Communications Biology (Nov 2024)

Water in peripheral TM-interfaces of Orai1-channels triggers pore opening

  • Valentina Hopl,
  • Adéla Tiffner,
  • Armin Wutscher,
  • Matthias Sallinger,
  • Herwig Grabmayr,
  • Magdalena Prantl,
  • Maximilian Fröhlich,
  • Julia Söllner,
  • Sarah Weiß,
  • Hadil Najjar,
  • Yuliia Nazarenko,
  • Selina Harant,
  • Natalia Kriško,
  • Marc Fahrner,
  • Christina Humer,
  • Carmen Höglinger,
  • Heinrich Krobath,
  • Daniel Bonhenry,
  • Isabella Derler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-07174-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract The activation of the Ca2+-channel Orai1 via the physiological activator stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1) requires structural rearrangements within the entire channel complex involving a series of gating checkpoints. Focusing on the gating mechanism operating along the peripheral transmembrane domain (TM) 3/TM4-interface, we report here that some charged substitutions close to the center of TM3 or TM4 lead to constitutively active Orai1 variants triggering nuclear factor of activated T-cell (NFAT) translocation into the nucleus. Molecular dynamics simulations unveil that this gain-of-function correlates with enhanced hydration at peripheral TM-interfaces, leading to increased local structural flexibility of the channel periphery and global conformational changes permitting pore opening. Our findings indicate that efficient dehydration of the peripheral TM-interfaces driven by the hydrophobic effect is critical for maintaining the closed state of Orai1. We conclude that a charge close to the center of TM3 or TM4 facilitates concomitant hydration and widening of peripheral TM interfaces to trigger constitutive Orai1 pore opening to a level comparable to or exceeding that of native activated Orai1.