Abstract

The epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) mediates sodium absorption in lung, kidney, and colon epithelia. Channels in the ENaC/degenerin family possess an extracellular region that senses physicochemical changes in the extracellular milieu and allosterically regulates the channel opening. Proteolytic cleavage activates the ENaC opening, by the removal of specific segments in the finger domains of the α- and γ ENaC-subunits. Cleavage causes perturbations in the extracellular region that propagate to the channel gate. However, it is not known how the channel structure mediates the propagation of activation signals through the extracellular sensing domains. Here, to identify the structure-function determinants that mediate allosteric ENaC activation, we performed MD simulations, thiol modification of residues substituted by cysteine, and voltage-clamp electrophysiology recordings. Our simulations of an ENaC heterotetramer, α1βα2γ, in the proteolytically cleaved and uncleaved states revealed structural pathways in the α-subunit that are responsible for ENaC proteolytic activation. To validate these findings, we performed site-directed mutagenesis to introduce cysteine substitutions in the extracellular domains of the α-, β-, and γ ENaC-subunits. Insertion of a cysteine at the α-subunit Glu557 site, predicted to stabilize a closed state of ENaC, inhibited ENaC basal activity and retarded the kinetics of proteolytic activation by 2-fold. Our results suggest that the lower palm domain of αENaC is essential for ENaC activation. In conclusion, our integrated computational and experimental approach suggests key structure-function determinants for ENaC proteolytic activation and points toward a mechanistic model for the allosteric communication in the extracellular domains of the ENaC/degenerin family channels.

Highlights

  • The epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) mediates sodium absorption in lung, kidney, and colon epithelia

  • We identified residues in the ␣-subunit that modulate the kinetics of proteolytic activation and uncovered allosteric pathways that dynamically link the hypervariable region (HVR) region in the ␣ENaC finger domain to the channel gate

  • By analyzing multiple discrete molecular dynamics (DMD) trajectories [26, 27], we found that cleavages in the ␣- and ␥-subunits relax the finger domains of the subunits, because the residues flanking the cleavage sites fold into a set of thermodynamically favorable conformations (Movie S1)

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Summary

Introduction

The epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) mediates sodium absorption in lung, kidney, and colon epithelia. Cleavage causes perturbations in the extracellular region that propagate to the channel gate It is not known how the channel structure mediates the propagation of activation signals through the extracellular sensing domains. 1 To whom correspondence may be addressed: 1113 Marsico Hall, Chapel Hill, Members of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC)3/degenerin ion channel family share functions that can be backtracked to a common ancestor This ancestral receptor was likely essential to the maintenance of electrolyte balance in eukaryotic cells as they adapted to an electrolyte-rich environment [1]. Because perturbations in the finger domains are essential to couple the activation signals to the channel gate, we hypothesized that key extracellular residues and inter-residue interactions transduce HVR conformational changes to the gate region. The ENaC/degenerin ion channel family utilizes a remarkable allosteric machinery that enables the large extracellular domains to act as receptors to sense specific changes in the

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