Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience (May 2018)

Cues to Opening Mechanisms From in Silico Electric Field Excitation of Cx26 Hemichannel and in Vitro Mutagenesis Studies in HeLa Transfectans

  • Francesco Zonta,
  • Francesco Zonta,
  • Damiano Buratto,
  • Damiano Buratto,
  • Damiano Buratto,
  • Giulia Crispino,
  • Giulia Crispino,
  • Giulia Crispino,
  • Andrea Carrer,
  • Andrea Carrer,
  • Andrea Carrer,
  • Francesca Bruno,
  • Guang Yang,
  • Fabio Mammano,
  • Fabio Mammano,
  • Fabio Mammano,
  • Fabio Mammano,
  • Sergio Pantano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnmol.2018.00170
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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Connexin channels play numerous essential roles in virtually every organ by mediating solute exchange between adjacent cells, or between cytoplasm and extracellular milieu. Our understanding of the structure-function relationship of connexin channels relies on X-ray crystallographic data for human connexin 26 (hCx26) intercellular gap junction channels. Comparison of experimental data and molecular dynamics simulations suggests that the published structures represent neither fully-open nor closed configurations. To facilitate the search for alternative stable configurations, we developed a coarse grained (CG) molecular model of the hCx26 hemichannel and studied its responses to external electric fields. When challenged by a field of 0.06 V/nm, the hemichannel relaxed toward a novel configuration characterized by a widened pore and an increased bending of the second transmembrane helix (TM2) at the level of the conserved Pro87. A point mutation that inhibited such transition in our simulations impeded hemichannel opening in electrophysiology and dye uptake experiments conducted on HeLa tranfectants. These results suggest that the hCx26 hemichannel uses a global degree of freedom to transit between different configuration states, which may be shared among the whole connexin family.

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