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Department of Physiology, University of Texas-Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas
Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Paul Blount, Dept. of Physiology, University of Texas-Southwestern Medical Center, 5323 Harry Hines Blvd., Dallas, TX 75390-9040. Tel.: 214-645-6014; Fax: 214-645-6019; E-mail: paul.blount{at}utsouthwestern.edu.
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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mscL/
mscS double mutant bacterial strain shows more than a 10-fold increase in cell lysis upon osmotic downshock when compared to the parental strain (9
The first gene shown to encode a mechanosensitive channel activity is mscL from Escherichia coli (10
). The encoded MscL protein (Eco-MscL) is relatively small consisting of 136 amino acids with two transmembrane domains (TM1 and TM2), a periplasmic loop, and both the amino and carboxyl terminal facing the cytoplasm (11
). Several studies utilizing random and site-directed mutagenesis have identified the most cytoplasmic region of TM1 as essential for normal channel activity, and have lead to the postulation of a gating mechanism (12
,13
). The crystallization and structural resolution to 3.5 Å of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis ortholog (Tb-MscL) in the closed, or nearly closed, state confirmed the previous topological analysis of Eco-MscL (11
) and revealed that the channel is a homopentamer (14
). Two models have been proposed for the structure of Eco-MscL. First, Sukharev, Guy, and their colleagues (15
,16
) generated detailed structural models (SG model) of Eco-MscL in its closed, open, and transitional states during gating, based on the Tb-MscL crystal structure, molecular modeling, and disulfide trapping experiments. A second model of MscL gating was proposed by Perozo, Martinac, and their colleagues (PM model), and was based on data from site-directed spin-labeling (SDSL) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy studies (17
). Both models propose that a sharp tilting of the transmembrane domains toward the plane of the membrane occurs during gating. Although the two models disagreed on the direction and degree of the rotation of the TM1 helix, thus predicting a completely different set of residues to line the pore in the open state, a resolution to this discrepancy, largely consistent with the PM model, has recently been proposed (18
).
The crystallization of Tb-MscL was a breakthrough to the understanding of the channel; however, not all of the protein was resolved, with the extreme N-terminal portion of MscL missing from the crystal structure (starts at residue R11). As mentioned by the authors, residues before V15 are disordered in the crystal, presumably because of a high mobility (14
). Although no direct structural data are available, the functional relevance of the N-terminal region has been experimentally demonstrated. Deletion of only 11 amino acids at the MscL extreme N-terminal end leads to a nonfunctional channel (19
); random mutagenesis experiments showed that expression of MscL channels with an N15D, G14E, or R13C substitution alters channel function and leads to a slowed-growth gain-of-function (GOF) in vivo phenotype (20
). Finally, Kumánovics et al. (21
) found a motif, NhhD (where h is hydrophobic), found near the cytoplasmic membrane before a transmembrane domain (N15-D18 in Eco-MscL), is extremely conserved among very diverse families of channels including bacterial MscL, voltage-gated, polycystin, Drosophila TRP, and human TRP-like channels. The authors hypothesized that this conserved motif is a functional component of sensor modules; consistent with this interpretation, mutation of this region leads to misfunctioning channels in virtually every sensor-channel family in which it is found (21
).
Because of its clear functional importance but lack of structural data, the N-terminal region of MscL remains mysterious. The SG model of Eco-MscL predicted that the N-terminal region forms an
-helix (S1) essential for channel gating. It furthermore predicts that in the pentameric channel the S1 domains form a helical bundle that constitutes a "second gate". According to the model, the channel remains closed even after the TM1 domains have accomplished significant tilting within the membrane and have expanded to form a large vestibule. The sequential separation of S1 segments are employed to explain the substates observed in patch clamp (15
,16
). The delayed expansion of S1 in this model predicted that the three "linker" residues, Arg-13, Gly-14, and Asn-15, should be very flexible to serve as a "string" linking expanding TMs to the still-closed S1 bundle. As support of their hypothesis, the authors note that the length of this region is highly conserved and there is an essentially invariant glycine at position 14 that has more conformational freedom than other residues (16
). In the SG transition-state models, the linker and TM1 domains are predicted to move in a symmetrical, smooth, and orderly manner. The PM model is consistent with aspects of the SG model; residues G14V17 showed the highest mobility of the TM1 region, possibly reflecting its flexibility (17
). Despite the models that have been proposed, the specific movements of the linker domain during the gating process have not been tested.
