Abstract

Sodium channel Na(v)1.7 has recently elicited considerable interest as a key contributor to human pain. Gain-of-function mutations of Na(v)1.7 produce painful disorders, whereas loss-of-function Na(v)1.7 mutations produce insensitivity to pain. The inherited erythromelalgia Na(v)1.7/F1449V mutation, within the C terminus of domain III/transmembrane helix S6, shifts channel activation by -7.2 mV and accelerates time to peak, leading to nociceptor hyperexcitability. We constructed a homology model of Na(v)1.7, based on the KcsA potassium channel crystal structure, which identifies four phylogenetically conserved aromatic residues that correspond to DIII/F1449 at the C-terminal end of each of the four S6 helices. The model predicted that changes in side-chain size of residue 1449 alter the pore's cytoplasmic aperture diameter and reshape inter-domain contact surfaces that contribute to closed state stabilization. To test this hypothesis, we compared activation of wild-type and mutant Na(v)1.7 channels F1449V/L/Y/W by whole cell patch clamp analysis. All but the F1449V mutation conserve the voltage dependence of activation. Compared with wild type, time to peak was shorter in F1449V, similar in F1449L, but longer for F1449Y and F1449W, suggesting that a bulky, hydrophobic residue is necessary for normal activation. We also substituted the corresponding aromatic residue of S6 in each domain individually with valine, to mimic the naturally occurring Na(v)1.7 mutation. We show that DII/F960V and DIII/F1449V, but not DI/Y405V or DIV/F1752V, regulate Na(v)1.7 activation, consistent with well established conformational changes in DII and DIII. We propose that the four aromatic residues contribute to the gate at the cytoplasmic pore aperture, and that their ring side chains form a hydrophobic plug which stabilizes the closed state of Na(v)1.7.

Highlights

  • Sodium channel Nav1.7 has recently elicited considerable interest as a key contributor to human pain

  • We investigated the effect of substitution of F1449 with an the time from the test pulse onset to the peak of sodium inward aliphatic hydrophobic residue leucine (F1449L), and the aro- current at a series of voltages applied from the matic residues tyrosine (F1449Y) and tryptophan (F1449W). holding potential of Ϫ120 mV

  • We identified aromatic residues, which are conserved in most sodium channel isoforms

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Computational Modeling of Nav1.7—A homology model of the closed-state pore domain of Nav1.7 was generated using the crystal structure of the KcsA potassium channel (PDB code 1BL8) [21] as the structural template. Electrophysiology—Whole cell voltage clamp recordings [35] of HEK 293 cells transiently transfected with the sodium channels Nav1.7R, DI/Y405V, DII/F960V, DIII/F1449V, DIII/ F1449L, DIII/F1449Y, DIII/F1449W, DIV/F1752V, or F960V/ F1449V double mutant derivatives were performed with an EPC-9 amplifier (HEKA Electronics, Lambrecht/Pfalz, Germany) using fire-polished 0.5- to 1.5-M⍀ electrodes (World Precision Instruments, Inc., Sarasota, FL). TTX was added to the bath solution to block all endogenous voltage-gated sodium currents that might be present in HEK 293 cells [36] and thereby permitted study of Nav1.7R in isolation. The normalized curves were fitted using a Boltzmann distribution equation, INa INa,max ϭ ϩ

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RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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