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. 1996 Feb;16(2):407-13.
doi: 10.1016/s0896-6273(00)80058-6.

Interactions between a pore-blocking peptide and the voltage sensor of the sodium channel: an electrostatic approach to channel geometry

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Free article

Interactions between a pore-blocking peptide and the voltage sensor of the sodium channel: an electrostatic approach to channel geometry

R J French et al. Neuron. 1996 Feb.
Free article

Abstract

Few experimental data illuminate the relationship between the molecular structures that mediate ion conduction through voltage-dependent ion channels and the structures responsible for sensing transmembrane voltage and controlling gating. To fill this void, we have used a strongly cationic, mutated mu-conotoxin peptide, which only partially blocks current through voltage-dependent sodium channels, to study voltage-dependent activation gating in both bound and unbound channels. When the peptide binds to the ion-conducting pore, it inhibit channel opening, necessitating stronger depolarization for channel activation. We show that this activation shift could result entirely from electrostatic inhibition of the movement of the voltage-sensing S4 charges and estimate the approximate physical distance through which the S4 charges move.

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