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Voltage-gated proton channel in a dinoflagellate.


ABSTRACT: Fogel and Hastings first hypothesized the existence of voltage-gated proton channels in 1972 in bioluminescent dinoflagellates, where they were thought to trigger the flash by activating luciferase. Proton channel genes were subsequently identified in human, mouse, and Ciona intestinalis, but their existence in dinoflagellates remained unconfirmed. We identified a candidate proton channel gene from a Karlodinium veneficum cDNA library based on homology with known proton channel genes. K. veneficum is a predatory, nonbioluminescent dinoflagellate that produces toxins responsible for fish kills worldwide. Patch clamp studies on the heterologously expressed gene confirm that it codes for a genuine voltage-gated proton channel, kH(V)1: it is proton-specific and activated by depolarization, its g(H)-V relationship shifts with changes in external or internal pH, and mutation of the selectivity filter (which we identify as Asp(51)) results in loss of proton-specific conduction. Indirect evidence suggests that kH(V)1 is monomeric, unlike other proton channels. Furthermore, kH(V)1 differs from all known proton channels in activating well negative to the Nernst potential for protons, E(H). This unique voltage dependence makes the dinoflagellate proton channel ideally suited to mediate the proton influx postulated to trigger bioluminescence. In contrast to vertebrate proton channels, whose main function is acid extrusion, we propose that proton channels in dinoflagellates have fundamentally different functions of signaling and excitability.

SUBMITTER: Smith SM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3207696 | biostudies-literature | 2011 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Voltage-gated proton channel in a dinoflagellate.

Smith Susan M E SM   Morgan Deri D   Musset Boris B   Cherny Vladimir V VV   Place Allen R AR   Hastings J Woodland JW   Decoursey Thomas E TE  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20111017 44


Fogel and Hastings first hypothesized the existence of voltage-gated proton channels in 1972 in bioluminescent dinoflagellates, where they were thought to trigger the flash by activating luciferase. Proton channel genes were subsequently identified in human, mouse, and Ciona intestinalis, but their existence in dinoflagellates remained unconfirmed. We identified a candidate proton channel gene from a Karlodinium veneficum cDNA library based on homology with known proton channel genes. K. venefic  ...[more]

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