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      Differential Effects of Sterols on Ion Channels: Stereospecific Binding vs Stereospecific Response.

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          Abstract

          Numerous ion channels have been shown to be regulated by the level of membrane cholesterol, but the mechanisms responsible for these effects are still not well understood. The key question in the field is how to discriminate between the contributions of the two central mechanisms that might be responsible for the sensitivity of ion channels to cholesterol: specific sterol-protein interactions or regulation of channels by the bilayer physical properties. Comparative analysis of cholesterol and its isomers on the function of an ion channel is a powerful tool to achieve this goal. An increasing number of studies show that cholesterol regulates several types of ion channels in a stereospecific manner, suggesting an involvement of specific sterol-protein interactions. However in this chapter, we present evidence that the stereospecificity of cholesterol-ion channel interactions may be mediated, not by a lack of binding, as has been generally assumed, but by the specificity of the interaction, which results in a functional effect, in the case of native cholesterol, and a lack of functional effect, in the case of a cholesterol isomer. In other words, accumulating evidence suggests that the structural requirements of ion channel cholesterol-binding sites are lax, allowing chiral isomers of cholesterol to bind to the same site in a nonstereospecific way, but the ability of a sterol to confer a functional effect on the channel activity can still be stereospecific. This is an important distinction both conceptually and methodologically. Indeed, our analysis shows that the orientations of cholesterol and its chiral isomer ent-cholesterol within a hydrophobic binding pocket of Kir2.2 are significantly different, and we propose that this difference may underlie distinct functional outcomes.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Curr Top Membr
          Current topics in membranes
          Elsevier BV
          1063-5823
          1063-5823
          2017
          : 80
          Affiliations
          [1 ] University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.
          [2 ] North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, United States.
          [3 ] University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States. Electronic address: levitan@uic.edu.
          Article
          S1063-5823(17)30009-1
          10.1016/bs.ctm.2017.06.001
          28863819
          fb09c49c-78d9-4bc7-a66d-7732a8a003d3
          History

          Cholesterol binding,Cholesterol enantiomers,Epicholesterol,Kir2 channels,Potassium channels,ent-Cholesterol,Cholesterol

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