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Research Articles

Deciphering the role of aquaporin 1 in the adaptation of the stinging catfish Heteropneustes fossilis to environmental hypertonicity by molecular dynamics simulation studies

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Pages 2075-2089 | Received 06 Jan 2021, Accepted 05 Jan 2022, Published online: 18 Jan 2022
 

Abstract

A thorough investigation of the water permeability of H. fossilis aquaporin 1 (hfAQP1) in a hypertonic environment can provide a useful insight into the understanding of the underlying molecular mechanism of its high tolerance to salinity. Here, we constructed a 3 D homology model of hfAQP1 by taking Bos taurus AQP1, AQP0, and human AQP2 as templates using I-TASSER. The model obtained has similar structural organizations with mammalian AQP1s in all aspects. We investigated the water permeability of the modeled hfAQP1 in a 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) membrane under neutral and 100 mM hypersalinity by subjecting each system to a 100 ns molecular dynamics simulation. Our results show that hypersalinity hinders water permeation across the membrane through the hfAQP1 channel. A change in the intermolecular distance between key residues of the ar/R selectivity filter along with charge redistribution resulted in the accommodation of only 2–6 water molecules inside the channel at once under hypersaline conditions. We investigated the mRNA expression pattern of hfaqp1 in osmoregulatory organs of H. fossilis in response to 100 mM hypertonicity by using qPCR analysis. The transcript was downregulated in kidney and GI tract, but upregulated in the Gills. Thus, the catfish survive in a hypertonic environment by reducing the transport of water in its cellular systems and downregulating the expression of the hfaqp1 gene. The results observed in our study can shed more light on the functionality of AQP1 in catfishes under salinity stress and aid in future researches on solving more gating mechanisms involved in its regulation.

Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma

Acknowledgments

The authors are thankful to the DST SERB for funding and the Head, Department of Zoology, UGC SAP, Bioinformatics Infrastructure facility, (DBT) Gauhati University, for providing the necessary facilities and equipments for conducting the purpose of the study. We also acknowledge Bioinformatics Infrastructure Facility, CVSc, AAU, Khanapara for providing the computational resources to perform structural modeling and analysis.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This study was funded by the DST SERB ECR Grant with Sanction Number: ECR12016/000809 dated 7th March 2017.

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