6533b835fe1ef96bd129f514

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Thermodynamics and kinetics of ion permeation in wild-type and mutated open active conformation of the human α7 nicotinic receptor

Letizia ChiodoGrazia CottoneLuca Maragliano

subject

alpha7 Nicotinic Acetylcholine ReceptorProtein ConformationGeneral Chemical EngineeringMutantProtonationLibrary and Information SciencesMolecular Dynamics SimulationReceptors Nicotinic01 natural sciencesArticleMolecular dynamics0103 physical sciencesHumansPotential of mean forceIon channel010304 chemical physicsChemistryWild typeGeneral ChemistryTransmembrane protein0104 chemical sciencesComputer Science Applications010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistryNicotinic acetylcholine receptorKineticsnicotinic receptor ion permeation Milestoning free energyBiophysicsThermodynamics

description

Molecular studies of human pentameric ligand-gated ion channels (LGICs) expressed in neurons and at neuromuscular junctions are of utmost importance in the development of therapeutic strategies for neurological disorders. We focus here on the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor nAChR-α7, a homopentameric channel widely expressed in the human brain, with a proven role in a wide spectrum of disorders including schizophrenia and Alzheimer's disease. By exploiting an all-atom structural model of the full (transmembrane and extracellular) protein in the open, agonist-bound conformation we recently developed, we evaluate the free energy and the mean first passage time of single-ion permeation using molecular dynamics simulations and the milestoning method with Voronoi tessellation. The results for the wild-type channel provide the first available mapping of the potential of mean force in the full-length α7 nAChR, reveal its expected cationic nature, and are in good agreement with simulation data for other channels of the LGIC family and with experimental data on nAChRs. We then investigate the role of a specific mutation directly related to ion selectivity in LGICs, the E-1' → A-1' substitution at the cytoplasmatic selectivity filter. We find that the mutation strongly affects sodium and chloride permeation in opposite directions, leading to a complete inversion of selectivity, at variance with the limited experimental results available that classify this mutant as cationic. We thus provide structural determinants for the observed cationic-to-anionic inversion, revealing a key role of the protonation state of residue rings far from the mutation, in the proximity of the hydrophobic channel gate.

10.1021/acs.jcim.0c00549http://hdl.handle.net/10447/480596