Abstract

High-resolution structures of voltage-gated sodium channels (Nav) were first obtained from a prokaryotic ortholog NavAb, which provided important mechanistic insights into Na+ selectivity and voltage gating. Unlike eukaryotic Navs, the NavAb channel is formed by four identical subunits, but its ion selectivity and pharmacological profiles are very similar to eukaryotic Navs. Recently, the structures of the NavAb voltage sensor at resting and activated states were obtained by cryo-EM, but its intermediate states and transition dynamics remain unclear. In the present work, we used liposome flux assays to show that purified NavAb proteins were functional to conduct both H+ and Na+ and were blocked by the local anesthetic lidocaine. Additionally, we examined the real-time conformational dynamics of the NavAb voltage sensor using single-molecule FRET. Our single-molecule FRET measurements on the tandem NavAb channel labeled with Cy3/5 FRET fluorophore pair revealed spontaneous transitions of the NavAb S4 segment among three conformational states, which fitted well with the kinetic model developed for the S4 segment of the human voltage-gated proton channel hHv1. Interestingly, even under strong activating voltage, the NavAb S4 segment seems to adopt a conformational distribution similar to that of the hHv1 S4 segment at a deep resting state. The conformational behaviors of the NavAb voltage sensor under different voltages need to be further examined to understand the mechanisms of voltage sensing and gating in the canonical voltage-gated ion channel superfamily.

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