Identification of a Binding Motif in the S5 Helix That Confers Cholesterol Sensitivity to the TRPV1 Ion Channel

Giovanni Picazo-Juárez(Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), Silvina Romero‐Suárez(Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), Andrés Nieto‐Posadas(Analogic (United States)), Itzel Llorente(Analogic (United States)), Andrés Jara-Oseguera(Universidad Nacional de Colombia), Margaret M. Briggs(Duke University), Thomas J. McIntosh(Duke University), Sidney A. Simon(Duke University), Ernesto Ladrón‐de‐Guevara(Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), León D Islas(Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), Tamara Rosenbaum(Analogic (United States))
Journal of Biological Chemistry
May 10, 2011
Cited by 152Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The TRPV1 ion channel serves as an integrator of noxious stimuli with its activation linked to pain and neurogenic inflammation. Cholesterol, a major component of cell membranes, modifies the function of several types of ion channels. Here, using measurements of capsaicin-activated currents in excised patches from TRPV1-expressing HEK cells, we show that enrichment with cholesterol, but not its diastereoisomer epicholesterol, markedly decreased wild-type rat TRPV1 currents. Substitutions in the S5 helix, rTRPV1-R579D, and rTRPV1-F582Q, decreased this cholesterol response and rTRPV1-L585I was insensitive to cholesterol addition. Two human TRPV1 variants, with different amino acids at position 585, had different responses to cholesterol with hTRPV1-Ile(585) being insensitive to this molecule. However, hTRPV1-I585L was inhibited by cholesterol addition similar to rTRPV1 with the same S5 sequence. In the absence of capsaicin, cholesterol enrichment also inhibited TRPV1 currents induced by elevated temperature and voltage. These data suggest that there is a cholesterol-binding site in TRPV1 and that the functions of TRPV1 depend on the genetic variant and membrane cholesterol content.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis