Source data: Native American ataxia medicines rescue ataxia-linked mutant potassium channel activity via binding to the voltage sensing domain
收藏DataCite Commons2025-04-01 更新2025-04-09 收录
下载链接:
https://datadryad.org/dataset/doi:10.7280/D1569B
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
There are currently no drugs known to rescue the function of Kv1.1
voltage-gated potassium channels carrying loss-of-function sequence
variants underlying the inherited movement disorder, Episodic Ataxia 1
(EA1). The Kwakwaka'wakw First Nations of the Pacific
Northwest Coast used Fucus gardneri (bladderwrack kelp), Physocarpus
capitatus (Pacific ninebark) and Urtica dioica (common nettle) to
treat locomotor ataxia. Here, extracts of these plants enhanced wild-type
Kv1.1 current, especially at subthreshold potentials. Screening of their
constituents revealed that gallic acid and tannic acid similarly augmented
wild-type Kv1.1 current, with submicromolar potency. Crucially, the
extracts and their constituents also enhanced activity of Kv1.1 channels
containing EA1-linked sequence variants. Molecular dynamics simulations
revealed that gallic acid augments Kv1.1 activity via a previously
unreported small-molecule binding site in the extracellular S1-S2 linker.
Thus, traditional Native American ataxia treatments utilize a molecular
mechanistic foundation that can inform small-molecule approaches to
therapeutically correcting EA1 and potentially other Kv1.1-linked
channelopathies.
提供机构:
Dryad
创建时间:
2023-05-08



