Web Release Date: June 7,
Barriers to Ion Translocation in Cationic and Anionic Receptors from the Cys-Loop Family










Contribution from the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Department of Pharmacology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and Center for Theoretical Biological Physics, University of California-San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, California 92093-0365, and Department of Physiology and Biomedical Engineering, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, Minnesota 55905
Received February 7, 2007

Abstract:
Understanding the mechanisms of gating and ion permeation in biological channels and receptors
has been a long-standing challenge in biophysics. Recent advances in structural biology have revealed
the architecture of a number of transmembrane channels and allowed detailed, molecular-level insight into
these systems. Herein, we have examined the barriers to ion conductance and origins of ion selectivity in
models of the cationic human
7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) and the anionic
1 glycine receptor
(GlyR), based on the structure of Torpedo nAChR. Molecular dynamics simulations were used to determine
water density profiles along the channel length, and they established that both receptor pores were fully
hydrated. The very low water density in the middle of the nAChR pore indicated the existence of a
hydrophobic constriction. By contrast, the pore of GlyR was lined with hydrophilic residues and remained
well-hydrated throughout. Adaptive biasing force simulations allowed us to reconstruct potentials of mean
force (PMFs) for chloride and sodium ions in the two receptors. For the nicotinic receptor we observed
barriers to ion translocation associated with rings of hydrophobic residues-Val13' and Leu9'-in the middle
of the transmembrane domain. This finding further substantiates the hydrophobic gating hypothesis for
nAChR. The PMF revealed no significant hydrophobic barrier for chloride translocation in GlyR. For both
receptors nonpermeant ions displayed considerable barriers. Thus, the overall electrostatics and the
presence of rings of charged residues at the entrance and exit of the channels were sufficient to explain
the experimentally observed anion and cation selectivity.
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