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Experimental Neurobiology ; : 183-215, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-739544

RESUMO

In the brain, a reduction in extracellular osmolality causes water-influx and swelling, which subsequently triggers Cl⁻- and osmolytes-efflux via volume-regulated anion channel (VRAC). Although LRRC8 family has been recently proposed as the pore-forming VRAC which is activated by low cytoplasmic ionic strength but not by swelling, the molecular identity of the pore-forming swelling-dependent VRAC (VRAC(swell)) remains unclear. Here we identify and characterize Tweety-homologs (TTYH1, TTYH2, TTYH3) as the major VRAC(swell) in astrocytes. Gene-silencing of all Ttyh1/2/3 eliminated hypo-osmotic-solution-induced Cl⁻ conductance (I(Cl,swell)) in cultured and hippocampal astrocytes. When heterologously expressed in HEK293T or CHO-K1 cells, each TTYH isoform showed a significant I(Cl,swell) with similar aquaporin-4 dependency, pharmacological properties and glutamate permeability as I(Cl,swell) observed in native astrocytes. Mutagenesis-based structure-activity analysis revealed that positively charged arginine residue at 165 in TTYH1 and 164 in TTYH2 is critical for the formation of the channel-pore. Our results demonstrate that TTYH family confers the bona fide VRAC(swell) in the brain.


Assuntos
Humanos , Arginina , Astrócitos , Encéfalo , Citoplasma , Ácido Glutâmico , Concentração Osmolar , Permeabilidade
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