Probing the Architecture of an L-type Calcium Channel with a Charged Phenylalkylamine EVIDENCE FOR A WIDELY OPEN PORE AND DRUG TRAPPING

2006 
Abstract Voltage-gated calcium channels are in a closed conformation at rest and open temporarily when the membrane is depolarized. To gain insight into the molecular architecture of Cav1.2, we probed the closed and open conformations with the charged phenylalkylamine (-)devapamil ((-)qD888). To elucidate the access pathway of (-)D888 to its binding pocket from the intracellular side, we used mutations replacing a highly conserved Ile-781 by threonine/proline in the pore-lining segment IIS6 of Cav1.2 (1). The shifted channel gating of these mutants (by 30–40 mV in the hyperpolarizing direction) enabled us to evoke currents with identical kinetics at different potentials and thus investigate the effect of the membrane potentials on the drug access per se. We show here that under these conditions the development of channel block by (-)qD888 is not affected by the transmembrane voltage. Recovery from block at rest was, however, accelerated at more hyperpolarized voltages. These findings support the conclusion that Cav1.2 must be opening widely to enable free access of the charged (-)D888 molecule to its binding site, whereas drug dissociation from the closed channel conformation is restricted by bulky channel gates. The functional data indicating a location of a trapped (-)D888 molecule close to the central pore region are supported by a homology model illustrating that the closed Cav1.2 is able to accommodate a large cation such as (-)D888.
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