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School of Biological Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom
Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Prof. A. G. Lee, School of Biological Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO16 7PX, UK. Tel.: 44-0-2380-594331; Fax: 44-0-2380-594459; E-mail: agl{at}soton.ac.uk.
| ABSTRACT |
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20 mol% phosphatidylglycerol, as in the Escherichia coli inner membrane, the nonannular sites will be
37% occupied by phosphatidylglycerol. The binding constant for phosphatidic acid is similar to that for phosphatidylglycerol but binding constants for phosphatidylserine and cardiolipin are about double those for phosphatidylglycerol. Binding to annular sites around the circumference of the KcsA tetramer are different on the extracellular and intracellular faces of the membrane. On the extracellular face of the membrane the binding constants for anionic lipids are similar to those for phosphatidylcholine, the lack of specificity being consistent with the lack of any marked clusters of charged residues on KcsA close to the membrane on the extracellular side. In contrast, binding to annular sites on the intracellular side of the membrane shows a distinct structural specificity, with binding of phosphatidic acid and phosphatidylglycerol being stronger than binding of phosphatidylcholine, whereas binding constants for phosphatidylserine and cardiolipin are similar to that for phosphatidylcholine. It is suggested that this pattern of binding follows from the pattern of charge distribution on KcsA on the intracellular side of the membrane. | INTRODUCTION |
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0.7 mol of phosphatidylglycerol per monomer (2
We have termed lipid binding sites located at protein-protein interfaces or between transmembrane
-helices as nonannular sites, to distinguish them from the boundary or annular lipids that cover the bulk of the hydrophobic surface of a membrane protein (4
). The obvious question for KcsA is whether the nonannular sites are empty in the absence of anionic lipid, this leading to the lack of activity, or whether, in the absence of anionic lipid, the nonannular sites are occupied by zwitterionic lipid, the channel not being functional when the nonannular sites are occupied by zwitterionic lipid. It is also important to know how strongly anionic lipid binds to the nonannular sites; the fact that purification from decyl maltoside leads to substoichiometric levels of anionic lipid (2
) and that purification from Mega-9 leads to the loss of almost all the bound lipid (3
) shows that the affinity is not so high that binding is essentially irreversible. The level of occupancy of the nonannular sites by anionic lipid in the native membrane will depend on the binding constant for anionic lipid and on the concentration of anionic lipid in the outer monolayer of the lipid bilayer where the nonannular binding sites are located.
Here we show how quenching of the fluorescence of Trp residues in KcsA by bromine-containing phospholipids can be used to study the selectivity of binding at the nonannular sites on KcsA. Bromine-containing phospholipids are made by addition of bromine across the double bonds of phospholipids containing two oleyl chains: these lipids behave much like conventional phospholipids with unsaturated fatty acyl chains, because the bulky bromine atoms have effects on lipid packing that are similar to those of a cis double bond (5
). The efficiency of quenching of Trp fluorescence by phospholipids containing dibrominated fatty acyl chains depends on the sixth power of the distance between the Trp and the dibromo group with a value for Ro, the distance at which energy transfer is 50% efficient, of 8 Å (6
,7
). This could either indicate that fluorescence quenching is by a Förster energy transfer mechanism (7
) or that quenching is collisional, taking into account the depth distribution of the fluorophore and quencher in the membrane (8
). Whichever is the case, the observation that the experimental quenching data fit well to a sixth power dependence on distance suggests that an analysis in these terms can be used to estimate expected efficiencies of quenching by bromine-containing phospholipids. In particular, the short range of the quenching process means that only lipids bound in the immediate vicinity of a Trp residue can affect its fluorescence intensity.