Here, we have utilized an existing cysteine library (22
) and a cysteine-trapping approach to determine the proximity of residues R13D18 in MscL pentameric structure. Because residues 1318 are predicted by the SG models to not only contain the "linker" between S1 and TM1, but also the first few residues at the beginning of the TM1 domain, for simplicity we refer to this area as the S1-TM1 linker region.
By using an osmotic downshock to gate the channels in vivo, we compare the ability of these cysteine-substituted residues to interact with their counterpart in neighboring subunits in the unstressed and osmotically shocked conditions. Our results suggest that residues in this region often approach each other during the closed-to-open transition. In light of the current models for the gating of MscL, these findings cannot be easily explained unless asymmetric movements between the subunits occur in the gating process. The functional consequences of this interaction for one mutant, N15C, were particularly enlightening: the covalent interaction of this residue within the complex appears to occur rapidly and efficiently, and not only still allows the channel to achieve what appears to be a normal and fully open state, demonstrating the flexibility of the region, but also increases the probability of channel gating by 100-fold. Together, the data suggest that we have trapped the channel into a normal transition state that retains the capacity to attain both closed and fully open states.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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mscL::Cm) (11
Western blot analysis
Single colonies were grown in LB in a shaker-incubator at 37°C to an early log phase (OD600 of 0.20.3), and diluted 1:1 in LB media supplemented with 1 M NaCl. At this point IPTG was added to a final concentration of 1 mM to induce MscL protein expression. Cultures were grown to an OD600 of 0.30.4 and then diluted 20-fold in prewarmed (37°C) distilled water (shock) or in 500 mM NaCl LB media (mock-shock) and returned to the shaker-incubator for 20 min. Cells were pelleted in a microfuge and resuspended in nonreducing Laemmli buffer (62.5 mM Tris pH 6.8 (Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA), 25% v/v glycerol, 2% w/v sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), 0.01% w/v bromophenol blue (Sigma, St. Louis, MO)) in a final volume normalized by the OD600 before dilution. At this point 3% ß-mercaptoethanol was added to half of each sample; all samples were heated at 70°C for 4 min and centrifuged for 2 min at 14,000x g before resolution in a 420% gradient Tris-Cl polyacrylamide gel (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA). Proteins were electrotransferred to Immobilon polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) membranes (Millipore, Billerica, MA) at 100 mV for 70 min. Western blot analysis was performed using primary antibodies against the MscL C-terminus as previously described (19
) and the Immobilon Detection Reagents kit (Millipore) according to the manufacturer's instructions. X-ray sensitive film (Blue Bio Film, Denville Scientific, Metuchen, NJ) was exposed to the blotted membranes. Quantification was done by measuring the density of the bands using the Scion Image software (National Institutes of Health).
Electrophysiology
E. coli giant spheroplasts were generated and used in patch-clamp experiments as described previously (12
). To ensure there is no channel clustering, which could allow interactions between neighboring channels and complicate the interpretations of the results, we kept the expression levels low by decreasing the induction times to <10 min. Thus, expression level was
520 channels per patch. This was done merely as an added precaution, since, in contrast to MscK (7
), no evidence of clustering of MscL channels has been observed either by visualization of channels in spheroplasts (24
) or when the number of channels per patch has been monitored ((25
); this study). Thus, intercomplex disulfide bridges seem unlikely. Excised, inside-out patches were examined at room temperature under symmetrical conditions using a buffer comprised of 200 mM KCl, 90 mM MgCl2, 10 mM CaCl2, and 5 mM HEPES pH 6 (Sigma, St. Louis, MO). When indicated, 30% H2O2 (Sigma) or 1 M dithiothreitol (DTT) (Sigma) were added to, or perfused into the bath to a final concentration of 15% v/v or 110 mM, respectively.
