Structural insight into the allosteric inhibition of human sodium-calcium exchanger NCX1 by XIP and SEA0400

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Abstract

Sodium-calcium exchanger proteins influence calcium homeostasis in many cell types and participate in a wide range of physiological and pathological processes. Here, we elucidate the cryo-EM structure of the human Na+/Ca2+ exchanger NCX1.3 in the presence of a specific inhibitor, SEA0400. Conserved ion-coordinating residues are exposed on the cytoplasmic face of NCX1.3, indicating that the observed structure is stabilized in an inward-facing conformation. We show how regulatory calcium-binding domains (CBDs) assemble with the ion-translocation transmembrane domain (TMD). The exchanger-inhibitory peptide (XIP) is trapped within a groove between the TMD and CBD2 and predicted to clash with gating helices TMs1/6 at the outward-facing state, thus hindering conformational transition and promoting inactivation of the transporter. A bound SEA0400 molecule stiffens helix TM2ab and affects conformational rearrangements of TM2ab that are associated with the ion-exchange reaction, thus allosterically attenuating Ca2+-uptake activity of NCX1.3.

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Dong, Y., Yu, Z., Li, Y., Huang, B., Bai, Q., Gao, Y., … Zhao, Y. (2024). Structural insight into the allosteric inhibition of human sodium-calcium exchanger NCX1 by XIP and SEA0400. EMBO Journal, 43(1), 14–31. https://doi.org/10.1038/s44318-023-00013-0

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