Sandbox Reserved 1769
From Proteopedia
(Difference between revisions)
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=== Proline/Glycine Hinge === | === Proline/Glycine Hinge === | ||
Glycine and proline residues in the connecting loops and extra- and intracellular helices act as hinges in the mechanism of bile salt uptake. The flexibility allows separation of the core and panel domains, creating a pore open to the extracellular space and exposing critical Na+ binding sites. Once substrate binds the open-pore state, this hinge allows transition to close this pore relative to the extracellular side and open to the cytoplasmic side, thus allowing release of substrate into the cell. | Glycine and proline residues in the connecting loops and extra- and intracellular helices act as hinges in the mechanism of bile salt uptake. The flexibility allows separation of the core and panel domains, creating a pore open to the extracellular space and exposing critical Na+ binding sites. Once substrate binds the open-pore state, this hinge allows transition to close this pore relative to the extracellular side and open to the cytoplasmic side, thus allowing release of substrate into the cell. | ||
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=== Sodium Binding Sites === | === Sodium Binding Sites === | ||
+ | Symport of Na+ ions with bile salts is necessary to drive transport into the cell, as transport of bile salts into the cell is thermodynamically unfavorable. | ||
=== Significant Residues === | === Significant Residues === | ||
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=== Mechanism of HBV/HDV Infection === | === Mechanism of HBV/HDV Infection === | ||
- | HBV and HDV viruses infect are transported through NTCP via secondary active transport. After binding to NTCP, the viruses remain bound until low bile salt levels in the blood shift equilibria enough that endocytosis of NTCP occurs. Once in the cell, the viruses dissociate and infect. The exact mechanism of how HBV and HDV bind to NTCP is not certain, although two critical sites have been identified on NTCP: residues 84-87 and 157-165. Additionally, it has been shown that myristoylation (INSERT BLUE LINK) of the HBV/HDV capsid is vital for recognition by NTCP, as well as residues 8-17 on HBV/HDV (sequence: NPLGFFPDHQ). (INSERT CITING) has proposed two mechanisms for how HBV/HDV binds to NTCP. The first proposes binding of the myristoyl group to the host cell membrane, while residues 8-17 interact with NTCP residues 157-165. The second proposes binding of the myristoyl group with residues 157-165 in the pore. | + | HBV and HDV viruses infect are transported through NTCP via secondary active transport. After binding to NTCP in the open-pore state, the viruses remain bound until low bile salt levels in the blood shift equilibria enough that endocytosis of NTCP occurs. Once in the cell, the viruses dissociate and infect. The exact mechanism of how HBV and HDV bind to NTCP is not certain, although two critical sites have been identified on NTCP: residues 84-87 and 157-165. Additionally, it has been shown that myristoylation (INSERT BLUE LINK) of the HBV/HDV capsid is vital for recognition by NTCP, as well as residues 8-17 on HBV/HDV (sequence: NPLGFFPDHQ). (INSERT CITING) has proposed two mechanisms for how HBV/HDV binds to NTCP. The first proposes binding of the myristoyl group to the host cell membrane, while residues 8-17 interact with NTCP residues 157-165. The second proposes binding of the myristoyl group with residues 157-165 in the pore. |
== Medical Relevance == | == Medical Relevance == |
Revision as of 18:16, 20 March 2023
Sodium-taurocholate Co-transporting Polypeptide
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References
- ↑ Park JH, Iwamoto M, Yun JH, Uchikubo-Kamo T, Son D, Jin Z, Yoshida H, Ohki M, Ishimoto N, Mizutani K, Oshima M, Muramatsu M, Wakita T, Shirouzu M, Liu K, Uemura T, Nomura N, Iwata S, Watashi K, Tame JRH, Nishizawa T, Lee W, Park SY. Structural insights into the HBV receptor and bile acid transporter NTCP. Nature. 2022 Jun;606(7916):1027-1031. PMID:35580630 doi:10.1038/s41586-022-04857-0
- ↑ Goutam K, Ielasi FS, Pardon E, Steyaert J, Reyes N. Structural basis of sodium-dependent bile salt uptake into the liver. Nature. 2022 Jun;606(7916):1015-1020. PMID:35545671 doi:10.1038/s41586-022-04723-z
- ↑ Liu H, Irobalieva RN, Bang-Sørensen R, Nosol K, Mukherjee S, Agrawal P, Stieger B, Kossiakoff AA, Locher KP. Structure of human NTCP reveals the basis of recognition and sodium-driven transport of bile salts into the liver. Cell Res. 2022 Aug;32(8):773-776. PMID:35726088 doi:10.1038/s41422-022-00680-4
- ↑ Asami J, Kimura KT, Fujita-Fujiharu Y, Ishida H, Zhang Z, Nomura Y, Liu K, Uemura T, Sato Y, Ono M, Yamamoto M, Noda T, Shigematsu H, Drew D, Iwata S, Shimizu T, Nomura N, Ohto U. Structure of the bile acid transporter and HBV receptor NTCP. Nature. 2022 Jun;606(7916):1021-1026. PMID:35580629 doi:10.1038/s41586-022-04845-4
- ↑ Qi X, Li W. Unlocking the secrets to human NTCP structure. Innovation (Camb). 2022 Aug 1;3(5):100294. PMID:36032196 doi:10.1016/j.xinn.2022.100294
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