Recordings were performed at 20 mV (positive pipette). Data were acquired at a sampling rate of 20 kHz with a 5-kHz filter using an AxoPatch 200B amplifier in conjunction with Axoscope software (Axon Instruments, Union City, CA). A piezoelectric pressure transducer (World Precision Instruments, Sarasota, FL) was used to monitor the pressure throughout the experiments. The MscL threshold was defined as the pressure at which openings were observed at least every 0.52 s. Measurements before and after treatment were compared. To compare channel tension sensitivity between mutated and wild-type channels, the threshold was expressed as a fraction of the threshold for MscS, which was used as an internal control as previously described (12
,19
,20
). Open probability (Po) analysis and amplitude measurements were performed using Clampfit9 from Pclamp9, whereas Fetchan6 and Pstat6 from Pclamp8 software were used for kinetics analysis (Axon Instruments).
| RESULTS |
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11) similar to the example shown in Fig.2 A. The amount of dimers, presented as a percentage of the total MscL, is shown for each mutant after a mock-shock (gray) or an osmotic downshock (black).
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-carbon distance between subunits in the crystal structure (9.34 Å) and the current model of the closed E. coli channel (9.97 Å) similar to those in the S1-TM1 linker; however, no dimerization was detected for this mutant, even after the cells were osmotically downshocked (Fig. 3 B). Hence, the dimerization observed in the S1-TM1 linker region appears to be specific.
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As previously described, R13C activity was rarely observed unless a reducing agent was added to the patch buffer, and under reduced conditions this mutant gates at lower pressures than wild-type MscL (22
). In contrast to these data, but consistent with a previous study, the cysteine substitutions at residues G14 and D18 lead to nonfunctional channels that only gated when very high pressures were applied to the patch (21
). This observed lack of activity was independent of the presence of a reducing agent in the bath, suggesting that the cysteine substitutions themselves, and not disulfide bridges, produced the observed decrease in functional activity. On the other hand, V16 and V17 cysteine substitutions lead to channel activities with no significant differences from wild-type; no evident changes in their membrane tension sensitivity, conductance, or open probability (Po) were observed between oxidizing and reducing conditions with full amplitudes achieved in both conditions.
The N15C MscL mutant yielded the most remarkable results of the set in that the biochemical changes were clearly reflected in channel activity, as shown in Fig. 4 A. In contrast to mutants showing a decreased activity or lock-closed nature upon oxidation that is observed in other cysteine mutants (above; (15
,22
)), the Po of N15C MscL dramatically increased with the addition of 1% H2O2 to the patch buffer. Note that a constant pressure was applied to the patch, and that the increase in Po could be reversed by perfusion with a solution containing 1 mM DTT (Fig. 4 A), thus confirming that the observed effects are due to a change in the oxidative state of the channel. Similar results were obtained in multiple experiments and their quantification is shown in Fig. 4 B. The histogram of the log of NPo was plotted versus time and shows that the increase in opening probability occurs within an extremely short timescale, yet is long lasting if kept under nonreduced conditions. Increases in N15C Po were observed when other oxidative agents such as copper-phenanthroline (n = 4) or iodine (n = 3) were added to the bath, whereas none of these oxidative agents affected WT MscL activity (see supplemental figure in Supplementary Material). These results suggest that oxidation traps the N15C MscL channel into a conformation, presumably a normal transition state, which requires less energy for gating the channel.