KcsA contains five Trp residues, Trp-26 and Trp-113 exposed to the lipid bilayer on the intracellular side of the membrane, Trp-87 exposed to the lipid bilayer on the extracellular side, and Trp-67 and Trp-68 making up part of the pore structure on the extracellular side (Fig. 1 A). The lipid-exposed Trp residues are not conserved in the potassium channel family, and it is generally found that hydrophobic lipid-exposed residues can be replaced with other hydrophobic residues with no effect on function, as shown, for example, in studies of the Shaker potassium channel (9
,10
). Replacing the lipid-exposed Trp residues in KcsA with Cys has been shown to have no effect on function (11
). In the studies reported here we have replaced Trp-26 and Trp-113 on the intracellular side with Leu, leaving the three Trp residues on the extracellular side. The locations of these three Trp residues with respect to the surface of the KcsA trimer and the nonannular lipid binding site are shown in Fig. 1 B. Distances between the Trp residues and the bromine atoms in the lipid fatty acyl chains can be estimated as follows. Bromination of an oleyl chain gives the corresponding 9,10-dibromostearoyl derivative. The hydrophobic thickness of a bilayer of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine is
27 Å (12
), so that the bromines in the brominated phospholipids will be
7 Å from the glycerol backbone region of the bilayer. Distances along the membrane between the ß-carbons of Trp residues 67 and 68 and the closest fatty acyl chains of an annular lipid molecule are
12 and 16 Å, respectively, giving Trp-bromine separation distances of
14 and 17 Å, respectively. In Förster energy transfer theory, the efficiency of energy transfer E between fluorophore and quencher is related to the distance of separation d by
![]() | (1) |
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3 and 1%, respectively, assuming that quenching is dominated by the nearest brominated fatty acyl chain. In contrast, the distance along the membrane surface between Trp-87 and the nearest annular lipid molecule is
3.3 Å, giving a Trp-bromine separation distance of 7.7 Å and an expected level of quenching of
56%. With a lipid diameter of
9.4 Å the Trp-bromine distance for Trp-87 and the next nearest annular lipid molecule will be 12.1 Å, giving an expected level of quenching of
7%. Thus, quenching of the fluorescence of Trp-87 will report on only those one or two lipid binding sites closest to Trp-87. A similar calculation for the effect of a brominated lipid molecule bound to the nonannular site suggests that the level of quenching for Trp-67, for which the Trp-bromine separation distance is
7.4 Å, will be
61%, with a level of quenching for the more distant Trp-68 and Trp-87 of
7%. Thus, quenching of Trp-67 will report on binding at nonannular sites, quenching of Trp-87 will report on binding at annular sites, and Trp-68 will be essentially unquenched by brominated lipid. | EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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Mutagenesis and purification of KcsA
A plasmid containing the kcsA gene (13
) with a poly-His epitope at the N-terminus was the generous gift of Professor H. Schrempf, University of Osnabruck, Osnabruck, Germany. KcsA was purified according to the method of Williamson et al. (3
) with a few modifications. Briefly, cells were washed and resuspended in buffer (140 mM NaCl, 2.7 mM KCl, 10 mM Na2HPO4, 1.8 mM KH2PO4) and lysed by sonication. The sample was spun at 100,000 x g for 30 min and the membrane pellet was solubilized in the above buffer containing 5 mM dodecyl maltoside (Calbiochem, San Diego, CA) for 1 h at room temperature. Unsolubilized material was removed by centrifugation at 8000 x g for 20 min and the supernatant was loaded onto a 1-ml Ni2+-Sepharose-His-Trap affinity column (Amersham, Buckinghamshire, UK) preequilibrated with buffer containing 20 mM imidazole. After washing the column, the His-tagged KcsA protein was eluted with 300 mM imidazole and stored at 80°C until use. The homogeneity of KcsA was assessed by sodium dodecyl-sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), using the method of Laemmli (14
). Concentrations of KcsA were estimated from absorption spectra measured in buffer containing 1% sodium dodecyl sulfate to reduce light scatter, using extinction coefficients of 34,850 M1 cm1, 29,160 M1 cm1, and 23,470 M1 cm1, for wild-type KcsA, W113L, and W26, 113L, respectively, at 280 nm.
