A Cholesterol Dimer Stabilizes the Inactivated State of an Inward-Rectifier Potassium Channel.
Collin G BorcikIsaac R EasonMaryam YekefallahReza AmaniRuixian HanBoden H VanderloopBenjamin J WyliePublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
Cholesterol oligomers reside in multiple membrane protein X-ray crystal structures. Yet, there is no direct link between these oligomers and a biological function. Here we present the structural and functional details of a cholesterol dimer that stabilizes the inactivated state of an inward-rectifier potassium channel KirBac1.1. K + efflux assays confirm that high cholesterol concentration reduces K + conductance. We then determine the structure of the cholesterol-KirBac1.1 complex using Xplor-NIH simulated annealing calculations driven by solid-state NMR distance measurements. These calculations identified an α-α cholesterol dimer docked to a cleft formed by adjacent subunits of the homotetrameric protein. We compare these results to coarse grain molecular dynamics simulations. This is one of the first examples of a cholesterol oligomer performing a distinct biological function and structural characterization of a conserved promiscuous lipid binding region.