Structural basis and energy landscape for the Ca2+ gating and calmodulation of the Kv7.2 K+ channel

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Abstract

The Kv7.2 (KCNQ2) channel is the principal molecular component of the slow voltage-gated, noninactivating K+ M-current, a key controller of neuronal excitability. To investigate the calmodulin (CaM)-mediated Ca2+ gating of the channel, we used NMR spectroscopy to structurally and dynamically describe the association of helices hA and hB of Kv7.2 with CaM, as a function of Ca2+ concentration. The structures of the CaM/Kv7.2-hAB complex at two different calcification states are reported here. In the presence of a basal cytosolic Ca2+ concentration (10–100 nM), only the N-lobe of CaM is Ca2+-loaded and the complex (representative of the open channel) exhibits collective dynamics on the millisecond time scale toward a low-populated excited state (1.5%) that corresponds to the inactive state of the channel. In response to a chemical or electrical signal, intracellular Ca2+ levels rise up to 1–10 ?M, triggering Ca2+ association with the C-lobe. The associated conformational rearrangement is the key biological signal that shifts populations to the closed/inactive channel. This reorientation affects the C-lobe of CaM and both helices in Kv7.2, allosterically transducing the information from the Ca2+-binding site to the transmembrane region of the channel.

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Bernardo-Seisdedos, G., Nuñez, E., Gomis, C., Malo, C., Villarroel, Á., & Millet, O. (2018). Structural basis and energy landscape for the Ca2+ gating and calmodulation of the Kv7.2 K+ channel. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 115(10), 2395–2400. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1800235115

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