Site-directed mutagenesis was performed using the Quick-change protocol from Stratagene (La Jolla, CA). Mutated KcsA were prepared with the Trp residue at position 113 replaced by Leu (W113L) or with the Trp residues at positions 26 and 113 both replaced by Leu (W26,113L). W113L was produced using synthetic oligonucleotide primers 5'-CCGCGCTGGCAACCTTGTTCGTCGGCCGGGAAC-3' and 5'-CCGACGAACAAGGTTGCCAGCGCGGCGGTCACCAGAC-3' and W26,113L was pro-duced by mutation of Trp-26 in W113L using the primers 5'-GTGC-GCTTCATTTGAGGGCCGCGGGTGC-3' and 5'-GGCCCTCAAATGAAGCGCACTGCCGTGGC-3'. After polymerase chain reaction mutagenesis, the native methylated DNA templates were digested with Dpn1 (Promega, Madison, WI) for 2 h at 37°C. The mutations were confirmed by DNA sequencing.
Fluorescence measurements
Purified KcsA was reconstituted into lipid bilayers by mixing lipid and KcsA in cholate followed by dilution of 50 µl of the detergent-lipid-protein mixture into 3 ml buffer (20 mM HEPES and 1 mM EGTA, at pH 7.2) to decrease the concentration of cholate below its critical micelle concentration, as described in Alvis et al. (15
). The final protein concentration was 0.24 µM and the molar ratio of lipid to KcsA was 100:1. Fluorescence was recorded on an SLM 8000C fluorimeter (Urbana, IL) with excitation at 290 nm, at 25°C. Fluorescence emission spectra were corrected for light scatter by subtraction of a blank consisting of lipid alone in buffer. Spectra were corrected for the wavelength dependence of instrumental response using a set of correction factors generated by comparison of an emission spectrum for tryptophan in buffer with the corrected emission spectrum for tryptophan published by Chen (16
). In quenching experiments with acrylamide, the inner filter effect was minimized by exciting fluorescence at 295 nm, corrections for the inner filter effect being made by applying the correction factor 10
0.5c, where
is the molar extinction coefficient at 295 nm and c is the molar concentration of acrylamide.
The reported fluorescence intensities represent the average of duplicate measurements from two or three separate reconstitutions.
Analysis of fluorescence quenching results
Quenching of Trp fluorescence in a mixture of a nonbrominated lipid with its brominated analog, where the lipid binds only to the annular sites around KcsA, has been fitted to a lattice model for quenching (3
,15
,17
19
) using the equation
![]() | (2) |
Here Fo and
are the fluorescence intensities of KcsA in nonbrominated and brominated lipid, respectively, F is the fluorescence intensity in the phospholipid mixture when the mol fraction of brominated lipid is xBr, and n is the number of annular lipid binding sites on KcsA from which the fluorescence of a Trp residue can be quenched. In a mixture of two classes of lipid A and B where, for example, lipid A is a nonbrominated zwitterionic lipid and lipid B is a brominated anionic lipid, an equilibrium will be established at each of the annular sites:
![]() |
![]() | (3) |
Fluorescence quenching in the mixture is described by the equation
![]() | (4) |
the fraction of annular sites on KcsA occupied by brominated lipid, is given by
![]() | (5) |
If only anionic lipid, lipid B, can bind to the nonannular sites on KcsA then binding to the nonannular sites can be described by a simple binding equation:
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The association constant KNA for binding at the nonannular sites is given by
![]() | (6) |
The fraction of nonannular sites occupied by brominated anionic lipid,
is given by
![]() | (7) |
The fluorescence intensity for a Trp residue close to the nonannular site will be directly related to the probability of occupation of the nonannular site by brominated lipid:
![]() | (8) |
is the fluorescence intensity when the nonannular site is occupied by brominated lipid.
