Abstract

Voltage-gated sodium (Nav) channels play critical roles in propagating action potentials and otherwise manipulating ionic gradients in excitable cells. These channels open in response to membrane depolarization, selectively permeating sodium ions until rapidly inactivating. Structural characterization of the gating cycle in this channel family has proved challenging, particularly due to the transient nature of the open state. A structure from the bacterium Magnetococcus marinus Nav (NavMs) was initially proposed to be open, based on its pore diameter and voltage-sensor conformation. However, the functional annotation of this model, and the structural details of the open state, remain disputed. In this work, we used molecular modeling and simulations to test possible open-state models of NavMs. The full-length experimental structure, termed here the α-model, was consistently dehydrated at the activation gate, indicating an inability to conduct ions. Based on a spontaneous transition observed in extended simulations, and sequence/structure comparison to other Nav channels, we built an alternative π-model featuring a helix transition and the rotation of a conserved asparagine residue into the activation gate. Pore hydration, ion permeation, and state-dependent drug binding in this model were consistent with an open functional state. This work thus offers both a functional annotation of the full-length NavMs structure and a detailed model for a stable Nav open state, with potential conservation in diverse ion-channel families.

Highlights

  • Voltage-gated sodium (Nav) channels are membrane proteins that play an important role in the propagation of action potentials in excitable cells during nerve impulse conduction, among other physiological processes

  • To test the functional annotation of NavMs as a model for gating, we first examined the hydration of the channel pore using Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations

  • Given the close packing of S6 against the full length of S5 and the S4–S5 linker in this structure (Fig. 2 C and D), a local expansion sufficient to hydrate the activation gate does not appear possible, barring substantial rearrangement of the already fully activated voltage-sensing domain (VSD) as well as pore domain

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Summary

Introduction

Voltage-gated sodium (Nav) channels are membrane proteins that play an important role in the propagation of action potentials in excitable cells during nerve impulse conduction, among other physiological processes. These channels are involved in cardiac, muscular, and neurological disorders, making it important to understand the mechanisms that underlie their function [1]. Bacterial Nav channels are homotetramers with $270 residues per subunit that have a simpler architecture with smaller intracellular and extracellular domains [9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26]

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