Login / Signup

Structural and molecular basis of choline uptake into the brain by FLVCR2.

Rosemary J CaterDibyanti MukherjeeEva Gil IturbeSatchal K ErramilliTing ChenKatie KooNicolás Santander GrezAndrew ReckersBrian KlossTomasz GawdaBrendon C ChoyZhening ZhangAditya KatewaAmara LarpthaveesarpEric J HuangScott W J MooneyOliver B ClarkeSook Wah YeeKathleen M GiacominiAnthony A KossiakoffMatthias QuickThomas D ArnoldFilippo Mancia
Published in: Nature (2024)
Choline is an essential nutrient that the human body needs in vast quantities for cell membrane synthesis, epigenetic modification and neurotransmission. The brain has a particularly high demand for choline, but how it enters the brain remains unknown 1-3 . The major facilitator superfamily transporter FLVCR1 (also known as MFSD7B or SLC49A1) was recently determined to be a choline transporter but is not highly expressed at the blood-brain barrier, whereas the related protein FLVCR2 (also known as MFSD7C or SLC49A2) is expressed in endothelial cells at the blood-brain barrier 4-7 . Previous studies have shown that mutations in human Flvcr2 cause cerebral vascular abnormalities, hydrocephalus and embryonic lethality, but the physiological role of FLVCR2 is unknown 4,5 . Here we demonstrate both in vivo and in vitro that FLVCR2 is a BBB choline transporter and is responsible for the majority of choline uptake into the brain. We also determine the structures of choline-bound FLVCR2 in both inward-facing and outward-facing states using cryo-electron microscopy. These results reveal how the brain obtains choline and provide molecular-level insights into how FLVCR2 binds choline in an aromatic cage and mediates its uptake. Our work could provide a novel framework for the targeted delivery of therapeutic agents into the brain.
Keyphrases