In the special case of the mutant W26,113L that contains three Trp residues with equal fluorescence emission intensities, where one Trp residue is not quenched by brominated lipid, one Trp is quenched by binding of brominated lipid to the annular sites, and one Trp is quenched by binding of brominated lipid to the nonannular sites, the fluorescence intensity will be given by
![]() | (9) |
To describe fluorescence quenching for wild-type KcsA from the annular sites it is necessary to consider the possibility that binding constants at the annular sites on the extracellular and intracellular sides of the membrane are different. For wild-type KcsA, Trp-67 and Trp-87 will not be quenched by annular lipid, Trp-87 will be quenched by annular lipid binding on the extracellular side of the membrane, and Trp-26 and Trp-113 will be quenched by annular lipid binding on the intracellular side of the membrane (Fig. 1). The fluorescence intensity in this case will be given by
![]() | (10) |
are fluorescence intensities for Trp-87 and for Trp-26 and Trp-113, respectively, in brominated lipid, and
are the fractional occupancies of the annular sites by brominated lipid on the extracellular and intracellular sides of the membrane, respectively, calculated from Eq. 5 with the appropriate value for the relative binding constant KA on the extracellular and intracellular sides of the membrane. The experimental data were fitted to the above equations using the nonlinear least-squares routine in the SigmaPlot package (SPSS, Chicago, IL).
| RESULTS |
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![]() | (11) |
A comparison between Eqs. 2 and 11 is presented in Fig. 2. Fig. 2 shows fluorescence intensities calculated from Eq. 11 for a mixture of a nonbrominated lipid with its brominated analog for values of M and FM of 2 and 0.4, respectively. This calculated curve was then fitted to Eq. 2 giving a value for n of 1.4 (Fig. 2) confirming that Eq. 2 overestimates the number of binding sites from which quenching can be observed, when FM > 0. The important point here, however, is that the use of Eqs. 4 and 11 give the same values for the relative binding constant KA because the values of KA are obtained by comparison of pairs of quenching curves. For example, Fig. 2 shows quenching curves calculated from Eq. 11 again with values of M and FM of 2 and 0.4, respectively, but now for two mixtures of lipids, one where the relative binding constant KA is 2.0 and the other where the relative binding constant KA is 0.5 (Fig. 2). Fitting these two curves to Eq. 4 with the value of n fixed at the value of 1.4 gives relative binding constants KA of 2.0 and 0.5. The fact that Eq. 4 recovers exactly the values of KA used in the simulations justifies the use of the mathematically much more convenient Eq. 4.
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-helix in a lipid bilayer. Fluorescence emission spectra for W26,113L are identical in di(C18:1)PC, di(C18:1)PA, di(C18:1)PG, di(C18:1)PS, and tetra(C18:1)CL (data not shown), suggesting that binding of anionic lipid to W26,113L results in no large change in conformation.
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0.44 estimated above from the expected distance of separation between Trp-87 and the nearest annular lipid molecule. Similarly, if only Trp-26 and Trp-87 in W113L are quenched by di(Br2C18:0)PC then the observed value for F/Fo of 0.66 for W113L corresponds to an average F/Fo value of 0.32 for Trp-26 and Trp-87, and if only Trp-26, Trp-87, and Trp-113 in wild-type KcsA are quenched by di(Br2C18:0)PC then the observed value of F/Fo of 0.61 for wild-type KcsA corresponds to an average F/Fo for the three quenched Trp residues of 0.35. The similarity of the values for F/Fo calculated in this way for the three lipid-exposed Trp residues is consistent with the suggestion that Trp-26, Trp-87, and Trp-113 are the only three Trp residues quenched significantly by di(Br2C18:0)PC. The quenching observed in brominated anionic lipid is
25% greater than that observed in di(Br2C18:0)PC (Fig. 4), corresponding to a value for F/Fo for Trp-67 of
0.27, compared to the value of
0.39 estimated above from the expected distance of separation between Trp-67 and the nearest fatty acyl chain of a bound nonannular lipid molecule.
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Data for quenching of the fluorescence of W26,113L in mixtures of di(Br2C18:0)PC and anionic lipid (Fig. 4) were analyzed in terms of Eq. 4 with a value for n of 1.69, the average value from Table 1, giving the relative binding constants for the anionic lipids at the annular sites on the extracellular side of KcsA listed in Table 2; the fact that all values were close to 1 shows that there is little selectivity in binding to the annular sites on the extracellular side of the membrane.
