Xenon-inhibition of the MscL mechano-sensitive channel and the CopB copper ATPase under different conditions suggests direct effects on these proteins.

Xenon is frequently used as a general anesthetic in humans, but the mechanism remains an issue of debate. While for some membrane proteins, a direct interaction of xenon with the protein has been shown to be the inhibitory mechanism, other membrane protein functions could be affected by changes of m...

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Main Authors: Evgeny Petrov, Gopalakrishnan Menon, Paul R Rohde, Andrew R Battle, Boris Martinac, Marc Solioz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5986136?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-ced3bfc8ebee4d07b20a16f856afcd982020-11-25T02:36:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01136e019811010.1371/journal.pone.0198110Xenon-inhibition of the MscL mechano-sensitive channel and the CopB copper ATPase under different conditions suggests direct effects on these proteins.Evgeny PetrovGopalakrishnan MenonPaul R RohdeAndrew R BattleBoris MartinacMarc SoliozXenon is frequently used as a general anesthetic in humans, but the mechanism remains an issue of debate. While for some membrane proteins, a direct interaction of xenon with the protein has been shown to be the inhibitory mechanism, other membrane protein functions could be affected by changes of membrane properties due to partitioning of the gas into the lipid bilayer. Here, the effect of xenon on a mechanosensitive ion channel and a copper ion-translocating ATPase was compared under different conditions. Xenon inhibited spontaneous gating of the Escherichia coli mechano-sensitive mutant channel MscL-G22E, as shown by patch-clamp recording techniques. Under high hydrostatic pressure, MscL-inhibition was reversed. Similarly, the activity of the Enterococcus hirae CopB copper ATPase, reconstituted into proteoliposomes, was inhibited by xenon. However, the CopB ATPase activity was also inhibited by xenon when CopB was in a solubilized state. These findings suggest that xenon acts by directly interacting with these proteins, rather than via indirect effects by altering membrane properties. Also, inhibition of copper transport may be a novel effect of xenon that contributes to anesthesia.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5986136?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Evgeny Petrov
Gopalakrishnan Menon
Paul R Rohde
Andrew R Battle
Boris Martinac
Marc Solioz
spellingShingle Evgeny Petrov
Gopalakrishnan Menon
Paul R Rohde
Andrew R Battle
Boris Martinac
Marc Solioz
Xenon-inhibition of the MscL mechano-sensitive channel and the CopB copper ATPase under different conditions suggests direct effects on these proteins.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Evgeny Petrov
Gopalakrishnan Menon
Paul R Rohde
Andrew R Battle
Boris Martinac
Marc Solioz
author_sort Evgeny Petrov
title Xenon-inhibition of the MscL mechano-sensitive channel and the CopB copper ATPase under different conditions suggests direct effects on these proteins.
title_short Xenon-inhibition of the MscL mechano-sensitive channel and the CopB copper ATPase under different conditions suggests direct effects on these proteins.
title_full Xenon-inhibition of the MscL mechano-sensitive channel and the CopB copper ATPase under different conditions suggests direct effects on these proteins.
title_fullStr Xenon-inhibition of the MscL mechano-sensitive channel and the CopB copper ATPase under different conditions suggests direct effects on these proteins.
title_full_unstemmed Xenon-inhibition of the MscL mechano-sensitive channel and the CopB copper ATPase under different conditions suggests direct effects on these proteins.
title_sort xenon-inhibition of the mscl mechano-sensitive channel and the copb copper atpase under different conditions suggests direct effects on these proteins.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Xenon is frequently used as a general anesthetic in humans, but the mechanism remains an issue of debate. While for some membrane proteins, a direct interaction of xenon with the protein has been shown to be the inhibitory mechanism, other membrane protein functions could be affected by changes of membrane properties due to partitioning of the gas into the lipid bilayer. Here, the effect of xenon on a mechanosensitive ion channel and a copper ion-translocating ATPase was compared under different conditions. Xenon inhibited spontaneous gating of the Escherichia coli mechano-sensitive mutant channel MscL-G22E, as shown by patch-clamp recording techniques. Under high hydrostatic pressure, MscL-inhibition was reversed. Similarly, the activity of the Enterococcus hirae CopB copper ATPase, reconstituted into proteoliposomes, was inhibited by xenon. However, the CopB ATPase activity was also inhibited by xenon when CopB was in a solubilized state. These findings suggest that xenon acts by directly interacting with these proteins, rather than via indirect effects by altering membrane properties. Also, inhibition of copper transport may be a novel effect of xenon that contributes to anesthesia.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5986136?pdf=render
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AT gopalakrishnanmenon xenoninhibitionofthemsclmechanosensitivechannelandthecopbcopperatpaseunderdifferentconditionssuggestsdirecteffectsontheseproteins
AT paulrrohde xenoninhibitionofthemsclmechanosensitivechannelandthecopbcopperatpaseunderdifferentconditionssuggestsdirecteffectsontheseproteins
AT andrewrbattle xenoninhibitionofthemsclmechanosensitivechannelandthecopbcopperatpaseunderdifferentconditionssuggestsdirecteffectsontheseproteins
AT borismartinac xenoninhibitionofthemsclmechanosensitivechannelandthecopbcopperatpaseunderdifferentconditionssuggestsdirecteffectsontheseproteins
AT marcsolioz xenoninhibitionofthemsclmechanosensitivechannelandthecopbcopperatpaseunderdifferentconditionssuggestsdirecteffectsontheseproteins
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