Published June 1, 2022
| Version v1
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Molecular determinants of inhibition of the human proton channel hHv1 by the designer peptide C6 and a bivalent derivative
- 1. University of California, Irvine
- 2. University of Chicago
Description
The human voltage-gated proton channel (hHv1) is important for control of intracellular pH. We designed C6, a specific peptide inhibitor of hHv1, to evaluate the roles of the channel in sperm capacitation and in the inflammatory immune response of neutrophils [R. Zhao et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 115, E11847–E11856 (2018)]. One C6 binds with nanomolar affinity to each of the two S3–S4 voltage-sensor loops in hHv1 in cooperative fashion so that C6-bound channels require greater depolarization to open and do so more slowly. As depolarization drives hHv1 sensors outwardly, C6 affinity decreases, and inhibition is partial. Here, we identified residues essential to C6–hHv1 binding by scanning mutagenesis, five in the hHv1 S3–S4 loops and seven on C6. A structural model of the C6–hHv1 complex was then generated by molecular dynamics simulations and validated by mutant-cycle analysis. Guided by this model, we created a bivalent C6 peptide (C62) that binds simultaneously to both hHv1 subunits and fully inhibits current with picomolar affinity. The results help delineate the structural basis for C6 state-dependent inhibition, support an anionic lipid-mediated binding mechanism, and offer molecular insight into the effectiveness of engineered C6 as a therapeutic agent or lead.
Data availability
All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or SI Appendix.
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1073/pnas.2120750119
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:9688
Funding
- National Institutes of Health
- GM111716
- National Institutes of Health
- GM57846
- US–Israel Binational Science Foundation
- BSF 2017243
- National Center for Research Resources
- National Institutes of Health
- UL1 TR001414
- National Institutes of Health
- GM116961