Aquaporins Flashcards
Mercurial sensitivity - where does the mercury bind? How was this shown?
C189S residue on AQP1 – when different cysteine residues of AQP1 were mutated and then mercury added, no change in cell volume or Pf was seen in mutated C189S residue
AQP1 - hourglass model - what does this refer to and what are the important features?
6TMDs, loops between tmds 2 and 3 and 4 and 5 –> middle of this NPA domain can be found
The amino and carboxy end of the protein are intracellular
C189 residue - why important?
Crucial region of AQP1 lies close to opening of channel pore –> means AQP1 is sensitive from the inside of the cell
AQP1 tetramer structure
AQP1 exists as tetramer (confirmed by cryo-electron microscopy)
Central pore structure
4 monomers to protein - each monomer has a water pore
AQP1 AS A FUNCTIONAL UNIT - MONOMERS OR TETRAMERS? What experiment proved this
Tandem dimers created with WT-C189S, C189S-C189S and WT-WT structure
- Hg only impacted half and half by 50%
- Hg had no impact on both mutated monomers
»> each monomer is a functional unit
Hg sensitivity - where does Hg bind?
How does it impact H20 movement in that region of the protein?
Hg binds to the middle of a crystal structure of AQP1 created –> prevents movement of H20 in that region
Why is AQP1 an ideal water transporter – regarding hydrogen bonding?
AQP1 just slightly bigger than a water molecule so good size for single file movement of water molecules
- hydrogen bonding between water molecules means that they should be able to piggyback through the pore region
- AQP1 decouples water molecules by breaking hydroge bonds and reforming at the NPA motif
- Prevents H+ coming down the negatively charged back bone and makes pore very water selective
AQP3 - where is it located? WHy is it different to AQP1?
Located in the skin and collecting duct
Aquaglycerolporin - can therefore transport small solutes such as urea and glycerol as well as water
AQP3 structural differences to AQP1 –> what is shown with regards to mercurial sensitivity ?
Mercurial sensitivity of AQP3 increases in the presence of urea and glycerol –> allows for slower transport of solutes.
AQP3 also may be structurally different to AQP1
AQP6 - where is it found and why is it unorthodox
Found in the kidney and colocalises with H+ ATPase pump - also acts as a Cl- transporter!!
Known as an unorthodox AQP as it ISNT FOUND IN THE MEMBRANE
Mechanism of AQP6 - how is it PH sensitive?
Permeable to water and acts to balance the charges of vesicles –> Proton pump brings H+ into vesicles and then Cl- moves in via AQP6 to balance charge
Activity is PH sensitive!!!
What disease in linked to AQP2 malfunctioning?
Diabetes insipidus
no response of cells to vasopressin - patients cannot properly concentrate their urine
Either caused by lack of response to vasopressin or a problem in AQP2
AQP3 - what disease linked to?
Been linked to some cancers
3 types of epithelia that involve water transport - examples?
Reabsorbtion epithelia - proximal tubule - AQP1
Secretive epithelia - salivary gland - AQP5
SMALL INTESTINE CHALLENGES THIS - reabsorption occurs here but no AQPs can be found!!
PROXIMAL TUBULE - what conditions are present? why is this interesting?
High h20 permeability yet under nearly isotonic conditions (small gradient for reabsoprtion)