Identification of a dimerization domain in the TMEM16A calcium-activated chloride channel (CaCC)

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Abstract

Transmembrane proteins with unknown function 16 (TMEM16A) is a calcium-activated chloride channel (CaCC) important for neuronal, exocrine, and smooth muscle functions. TMEM16A belongs to a family of integral membrane proteins that includes another CaCC, TMEM16B, responsible for controlling action potential waveform and synaptic efficacy, and a small-conductance calcium-activated nonselective cation channel, TMEM16F, linked to Scott syndrome. We find that these channels in the TMEM16 family share a homodi-meric architecture facilitated by their cytoplasmic N termini. This di-merization domain is important for channel assembly in eukaryotic cells, and the in vitro association of peptides containing the dimer-ization domain is consistent with a homotypic protein-protein interaction. Amino acid substitutions in the dimerization domain affect functional TMEM16A-CaCC channel expression, as expected from its critical role in channel subunit assembly.

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Tien, J., Lee, H. Y., Minor, D. L., Jan, Y. N., & Jan, L. Y. (2013). Identification of a dimerization domain in the TMEM16A calcium-activated chloride channel (CaCC). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(16), 6352–6357. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1303672110

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