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Hellmich, Ute

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Hellmich

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Ute

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Hellmich, Ute

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  • Publication

    Phosphatidylinositol-4,5-Biphosphate-Dependent Rearrangement of TRPV4 Cytosolic Tails Enables Channel Activation by Physiological Stimuli

    (National Academy of Sciences, 2013) Garcia-Elias, Anna; Mrkonjic, Sanela; Pardo-Pastor, Carlos; Inada, Hitoshi; Hellmich, Ute; Rubio-Moscardó, Fanny; Plata, Cristina; Gaudet, Rachelle; Vicente, Rubén; Valverde, Miguel A.

    Most transient receptor potential (TRP) channels are regulated by phosphatidylinositol-4,5-biphosphate (PIP(_2)), although the structural rearrangements occurring on PIP(_2) binding are currently far from clear. Here we report that activation of the TRP vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channel by hypotonic and heat stimuli requires PIP(_2) binding to and rearrangement of the cytosolic tails. Neutralization of the positive charges within the sequence (^{121})KRWRK(^{125}), which resembles a phosphoinositide-binding site, rendered the channel unresponsive to hypotonicity and heat but responsive to 4α-phorbol 12,13-didecanoate, an agonist that binds directly to transmembrane domains. Similar channel response was obtained by depletion of PIP(_2) from the plasma membrane with translocatable phosphatases in heterologous expression systems or by activation of phospholipase C in native ciliated epithelial cells. PIP(_2) facilitated TRPV4 activation by the osmotransducing cytosolic messenger 5′-6’-epoxyeicosatrienoic acid and allowed channel activation by heat in inside-out patches. Protease protection assays demonstrated a PIP(_2)-binding site within the N-tail. The proximity of TRPV4 tails, analyzed by fluorescence resonance energy transfer, increased by depleting PIP(_2) mutations in the phosphoinositide site or by coexpression with protein kinase C and casein kinase substrate in neurons 3 (PACSIN3), a regulatory molecule that binds TRPV4 N-tails and abrogates activation by cell swelling and heat. PACSIN3 lacking the Bin-Amphiphysin-Rvs (F-BAR) domain interacted with TRPV4 without affecting channel activation or tail rearrangement. Thus, mutations weakening the TRPV4–PIP(_2) interacting site and conditions that deplete PIP(_2) or restrict access of TRPV4 to PIP(_2)—in the case of PACSIN3—change tail conformation and negatively affect channel activation by hypotonicity and heat.