posted on 2022-03-10, 17:12authored byTong Wei, Mi Zhou, Lingzhi Gu, Hong Yang, Yang Zhou, Ming Li
As the principal water channel in
the brain, aquaporin-4 (AQP4)
plays a vital role in brain edema, but its role in blast brain edema
is unclear. On the basis of molecular simulations, we reveal the atomically
detailed picture of AQP4 in response to blast shockwaves. The results
show that the shockwave alone closes the AQP4 channel; however, shock-induced
bubble collapse opens it. The jet from bubble collapse forcefully
increases the distance between helices and the tilt angles of six
helices relative to the membrane vertical direction in a very short
time. The average channel size increases about 2.6 times, and the
water flux rate is nearly 20 times higher than for normal states.
It is responsible for abnormal water transport and a potential cause
of acute blast brain edema. Additionally, the open AQP4 channel quickly
returns to its normal state, which is in turn helpful for edema absorption.
Thus, a novel gating mechanism for AQP4 related to the secondary structure
change has been provided, which is different from the previous residue-mediated
gating mechanism.