Mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1 ion channels can be tuned by cellular membrane tension

Piezo1 ion channels mediate the conversion of mechanical forces into electrical signals and are critical for responsiveness to touch in metazoans. The apparent mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1 varies substantially across cellular environments, stimulating methods and protocols, raising the fundament...

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Main Authors: Amanda H Lewis, Jörg Grandl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eLife Sciences Publications Ltd 2015-12-01
Series:eLife
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elifesciences.org/articles/12088
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spelling doaj-73b18e1a7f734f9da8f4b5a07ce9cfd82021-05-05T00:08:52ZengeLife Sciences Publications LtdeLife2050-084X2015-12-01410.7554/eLife.12088Mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1 ion channels can be tuned by cellular membrane tensionAmanda H Lewis0Jörg Grandl1Department of Neurobiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, United StatesDepartment of Neurobiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, United StatesPiezo1 ion channels mediate the conversion of mechanical forces into electrical signals and are critical for responsiveness to touch in metazoans. The apparent mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1 varies substantially across cellular environments, stimulating methods and protocols, raising the fundamental questions of what precise physical stimulus activates the channel and how its stimulus sensitivity is regulated. Here, we measured Piezo1 currents evoked by membrane stretch in three patch configurations, while simultaneously visualizing and measuring membrane geometry. Building on this approach, we developed protocols to minimize resting membrane curvature and tension prior to probing Piezo1 activity. We find that Piezo1 responds to lateral membrane tension with exquisite sensitivity as compared to other mechanically activated channels and that resting tension can drive channel inactivation, thereby tuning overall mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1. Our results explain how Piezo1 can function efficiently and with adaptable sensitivity as a sensor of mechanical stimulation in diverse cellular contexts.https://elifesciences.org/articles/12088Piezo1ion channeltensioninactivationmechanically activated
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amanda H Lewis
Jörg Grandl
spellingShingle Amanda H Lewis
Jörg Grandl
Mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1 ion channels can be tuned by cellular membrane tension
eLife
Piezo1
ion channel
tension
inactivation
mechanically activated
author_facet Amanda H Lewis
Jörg Grandl
author_sort Amanda H Lewis
title Mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1 ion channels can be tuned by cellular membrane tension
title_short Mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1 ion channels can be tuned by cellular membrane tension
title_full Mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1 ion channels can be tuned by cellular membrane tension
title_fullStr Mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1 ion channels can be tuned by cellular membrane tension
title_full_unstemmed Mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1 ion channels can be tuned by cellular membrane tension
title_sort mechanical sensitivity of piezo1 ion channels can be tuned by cellular membrane tension
publisher eLife Sciences Publications Ltd
series eLife
issn 2050-084X
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Piezo1 ion channels mediate the conversion of mechanical forces into electrical signals and are critical for responsiveness to touch in metazoans. The apparent mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1 varies substantially across cellular environments, stimulating methods and protocols, raising the fundamental questions of what precise physical stimulus activates the channel and how its stimulus sensitivity is regulated. Here, we measured Piezo1 currents evoked by membrane stretch in three patch configurations, while simultaneously visualizing and measuring membrane geometry. Building on this approach, we developed protocols to minimize resting membrane curvature and tension prior to probing Piezo1 activity. We find that Piezo1 responds to lateral membrane tension with exquisite sensitivity as compared to other mechanically activated channels and that resting tension can drive channel inactivation, thereby tuning overall mechanical sensitivity of Piezo1. Our results explain how Piezo1 can function efficiently and with adaptable sensitivity as a sensor of mechanical stimulation in diverse cellular contexts.
topic Piezo1
ion channel
tension
inactivation
mechanically activated
url https://elifesciences.org/articles/12088
work_keys_str_mv AT amandahlewis mechanicalsensitivityofpiezo1ionchannelscanbetunedbycellularmembranetension
AT jorggrandl mechanicalsensitivityofpiezo1ionchannelscanbetunedbycellularmembranetension
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