Gramicidin channels
Andersen, O.S.
Koeppe, R.E., II
Roux, B.
Weill Med. Coll., Cornell Univ., New York, NY, USA;
This paper appears in: NanoBioscience, IEEE Transactions on
Publication Date: March 2005
Volume: 4,
Issue: 1
On page(s): 10-20
ISSN: 1536-1241
INSPEC Accession Number: 8328306
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1109/TNB.2004.842470
Current Version Published: 2005-03-07
Abstract
Gramicidin channels are mini-proteins composed of two tryptophan-rich subunits. The conducting channels are formed by the transbilayer dimerization of nonconducting subunits, which are tied to the bilayer/solution interface through hydrogen bonds between the indole NH groups and the phospholipid backbone and water. The channel structure is known at atomic resolution and the channel's permeability characteristics are particularly well defined: gramicidin channels are selective for monovalent cations, with no measurable permeability to anions or polyvalent cations; ions and water move through a pore whose wall is formed by the peptide backbone; and the single-channel conductance and cation selectivity vary when the amino acid sequence is varied, even though the permeating ions make no contact with the amino acid side chains. Given the amount of experimental information that is available-for both the wild-type channels and for channels formed by amino acid-substituted gramicidin analogues-gramicidin channels provide important insights into the microphysics of ion permeation through bilayer-spanning channels. For the same reason, gramicidin channels constitute the system of choice for evaluating computational strategies for obtaining mechanistic insights into ion permeation through the complex channels formed by integral membrane proteins.
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