Crystal structure of a yeast aquaporin at 1.15 angstrom reveals a novel gating mechanism.
Journal article, 2009

Aquaporins are transmembrane proteins that facilitate the flow of water through cellular membranes. An unusual characteristic of yeast aquaporins is that they frequently contain an extended N terminus of unknown function. Here we present the X-ray structure of the yeast aquaporin Aqy1 from Pichia pastoris at 1.15 A resolution. Our crystal structure reveals that the water channel is closed by the N terminus, which arranges as a tightly wound helical bundle, with Tyr31 forming H-bond interactions to a water molecule within the pore and thereby occluding the channel entrance. Nevertheless, functional assays show that Aqy1 has appreciable water transport activity that aids survival during rapid freezing of P. pastoris. These findings establish that Aqy1 is a gated water channel. Mutational studies in combination with molecular dynamics simulations imply that gating may be regulated by a combination of phosphorylation and mechanosensitivity.

Freezing

Models

Aquaporins

chemistry

metabolism

Tyrosine

Ion Channel Gating

Microbial Viability

Molecular

Secondary

metabolism

Crystallography

Pichia

Biological Transport

chemistry

Water

Structural Homology

Phosphorylation

chemistry

Spinacia oleracea

Protein Structure

Computer Simulation

Protein

X-Ray

Author

Gerhard Fischer

University of Gothenburg

Urszula Kosinska-Eriksson

University of Gothenburg

Camilo Aponte-Santamaría

Madelene Palmgren

University of Gothenburg

Cecilia Geijer

University of Gothenburg

Kristina Hedfalk

University of Gothenburg

Stefan Hohmann

University of Gothenburg

Bert L de Groot

Richard Neutze

University of Gothenburg

Karin Lindkvist-Petersson

University of Gothenburg

PLoS Biology

1544-9173 (ISSN) 1545-7885 (eISSN)

Vol. 7 6 e1000130-

Subject Categories

Chemical Sciences

DOI

10.1371/journal.pbio.1000130

PubMed

19529756

More information

Created

10/10/2017