It was shown in Alvis et al. (15
) that n values for anionic phospholipids were the same as for phosphatidylcholines except for cardiolipin where the value of n was half that for the other phospholipids due to the four-chain nature of cardiolipin, and for phosphatidic acid for which the value of n was higher (n = 2.49) possibly related to the small size of the phosphatidic acid headgroup. Data for mixtures of di(C18:1)PC and brominated anionic lipid (Fig. 4) were then fitted to Eq. 9 using these values for n together with the determined values for the annular binding constant on the extracellular side of KcsA, giving the values for the nonannular binding constant listed in Table 2.
Because quenching by di(Br2C18:0)PC follows just from binding to annular sites, the binding constants for binding at the annular sites on the intracellular side of KcsA can be obtained from the previously published quenching data for wild-type KcsA (15
) using the binding constants for binding at the annular sites on the extracellular side of KcsA determined above. Quenching data for wild-type KcsA in mixtures of anionic lipid and di(Br2C18:0)PC were therefore analyzed in terms of Eq. 10 (Fig. 6) to give the annular binding constants on the intracellular side given in Table 2.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Binding to annular sites
Studies of fluorescence quenching of W26,113L in mixtures of anionic lipids and di(Br2C18:0)PC show that anionic lipids bind to annular sites on the extracellular side of KcsA with an affinity very similar to that of phosphatidylcholine (Table 1). Using these values for the annular binding constants on the extracellular side of KcsA, data for fluorescence quenching of wild-type KcsA by di(Br2C18:0)PC can be analyzed to obtain annular binding constants on the intracellular side of KcsA (Table 1; Fig. 6). In contrast to binding on the extracellular side of KcsA, the strength of binding on the intracellular side of KcsA is structurally specific (Table 2); whereas binding constants for phosphatidylserine and cardiolipin are close to those for phosphatidylcholine, binding of phosphatidic acid and phosphatidylglycerol is approximately three- and twofold stronger, respectively, than phosphatidylcholine. The lack of specificity in binding at annular sites on the extracellular side of the membrane is consistent with the lack of any marked cluster of charged residues on KcsA close to the membrane surface on the extracellular side of the membrane that might interact with the phospholipid headgroups. This contrasts with a distinct pattern for the charged residues on the intracellular side of the membrane (Fig. 7). The location of the glycerol backbone region of the lipid bilayer on the intracellular side of the membrane is marked by the location of the Trp residues on this side of the protein (3
). Arg-27 can then be seen to snorkel up to the glycerol backbone region to give a girdle of four positively charged residues (Fig. 7). Located
8 Å from this girdle of positive charge is a girdle of charged residues made up of Glu-118, Glu-120, and Arg-121, Glu-118 and Arg-121 forming a charged pair (Fig. 7). Thus, it is possible that favorable binding of phosphatidic acid and phosphatidylglycerol follows from favorable interaction between Arg-27 and the lipid phosphate group, the only charged group present in these lipids. An unfavorable interaction between Glu-120 and the negatively charged carboxyl group in phosphatidylserine or the additional negatively charged phosphate group present in cardiolipin could then explain the less favorable binding of these more complex anionic lipids.
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Binding to nonannular sites
Binding of lipid to the nonannular sites on KcsA shows marked selectivity for anionic lipid. The observation that fluorescence quenching in di(Br2C18:0)PC is approximately half that in brominated anionic lipid (Fig. 4) suggests that only anionic lipid can bind to the nonannular sites and quench the fluorescence of Trp-67. Selectivity of the nonannular sites for anionic lipid probably follows from the presence of two Arg residues, Arg-64 and Arg-89, close to the site, one coming from each of the monomers at the interface (23
).
