Molecular insights into lipid-assisted Ca2+ regulation of the TRP channel Polycystin-2.
Martin WilkesGregor M MadejLydia KreuterDaniel RhinowVeronika HeinzSilvia De SanctisSabine RuppelRebecca M RichterFriederike JoosMarina GriebenAshley C W PikeJuha T HuiskonenElisabeth P CarpenterWerner KühlbrandtRalph WitzgallChristine ZieglerPublished in: Nature structural & molecular biology (2017)
Polycystin-2 (PC2), a calcium-activated cation TRP channel, is involved in diverse Ca2+ signaling pathways. Malfunctioning Ca2+ regulation in PC2 causes autosomal-dominant polycystic kidney disease. Here we report two cryo-EM structures of distinct channel states of full-length human PC2 in complex with lipids and cations. The structures reveal conformational differences in the selectivity filter and in the large exoplasmic domain (TOP domain), which displays differing N-glycosylation. The more open structure has one cation bound below the selectivity filter (single-ion mode, PC2SI), whereas multiple cations are bound along the translocation pathway in the second structure (multi-ion mode, PC2MI). Ca2+ binding at the entrance of the selectivity filter suggests Ca2+ blockage in PC2MI, and we observed density for the Ca2+-sensing C-terminal EF hand in the unblocked PC2SI state. The states show altered interactions of lipids with the pore loop and TOP domain, thus reflecting the functional diversity of PC2 at different locations, owing to different membrane compositions.