The mechanism of Cl- ion permeation through single cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) channels was studied using the channel-blocking ion gluconate. High concentrations of intracellular gluconate ions cause a rapid, voltage-dependent block of CFTR Cl- channels by binding to a site ~40% of the way through the transmembrane electric field. The affinity of gluconate block was influenced by both intracellular and extracellular Cl- concentration. Increasing extracellular Cl- concentration reduced intracellular gluconate affinity, suggesting that a repulsive interaction occurs between Cl- and gluconate ions within the channel pore, an effect that would require the pore to be capable of holding more than one ion simultaneously. This effect of extracellular Cl- is not shared by extracellular gluconate ions, suggesting that gluconate is unable to enter the pore from the outside. Increasing the intracellular Cl- concentration also reduced the affinity of intracellular gluconate block, consistent with competition between intracellular Cl- and gluconate ions for a common binding site in the pore. Based on this evidence that CFTR is a multi-ion pore, we have analyzed Cl- permeation and gluconate block using discrete-state models with multiple occupancy. Both two- and three-site models were able to reproduce all of the experimental data with similar accuracy, including the dependence of blocker affinity on external Cl- (but not gluconate) ions and the dependence of channel conductance on Cl- concentration. The three-site model was also able to predict block by internal and external thiocyanate (SCN-) ions and anomalous mole fraction behavior seen in Cl-/SCN- mixtures.
CITATION STYLE
Linsdell, P., Tabcharani, J. A., & Hanrahan, J. W. (1997). Multi-ion mechanism for ion permeation and block in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator chloride channel. Journal of General Physiology, 110(4), 365–377. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.110.4.365
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