Abstract

The voltage-gated sodium channel NaV1.7 is an important target for drug development due to its role in pain perception. Recombinant expression of full-length channels and their use for biophysical characterization of interactions with potential drug candidates is challenging due to the protein size and complexity. To overcome this issue, we developed a protocol for the recombinant expression in E. coli and refolding into lipids of the isolated voltage sensing domain (VSD) of repeat II of NaV1.7, obtaining yields of about 2 mg of refolded VSD from 1 L bacterial cell culture. This VSD is known to be involved in the binding of a number of gating-modifier toxins, including the tarantula toxins ProTx-II and GpTx-I. Binding studies using microscale thermophoresis showed that recombinant refolded VSD binds both of these toxins with dissociation constants in the high nM range, and their relative binding affinities reflect the relative IC50 values of these toxins for full-channel inhibition. Additionally, we expressed mutant VSDs incorporating single amino acid substitutions that had previously been shown to affect the activity of ProTx-II on full channel. We found decreases in GpTx-I binding affinity for these mutants, consistent with a similar binding mechanism for GpTx-I as compared to that of ProTx-II. Therefore, this recombinant VSD captures many of the native interactions between NaV1.7 and tarantula gating-modifier toxins and represents a valuable tool for elucidating details of toxin binding and specificity that could help in the design of non-addictive pain medication acting through NaV1.7 inhibition.

Highlights

  • IntroductionVoltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs) are ion channels that are essential for the initiation and propagation of action potentials in excitatory cells [1]

  • The NaV1.7 VSD2 was cloned into a pSW02 vector, which contain a TrpΔLE fusion partner that drives the recombinant protein into inclusion bodies [12,13

  • The ability of isolated voltage sensing domain (VSD) to bind gating-modifier toxins has been demonstrated in several previous studies

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Summary

Introduction

Voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs) are ion channels that are essential for the initiation and propagation of action potentials in excitatory cells [1]. Their central ionconducting α subunit is made of a single polypeptide chain with two functional parts: the voltage sensing domains (VSDs) and the pore domain that forms the sodium-selective pore. The VSDs are comprised of the S1–S4 transmembrane helices of each of the pseudotetrameric channel’s four repeating units [2]. NaV 1.7 is a VGSC isoform of therapeutic interest since it has been shown to be involved with pain response [3].

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