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Biophys J, December 1998, p. 2811-2820, Vol. 75, No. 6
*Department of Physiology,
The mobility of protons in a dioxolane-linked gramicidin
A channel (D1) is comparable to the mobility of protons in
aqueous solutions (Cukierman, S., E. P. Quigley, and D. S. Crumrine. 1997. Biophys. J. 73:2489-2502). Aliphatic
alcohols decrease the mobility of H+ in aqueous solutions.
In this study, the effects of methanol on proton conduction through
D1 channels were investigated in different lipid bilayers
and at different HCl concentrations. Methanol attenuated H+
currents in a voltage-independent manner. Attenuation of proton currents was also independent of H+ concentrations in
solution. In phospholipid bilayers, methanol decreased the single
channel conductance to protons without affecting the binding affinity
of protons to bilayers. In glycerylmonooleate membranes, the
attenuation of single channel proton conductances qualitatively
resembled the decrease of conductivities of HCl solutions by methanol.
However, in both types of lipid bilayers, single channel proton
conductances through D1 channels were considerably more
attenuated than the conductivities of different HCl solutions. This
suggests that methanol modulates single proton currents through D1 channels. It is proposed that, on average, one methanol
molecule binds to a D1 channel, and attenuates
H+ conductance. The Gibbs free energy of this process
(
Biophys J, December 1998, p. 2811-2820, Vol. 75, No. 6
G0) is ~1.2 kcal/mol, which is
comparable to the free energy of decrease of HCl conductivity in
methanol solutions (1.6 kcal/mol). Apolar substances like urea and
glucose that do not transport protons in HCl solutions and do not
permeate D1 channels decreased solution conductivity and
single channel conductance by a considerably larger proportion than
methanol. Cs+ currents through D1 channels were
considerably less (fivefold) attenuated by methanol than proton
currents. It is proposed that methanol partitions inside the pore of
gramicidin channels and delays the transfer of protons between water
and methanol molecules, causing a significant attenuation of the single
channel proton conductance. Gramicidin channels offer an interesting
experimental model to study proton hopping along a single chain of
water molecules interrupted by a single methanol molecule.
© 1998 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/98/12/2811/10 $2.00
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