posted on 2024-05-02, 13:33authored byJu Liu, Yanlei Wang, Bo Gao, Kun Zhang, Hui Li, Jing Ren, Feng Huo, Baofeng Zhao, Lihua Zhang, Suojiang Zhang, Hongyan He
Membrane channel proteins (MCPs) play key roles in matter
transport
through cell membranes and act as major targets for vaccines and drugs.
For emerging ionic liquid (IL) drugs, a rational understanding of
how ILs affect the structure and transport function of MCP is crucial
to their design. In this work, GPU-accelerated microsecond-long molecular
dynamics simulations were employed to investigate the modulating mechanism
of ILs on MCP. Interestingly, ILs prefer to insert into the lipid
bilayer and channel of aquaporin-2 (AQP2) but adsorb on
the entrance of voltage-gated sodium channels (Nav). Molecular trajectory
and free energy analysis reflect that ILs have a minimal impact on
the structure of MCPs but significantly influence MCP functions. It
demonstrates that ILs can decrease the overall energy barrier for
water through AQP2 by 1.88 kcal/mol, whereas that for Na+ through Nav is increased by 1.70 kcal/mol. Consequently,
the permeation rates of water and Na+ can be enhanced and
reduced by at least 1 order of magnitude, respectively. Furthermore,
an abnormal IL gating mechanism was proposed by combining the hydrophobic
nature of MCP and confined water/ion coordination effects. More importantly,
we performed experiments to confirm the influence of ILs on AQP2 in human cells and found that treatment with ILs significantly
accelerated the changes in cell volume in response to altered external
osmotic pressure. Overall, these quantitative results will not only
deepen the understanding of IL-cell interactions but may also shed
light on the rational design of drugs and disease diagnosis.