Abstract

Molecular mechanisms underlying channel-membrane interplay have been extensively studied. Cholesterol, as a major component of the cell membrane, participates either in specific binding to channels or via modification of membrane physical features. Here, we examined the action of various sterols (cholesterol, epicholesterol, etc.) on a prototypical potassium channel (KcsA). Single-channel current recordings of the KcsA channel were performed in a water-in-oil droplet bilayer (contact bubble bilayer) with a mixed phospholipid composition (azolectin). Upon membrane perfusion of sterols, the activated gate at acidic pH closed immediately, irrespective of the sterol species. During perfusion, we found that the contacting bubbles changed their shapes, indicating alterations in membrane physical features. Absolute bilayer tension was measured according to the principle of surface chemistry, and inherent bilayer tension was ∼5 mN/m. All tested sterols decreased the tension, and the nonspecific sterol action to the channel was likely mediated by the bilayer tension. Purely mechanical manipulation that reduced bilayer tension also closed the gate, whereas the resting channel at neutral pH never activated upon increased tension. Thus, rather than conventional stretch activation, the channel, once ready to activate by acidic pH, changes the open probability through the action of bilayer tension. This constitutes a channel regulating modality by two successive stimuli. In the contact bubble bilayer, inherent bilayer tension was high, and the channel remained boosted. In the cell membrane, resting tension is low, and it is anticipated that the ready-to-activate channel remains closed until bilayer tension reaches a few millinewton/meter during physiological and pathological cellular activities.

Highlights

  • Molecular mechanisms underlying channel-membrane interplay have been extensively studied

  • The KcsA channel was reconstituted into a lipid bilayer using the contact bubble bilayer (CBB) method [21], which utilizes a water-in-oil droplet bilayer [22,23,24]

  • We investigated the mechanism by which a sterol affected the KcsA potassium channel, whose activity we recently found to be Proteins embedded in the cell membrane are subjected to the membrane’s chemical and physical modifications

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Summary

Introduction

Molecular mechanisms underlying channel-membrane interplay have been extensively studied. Rather than conventional stretch activation, the channel, once ready to activate by acidic pH, changes the open probability through the action of bilayer tension This constitutes a channel regulating modality by two successive stimuli. | | | bilayer tension contact bubble bilayer KcsA channel single-channel | current stretch-activated channel attenuated by cholesterol [17]. The KcsA channel was reconstituted into a lipid bilayer using the contact bubble bilayer (CBB) method [21], which utilizes a water-in-oil droplet bilayer [22,23,24] In this system, highly hydrophobic sterols are delivered around membrane-embedded channels (membrane perfusion) [17], and immediate single-channel responses can be evaluated following rapid sterol concentration changes. Acidic pH is necessary for activation, but channel opening is fine-tuned by membrane tension in what constitutes a doubly regulated activation modality

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