Photo-switchable tweezers illuminate pore-opening motions of an ATP-gated P2X ion channel

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Abstract

P2X receptors function by opening a transmembrane pore in response to extracellular ATP. Recent crystal structures solved in apo and ATP-bound states revealed molecular motions of the extracellular domain following agonist binding. However, the mechanism of pore opening still remains controversial. Here we use photo-switchable cross-linkers as ‘molecular tweezers’ to monitor a series of inter-residue distances in the transmembrane domain of the P2X2 receptor during activation. These experimentally based structural constraints combined with computational studies provide high-resolution models of the channel in the open and closed states. We show that the extent of the outer pore expansion is significantly reduced compared to the ATP-bound structure. Our data further reveal that the inner and outer ends of adjacent pore-lining helices come closer during opening, likely through a hinge-bending motion. These results provide new insight into the gating mechanism of P2X receptors and establish a versatile strategy applicable to other membrane proteins.

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Habermacher, C., Martz, A., Calimet, N., Lemoine, D., Peverini, L., Specht, A., … Grutter, T. (2016). Photo-switchable tweezers illuminate pore-opening motions of an ATP-gated P2X ion channel. ELife, 5(JANUARY2016). https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.11050

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