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Research Paper

Structural order in Pannexin 1 cytoplasmic domains

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Pages 157-166 | Received 25 Feb 2014, Accepted 10 Apr 2014, Published online: 21 Apr 2014
 

Abstract

Pannexin 1 forms ion and metabolite permeable hexameric channels with abundant expression in the central nervous system and elsewhere. Although pannexin 1 does not form intercellular channels, a common channel topology and oligomerization state, as well as involvement of the intracellular carboxyl terminal (CT) domain in channel gating, is shared with connexins. In this study, we characterized the secondary structure of the mouse pannexin 1 cytoplasmic domains to complement structural studies of the transmembrane segments and compare with similar domains from connexins. A combination of structural prediction tools and circular dichroism revealed that, unlike connexins (predominately intrinsically disordered), cytosolic regions of pannexin 1 contain approximately 50% secondary structure, a majority being α-helical. Moreover, prediction of transmembrane domains uncovered a potential membrane interacting region (I360-G370) located upstream of the caspase cleavage site (D375-D378) within the pannexin 1 CT domain. The α-helical content of a peptide containing these domains (G357-S384) increased in the presence of detergent micelles providing evidence of membrane association. We also purified a pannexin 1 CT construct containing the caspase cleavage site (M374-C426), assigned the resonances by NMR, and confirmed cleavage by Caspase-3 in vitro. On the basis of these structural studies of the cytoplasmic domains of pannexin 1, we propose a mechanism for the opening of pannexin 1 channels upon apoptosis, involving structural changes within the CT domain.

Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest

No potential conflicts of interest were disclosed.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported, in whole or in part, by the National Institutes of Health grants GM07263 (PS) and NS041282 (DS). The authors would like to thank Marcia Urban-Maldonado and Sydney Zack for their technical assistance with cloning and protein purification respectively.

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