that of the slow-gating mechanism, which is still largely a mystery. Our previous study on the intracellular proton (H+i)-induced inhibition of the CLC-0 anionic current led to the conclusion that the inhibition results from the slow-gate closure (also called inactivation). The conclusion was made based on substantial evidence such as a large temperature dependence of the H+i inhibition similar to that of the channel inactivation, a resistance to the H+i inhibition in the inactivation-suppressed C212S mutant, and a similar voltage dependence between the current recovery from the H+i inhibition and the recovery from the channel inactivation. In this work, we further examine the mechanism of the H+i inhibition of wild-type CLC-0 and several mutants. We observe that an anion efflux through the pore of CLC-0 accelerates the recovery from the H+i-induced inhibition, a process corresponding to the slow-gate opening. Furthermore, various inactivation-suppressed mutants exhibit different current recovery kinetics, suggesting the existence of multiple inactivated states (namely, slow-gate closed states). We speculate that protonation of the pore of CLC-0 increases the binding affinity of permeant anions in the pore, thereby generating a pore blockage of ion flow as the first step of inactivation. Subsequent complex protein conformational changes further transition the CLC-0 channel to deeper inactivated states.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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