TOPIC

A pharmacological master key mechanism that unlocks the selectivity filter gate in K+ channels

Journal

ICMS 2019 UK

Author(s)

Marcus Schewe

Year

2019

Dr Marcus Schewe, Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel – talk from the ICMS 2019.

Title: A pharmacological master key mechanism that unlocks the selectivity filter gate in K+ channels

Potassium (K+) channels have been evolutionarily tuned for activation by diverse biological stimuli, and pharmacological activation is thought to target these specific gating mechanisms. Here we report a class of negatively charged activators (NCAs) that bypass the specific mechanisms but act as master keys to open K+ channels gated at their selectivity filter (SF), including many two-pore domain K+ (K2P) channels, voltage-gated hERG (human ether-à-go-go–related gene) channels and calcium (Ca2+)–activated big-conductance potassium (BK)–type channels. Functional analysis, x-ray crystallography, and molecular dynamics simulations revealed that the NCAs bind to similar sites below the SF, increase pore and SF K+ occupancy, and open the filter gate. These results uncover an unrecognized polypharmacology among K+ channel activators and highlight a filter gating machinery that is conserved across different families of K+ channels with implications for rational drug design.

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