The Hidden Intricacies of Aquaporins: Remarkable Details in a Common Structural Scaffold

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Abstract

Evolution turned aquaporins (AQPs) into the most efficient facilitators of passive water flow through cell membranes at no expense of solute discrimination. In spite of a plethora of solved AQP structures, many structural details remain hidden. Here, by combining extensive sequence- and structural-based analysis of a unique set of 20 non-redundant high-resolution structures and molecular dynamics simulations of four representatives, key aspects of AQP stability, gating, selectivity, pore geometry, and oligomerization, with a potential impact on channel functionality, are identified. The general view of AQPs possessing a continuous open water pore is challenged and it is depicted that AQPs’ selectivity is not exclusively shaped by pore-lining residues but also by the relative arrangement of transmembrane helices. Moreover, this analysis reveals that hydrophobic interactions constitute the main determinant of protein thermal stability. Finally, a numbering scheme of the conserved AQP scaffold is established, facilitating direct comparison of, for example, disease-causing mutations and prediction of potential structural consequences. Additionally, the results pave the way for the design of optimized AQP water channels to be utilized in biotechnological applications.

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Gössweiner-Mohr, N., Siligan, C., Pluhackova, K., Umlandt, L., Koefler, S., Trajkovska, N., & Horner, A. (2022). The Hidden Intricacies of Aquaporins: Remarkable Details in a Common Structural Scaffold. Small, 18(31). https://doi.org/10.1002/smll.202202056

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