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Channel kinetics also correlated with the different oxidative states of the complex. Under reducing conditions (DTT in the patch buffer), N15C activity was characterized by very short open dwell times when compared to those of wild-type (Fig. 5, left graph; Table 1). When experiments were performed in the presence of 1% H2O2 (oxidative conditions), longer open dwell times, similar to those of wild-type, were observed (Fig. 5, right graph; Table 1). Surprisingly, a full conductance, indistinguishable from wild-type MscL, was observed for N15C not only in reduced but also oxidized conditions (Table 1). In addition, fewer events reached full openings in the reduced state, as can be seen in the inserts in Fig. 5. Hence, even though neighboring subunits are linked by disulfide bridges, as indicated by the biochemical analysis, the channels are actually more likely to obtain a stable and fully conducting open state.
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| DISCUSSION |
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-helix at the extreme N-terminal region of the protein, S1, and the first transmembrane domain, TM1 (15
Although the osmotic shock that is used in this study has previously been shown to gate the MscL channel, even when MscS and other channels are expressed (28
), one cannot rule out the possibility that an increase in dimerization is due to a more oxidative environment effected by the gating of MS channels. Indeed, the observation that all of the mutants show an increase in dimer formation upon osmotic downshock would be consistent with this interpretation. However, the increase observed is not constant between mutants, as would be expected if redox was the only factor. For example, R13C normally shows a small amount of dimerization that increases >18-fold when subjected to osmotic downshock, whereas V16C and V17C, which also show modest dimerization when untreated, have only a 45-fold increase upon osmotic downshock. The most likely interpretation is that the osmotic downshock leads to specific gating transition states, and that each residue has a unique probability for approaching their analogs within the complex and forming dimers upon these structural changes. Hence, whereas changes in the redox environment of the cell play some role in the increase in dimerization observed, it is likely that much of this increase in many of the mutants is due to structural rearrangements that occur as the channel gates.
The finding that the residues within the MscL linker region studied are able to spontaneously disulfide-bridge, or that this ability may increase when MscL is gated, is not predicted by any of the current structural models for the closed, open, or transition states of the channel. To date, the best available structural data of MscL are derived from the crystal structure of the Eco-MscL homolog from M. tuberculosis (Tb-MscL) that was solved by Chang et al. in its closed or nearly closed state (14
) (Fig.1 A). The SG model of E. coli MscL depicts a detailed gating transition from the closed to the open state of the channel with several intermediate states (15
,16
). We used these two available closed structures, the Tb-MscL crystal structure and the closed Eco-MscL proposed by SG model (Fig.1 A), to determine the predicted distances between the
-carbon atoms from two neighboring subunit residues for R11D16 in Tb-MscL and the analogous R13D18 in Eco-MscL. As shown in Table 2, all distances were 9.3 Å or greater, larger than that the 3.66.8 Å distance usually required for disulfide bridging two cysteines (30
,31
). Two models also exist for Eco-MscL in its open state. The SG model, mentioned above, derived from molecular modeling (15
,16
); a second is the PM model, based on studies using site-directed spin-labeling (SDSL) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy (17
,32
). In both models, distances between residues in this linker region increase as the channel opens. Measurements of the predicted distances between
-carbons of residues R13D18 from neighboring subunits in these open-structure models predict an increase in all the distances relative to the closed state (Table 2). Hence, the observed spontaneous bridging between these residues is not easily explained by any current models for the closed or open states.
