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Anoctamin-4 is a bona fide Ca2+-dependent non-selective cation channel.

Nadine ReichhartSimon SchöberlSusanne KeckeisAhmad Samir AlfaarChristophe RoubeixMagdalena CordesSergio Crespo-GarciaAkvile HaeckelNorbert KociokRenate FöcklerGabriele FelsAnja MatarugaRobert RauhVladimir M MilenkovicKerstin ZühlkeAnastasiia SholokhEyk SchellenbergerOlaf Strauß
Published in: Scientific reports (2019)
Changes in cell function occur by specific patterns of intracellular Ca2+, activating Ca2+-sensitive proteins. The anoctamin (TMEM16) protein family has Ca2+-dependent ion channel activity, which provides transmembrane ion transport, and/or Ca2+-dependent phosphatidyl-scramblase activity. Using amino acid sequence analysis combined with measurements of ion channel function, we clarified the so far unknown Ano4 function as Ca2+-dependent, non-selective monovalent cation channel; heterologous Ano4 expression in HEK293 cells elicits Ca2+ activated conductance with weak selectivity of K+ > Na+ > Li+. Endogenously expressed Ca2+-dependent cation channels in the retinal pigment epithelium were identified as Ano4 by KO mouse-derived primary RPE cells and siRNA against Ano4. Exchanging a negatively charged amino acid in the putative pore region (AA702-855) into a positive one (E775K) turns Ano4-elicited currents into Cl- currents evidencing its importance for ion selectivity. The molecular identification of Ano4 as a Ca2+-activated cation channel advances the understanding of its role in Ca2+ signaling.
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