Faculty, Staff and Student Publications

Publication Date

7-23-2022

Journal

Communications Biology

Abstract

Human two-pore channels (TPCs) are endolysosomal cation channels and play an important role in NAADP-evoked Ca2+ release and endomembrane dynamics. We found that YM201636, a PIKfyve inhibitor, potently inhibits PI(3,5)P2-activated human TPC2 with an IC50 of 0.16 μM. YM201636 also effectively inhibits NAADP-activated TPC2 and a constitutively-open TPC2 L690A/L694A mutant channel; whereas it exerts little effect when applied in the channel's closed state. PI-103, a YM201636 analog and an inhibitor of PI3K and mTOR, also inhibits human TPC2 with an IC50 of 0.64 μM. With mutational, virtual docking, and molecular dynamic simulation analyses, we found that YM201636 and PI-103 directly block the TPC2's open-state channel pore at the bundle-cross pore-gate region where a nearby H699 residue is a key determinant for channel's sensitivity to the inhibitors. H699 likely interacts with the blockers around the pore entrance and facilitates their access to the pore. Substitution of a Phe for H699 largely accounts for the TPC1 channel's insensitivity to YM201636. These findings identify two potent TPC2 channel blockers, reveal a channel pore entrance blockade mechanism, and provide an ion channel target in interpreting the pharmacological effects of two commonly used phosphoinositide kinase inhibitors.

Keywords

1-Phosphatidylinositol 4-Kinase, Aminopyridines, Calcium, Calcium Channels, Furans, Heterocyclic Compounds, 3-Ring, Histidine, Humans, Phosphatidylinositols, Pyridines, Pyrimidines

DOI

10.1038/s42003-022-03701-5

PMID

35871252

PMCID

PMC9308409

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

7-23-2022

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Published Open-Access

yes

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