|
Within the S1-TM1 linker region, one residue, R13, has repeatedly been found to be of unique functional importance. In a random mutagenesis study R13C MscL was found to effect a slowed-grow GOF phenotype in vivo (20
,22
). However, two independent experiments suggest that reconstitution of the charge can remediate the phenotype. First, an in vivo SCAM study demonstrated that an osmotic downshock-induced cell death phenotype of cells expressing this mutant can be partially reversed by the addition of the positively charged MTSET sulfhydryl reagent (18
). Second, when R13 was substituted with histidine, the cells expressing the mutated channel showed a GOF phenotype that could be remediated by restoring the positive charge by growth at lower pH (33
). Several lines of evidence also suggest that in some conformation(s) the R13 residues are in close proximity. In patch-clamp experiments, the R13H MscL activity was inhibited by the presence of metal ions (33
) suggesting a cluster of multiple histidine residues led to metal ion coordination (34
38
). In addition, we have demonstrated that in patch clamp, R13C is often found as a locked-closed channel that is best observed in the presence of a reducing agent in the bath (this study; (22
)). Finally, here we demonstrate that disulfide bridges at R13 are more likely to be observed in vivo when the channel is gated by osmotic downshock. These results are all consistent with the hypothesis that in the pentameric structure the normally positively charged arginines from each subunit approach each other during the closed-to-open transition; the lack of a charged residue at this position lowers the energy required for the channel to open, thus leading to a GOF phenotype.
Of all residues within the region studied here, N15C gave the most interpretable and surprising results. The findings that dimerization in vivo was increased upon osmotic downshock and, more significantly, that oxidative conditions increase the probability of channel opening in patch clamp strongly suggest that disulfide bridge formation occurs in a closed-to-open transition state. But, does this occur in a normal transition state or in a state tangential to the normal gating pathway? Put another way, one possible explanation for the data is that the region is extremely flexible, and that at some rate random movements allow the channel to get trapped in a rarely observed state. Indeed, both the SG (16
) and PM (17
) models predict this region of the channel to be flexible, which is consistent with our observation that the oxidized N15C mutant can obtain fully closed and open states. However, in patch clamp the modification of the channel activity of the N15C mutated channel occurs as rapidly as can be measured after an oxidizing agent is added to the bath (see Fig. 4). Hence, not only does it appear that N15 residues can approach their counterparts in neighboring subunits upon gating, it also seems extremely likely that this movement is quite common, probably occurring in the vast number of gating events.
One might expect from disulfide trapping experiments, like those presented here, that such a covalent linkage would lead to channels or proteins "locked" into specific conformations. In reality, however, the trapped state may not be immobile. For example, the Tb-MscL V15C mutant (corresponding to V17C in Eco-MscL), under oxidative conditions, has previously been found to lock into an open state in response to pressure; the channel then slowly and irreversibly stabilized into partially open "signature events"; such events occurred even after the cessation of stimuli (29
). This is likely to be species specific since we failed to see the "signature events" in the analogous V17C mutant from Eco-MscL. But notably, in the previous study the authors found that the Tb-MscL crystal structure does not predict that the V15 residues can easily interact with one another within the channel complex, and therefore proposed that their findings were likely to be the result of asymmetric movements that often occur upon gating. A similar argument can be made for the trapping of the Eco-MscL N15 mutant. As discussed above and presented in Table 2, N15 seems unlikely to interact in any known or predicted conformation if a smooth, radially symmetric closed-to-open transition is assumed, yet the disulfide bridging observed is very efficient. In the case of the V15C Tb-MscL, once the disulfide bridge is formed, the channel appears to lock into an unstable open structure and presumably attains unnatural and irreversible conformational states under the strain. Here we have apparently trapped N15C Eco-MscL in a normal transition state that does not irreversibly misfold, but instead retains the capacity to obtain both fully closed and fully open channel states.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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This work was supported by grant I-1420 of the Welch Foundation, grant FA9550-05-1-0073 of the Air Force Office of Scientific Review, grant 0655012Y of the American Heart Association-Texas Affiliate, and grant GM61028 from the National Institutes of Health.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Abbreviations used: MS, mechanosensitive; TM, transmembrane domain; GOF, gain-of-function; LOF, loss-of-function; E. coli, Escherichia coli; DTT, dithiothreitol; OD, optical density; Po, open probability.
Submitted on June 1, 2006; accepted for publication October 20, 2006.
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