Abstract

Transient receptor potential (TRP) channels are a family of cation channels involved in diverse cellular functions. They are composed of a transmembrane domain of six putative transmembrane segments flanked by large N- and C-terminal cytoplasmic domains. The melastatin subfamily (TRPM) channels have N-terminal domains of approximately 700 amino acids with four regions of shared homology and C-terminal domains containing the conserved TRP domain followed by a coiled-coil region. Here we investigated the effects of N- and C-terminal deletions on the cold and menthol receptor, TRPM8, expressed heterologously in Sf21 insect cells. Patch-clamp electrophysiology was used to study channel activity and revealed that only deletion of the first 39 amino acids was tolerated by the channel. Further N-terminal truncation or any C-terminal deletions prevented proper TRPM8 function. Confocal microscopy with immunofluorescence revealed that amino acids 40-86 are required for localization to the plasma membrane. Furthermore, analysis of deletion mutant oligomerization shows that the transmembrane domain is sufficient for TPRM8 assembly into tetramers. TRPM8 channels with C-terminal deletions tetramerize and localize properly but are inactive, indicating that although not essential for tetramerization and localization, the C terminus is critical for proper function of the channel sensor and/or gate.

Highlights

  • All Transient receptor potential (TRP) channels contain six predicted transmembrane segments, S1 to S6, flanked by cytoplasmic N- and C-terminal domains

  • The TRPM8 temperature response is mediated at least in part by its C-terminal intracellular domain: chimeras swapping the C-terminal domains of TRPM8 and TPRV1 (i.e. the vanilloid family TRP channel activated by temperatures Ͼ42 °C [16]) switch their thermal sensitivity [17]

  • Mutational analyses indicate that residues in the S1 and S2 transmembrane segments are required for TRPM8 activation by menthol and icilin [22, 24] and that residues in the S4 transmembrane segment and S4 –S5

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Summary

Introduction

All TRP channels contain six predicted transmembrane segments, S1 to S6, flanked by cytoplasmic N- and C-terminal domains. The two C-terminal deletion mutants were designed to remove most of the conserved coiled-coil domain (⌬C1070) and the entire cytosolic region including the TRP Construct Design and Expression—All TRPM8 deletion currents almost identical to those activated by menthol in the mutants were generated based on homology to other TRPM presence of PIP2 (Fig. 2).

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