Positively charged residues at the channel mouth boost single-file water flow
Sprache des Titels:
Englisch
Original Kurzfassung:
Water molecules lose two of their four bulk neighbours when entering single-file channels. This process may be sensitive to the presence of positive and negative charges at the channel mouth, since the costs for dehydrating cations and anions differ by a large margin. However, it is not known whether entrance charges affect single channel water permeability pf. So far pf is only known to be governed by H-bond formation between permeating water molecules and wall-lining residues. Here we compare the pf values of five different aquaporin species (AQP1, AQPZ, AQP4 wild type, and two phosphorylation mimicking AQP4 mutants) that offer the same number of hydrogen bond donating and receiving residues in their single-file region but display different entrance charges. The pf measurements were performed with reconstituted lipid vesicles. We assessed (i) the osmotically induced vesicle deflation from light scattering intensity in a stopped-flow device and (ii) aquaporin abundance by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. Substitution of serine at positions 111 and 180 in AQP4 for aspartic acid showed only a marginal effect on pf suggesting that negative entrance charges are of minor importance. In contrast, the total number of positively charged amino acid side chains at entrances and exits correlates with pf: A total of three, four and seven charges of AQP1, AQPZ, and AQP4 translate into pf values of 1.1, 1.8, and 3.2 × 10-13 cm3 s-1, respectively. Thus, positive interfacial charges boost pf of AQP1 to three times the value of AQP4. Nevertheless, the number of hydrogen bond donating and receiving residues in the single-file region remain the major determinant of pf. Their effect on pf may be hundredfold larger than that of interfacial charges.