Estimating the true stability of the prehydrolytic outward-facing state in an ABC protein.
Márton A SimonIordan IordanovAndras SzollosiLászló CsanádyPublished in: eLife (2023)
CFTR, the anion channel mutated in cystic fibrosis patients, is a model ABC protein whose ATP-driven conformational cycle is observable at single-molecule level in patch-clamp recordings. Bursts of CFTR pore openings are coupled to tight dimerization of its two nucleotide binding domains (NBDs) and in wild-type (WT) channels are mostly terminated by ATP hydrolysis. The slow rate of non-hydrolytic closure - which determines how tightly bursts and ATP hydrolysis are coupled - is unknown, as burst durations of catalytic site mutants span a range of ~200-fold. Here we show that Walker A mutation K1250A, Walker B mutation D1370N, and catalytic glutamate mutations E1371S and E1371Q all completely disrupt ATP hydrolysis. True non-hydrolytic closing rate of WT CFTR approximates that of K1250A and E1371S. That rate is slowed ~15-fold in E1371Q by a non-native inter-NBD H-bond, and accelerated ~15-fold in D1370N. These findings uncover unique features of the NBD interface in human CFTR.
Keyphrases
- cystic fibrosis
- single molecule
- wild type
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- lung function
- end stage renal disease
- endothelial cells
- anaerobic digestion
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- binding protein
- living cells
- protein protein
- chronic kidney disease
- blood brain barrier
- prognostic factors
- molecular dynamics
- molecular dynamics simulations
- high frequency
- dna binding