Article
Effects of Anionic Lipid and Ion Concentrations on the Topology and Segmental Mobility of Colicin Ia Channel Domain from Solid-State NMR†
This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant MCB-93398.
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Department of Chemistry, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011. Telephone: (515) 294-3521. Fax: (515) 294-0105. E-mail: mhong@iastate.edu.
Abstract

Channel-forming colicins are bacterial toxins that spontaneously insert into the inner cell membrane of sensitive bacteria to form voltage-gated ion channels. It has been shown that the channel current and the conformational flexibility of colicin E1 channel domain depend on the membrane surface potential, which is regulated by the anionic lipid content and the ion concentration. To better understand the dependence of colicin structure and dynamics on the membrane surface potential, we have used solid-state NMR to investigate the topology and segmental motion of the closed state of colicin Ia channel-forming domain in membranes of different anionic lipid contents and ion concentrations. Colicin Ia channel domain was reconstituted into membranes with different POPG and KCl concentrations. 1H spin diffusion experiments indicate that the protein contains a small domain that inserts into the hydrophobic center of the 70% anionic membrane, similar to when it binds to the 25% anionic membrane. Measurements of C−H and N−H dipolar couplings indicate that, on the sub-microsecond time scale, the protein has the least segmental mobility under the high-salt and low-anionic lipid condition, which has the most physiological membrane surface potential. Measurement of millisecond time scale motions yielded similar results. These suggest that optimal channel activity requires the protein to have sufficient segmental rigidity so that entire helices can undergo cooperative conformational motions that are required for translocating the channel-forming helices across the lipid bilayer upon voltage activation.
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History
- Published In Issue January 10, 2006
- Received August 2, 2005
Revised Manuscript Received November 3, 2005
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