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Article
Nature Structural Biology  9, 704 - 710 (2002)
Published online: 12 August 2002; | doi:10.1038/nsb828

A large iris-like expansion of a mechanosensitive channel protein induced by membrane tension

Monica Betanzos1, Chien-Sung Chiang1, H. Robert Guy2 & Sergei Sukharev1

1  Department of Biology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA.

2  Laboratory of Experimental and Computational Biology, NCI, National Institutes of Health, 12 South Drive, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-5567, USA.

Correspondence should be addressed to Sergei Sukharev ss311@umail.umd.edu
MscL, a bacterial mechanosensitive channel of large conductance, is the first structurally characterized mechanosensor protein. Molecular models of its gating mechanisms are tested here. Disulfide crosslinking shows that M1 transmembrane alpha-helices in MscL of resting Escherichia coli are arranged similarly to those in the crystal structure of MscL from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. An expanded conformation was trapped in osmotically shocked cells by the specific bridging between Cys 20 and Cys 36 of adjacent M1 helices. These bridges stabilized the open channel. Disulfide bonds engineered between the M1 and M2 helices of adjacent subunits (Cys 32−Cys 81) do not prevent channel gating. These findings support gating models in which interactions between M1 and M2 of adjacent subunits remain unaltered while their tilts simultaneously increase. The MscL barrel, therefore, undergoes a large concerted iris-like expansion and flattening when perturbed by membrane tension.

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Nature Structural & Molecular Biology
ISSN: 1545-9993
EISSN: 1545-9985
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