Aquaporins are a family of water and small molecule channels found in organisms ranging from bacteria to animals. One of these channels, the E. coli protein aquaporin Z (AqpZ), has been shown to selectively conduct only water at high rates. We have expressed, purified, crystallized, and solved the X-ray structure of AqpZ. The 2.5 Å resolution structure of AqpZ suggests aquaporin selectivity results both from a steric mechanism due to pore size and from specific amino acid substitutions that regulate the preference for a hydrophobic or hydrophilic substrate. This structure provides direct evidence on the molecular mechanisms of specificity between water and glycerol in this family of channels from a single species. It is to our knowledge the first atomic resolution structure of a recombinant aquaporin and so provides a platform for combined genetic, mutational, functional, and structural determinations of the mechanisms of aquaporins and, more generally, the assembly of multimeric membrane proteins.
Architecture and Selectivity in Aquaporins: 2.5 Å X-Ray Structure of Aquaporin Z
D. Savage,P. Egea,Yaneth Robles-Colmenares,J. D. Iii,R. Stroud
Published 2003 in PLoS Biology
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- Publication year
2003
- Venue
PLoS Biology
- Publication date
2003-12-01
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Chemistry
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Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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