Binding of anionic lipids at the nonannular sites varies by only a factor of 2 with anionic headgroup structure (Table 2) and is of only moderate affinity, with a standard free-energy change for binding
Go of
0.91.2 kcal mol1. The energy of interaction U between two ions is given by
![]() | (12) |
r is the relative permittivity (dielectric constant) of the medium, and r is the distance between the two ions. Assuming a dielectric constant of 78.5 (water), an energy of interaction of 1 kcal mol1 corresponds to a distance of separation of two monovalent ions of 4.2 Å. Thus, close contact between the charged groups on the phospholipid headgroup and charged groups on KcsA at the nonannular site is sufficient to explain the observed binding. Binding of this type, with the lipid headgroup not being tightly constrained within a binding pocket, would be consistent with the observation that the anionic lipid headgroup is not resolved in the crystal structure of KcsA (2
Fluorescence emission spectra for wild-type KcsA (15
) and W26,113L are very similar in bilayers of phosphatidylcholine and anionic phospholipids suggesting that binding of anionic lipid to the nonannular sites on KcsA results in no major conformational changes on KcsA, despite the presence of anionic lipid being essential for channel opening.
It is not known whether all four nonannular sites in the tetrameric KcsA structure have to be occupied by anionic lipid for the channel to open. The Escherichia coli cell membrane in which KcsA is expressed contains
20 mol % anionic lipid, mostly phosphatidylglycerol (24
). In mammalian cells the distribution of lipid species between the two faces of the plasma membrane is highly asymmetric, but it is not known if this is also the case in E. coli (25
). If the phosphatidylglycerol content of the outer leaflet of the E. coli membrane were 20 mol %, then, with the nonannular binding constant given in Table 2, the nonannular sites would be
37% occupied by phosphatidylglycerol, and the probability that at least one of the four nonannular sites was occupied by phosphatidylglycerol would be
85%. If the phosphatidylglycerol were to be concentrated in the outer leaflet of the membrane, then the fraction of nonannular sites occupied by phosphatidylglycerol would rise to
55% and the probability that at least one of the four nonannular sites was occupied by phosphatidylglycerol would be
96%. The lipid composition of the cell membrane of the Gram positive S. lividans appears not to have been determined, but other species of Streptomyces are rich in cardiolipin (26
,27
). For a cardiolipin content of 20 mol% in the outer leaflet of the membrane, the nonannular binding sites would be
75% occupied by cardiolipin.
High-resolution structures are available for an inwardly rectifying K+ channel (28
) and for two voltage gated K+ channels (29
,30
). None of these structures shows lipid molecules bound at protein-protein interfaces in the tetrameric structures. In the bacterial voltage gated K+ channel structure, Arg-64 and Arg-89 in KcsA are replaced by Asp-185 and Lys-210, forming a salt bridge (23
) and in the inwardly rectifying K+ channel there are no charged residues close to the region corresponding to the nonannular binding site on KcsA. Further, the deep cleft at each monomer-monomer interface in KcsA corresponding to the nonannular binding site is less uniform and open in the other K+ channel structures, suggesting that binding of anionic lipid at the monomer-monomer interfaces may not be a general phenomenon for all K+ channels.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank the Wellcome Trust for financial support, and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council for a studentship to S.J.A.
Submitted on July 15, 2005; accepted for publication September 14, 2005.
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P. Marius, M. Zagnoni, M. E. Sandison, J. M. East, H. Morgan, and A. G. Lee Binding of Anionic Lipids to at Least Three Nonannular Sites on the Potassium Channel KcsA is Required for Channel Opening Biophys. J., March 1, 2008; 94(5): 1689 - 1698. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. M. Powl, J. M. East, and A. G. Lee Different Effects of Lipid Chain Length on the Two Sides of a Membrane and the Lipid Annulus of MscL Biophys. J., July 1, 2007; 93(1): 113 - 122. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. S. Deol, C. Domene, P. J. Bond, and M. S. P. Sansom Anionic Phospholipid Interactions with the Potassium Channel KcsA: Simulation Studies Biophys. J., February 1, 2006; 90(3): 822 - 830. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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