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Dive into the research topics where Ignacio Diaz-Franulic is active.

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Featured researches published by Ignacio Diaz-Franulic.


Annual review of biophysics | 2016

Allosterism and Structure in Thermally Activated Transient Receptor Potential Channels

Ignacio Diaz-Franulic; Horacio Poblete; Germán Miño-Galaz; Carlos Gonzalez; Ramon Latorre

The molecular sensors that mediate temperature changes in living organisms are a large family of proteins known as thermosensitive transient receptor potential (TRP) ion channels. These membrane proteins are polymodal receptors that can be activated by cold or hot temperatures, depending on the channel subtype, voltage, and ligands. The stimuli sensors are allosterically coupled to a pore domain, increasing the probability of finding the channel in its ion conductive conformation. In this review we first discuss the allosteric coupling between the temperature and voltage sensor modules and the pore domain, and then discuss the thermodynamic foundations of thermo-TRP channel activation. We provide a structural overview of the molecular determinants of temperature sensing. We also posit an anisotropic thermal diffusion model that may explain the large temperature sensitivity of TRP channels. Additionally, we examine the effect of several ligands on TRP channel function and the evidence regarding their mechanisms of action.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2015

Pore dimensions and the role of occupancy in unitary conductance of Shaker K channels

Ignacio Diaz-Franulic; Romina V. Sepúlveda; Nieves Navarro-Quezada; Fernando D. González-Nilo; David Naranjo

The resistance of the inner vestibule limits Shaker’s conductance.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2016

Structure-Driven Pharmacology of Transient Receptor Potential Channel Vanilloid 1

Ignacio Diaz-Franulic; Javier Caceres-Molina; Romina V. Sepúlveda; Fernando D. González-Nilo; Ramon Latorre

The transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) ion channel is a polymodal receptor that mediates the flux of cations across the membrane in response to several stimuli, including heat, voltage, and ligands. The best known agonist of TRPV1 channels is capsaicin, the pungent component of “hot” chili peppers. In addition, peptides found in the venom of poisonous animals, along with the lipids phosphatidylinositol 4,5-biphosphate, lysophosphatidic acid, and cholesterol, bind to TRPV1 with high affinity to modulate channel gating. Here, we discuss the functional evidence regarding ligand-dependent activation of TRPV1 channels in light of structural data recently obtained by cryoelectron microscopy. This review focuses on the mechanistic insights into ligand binding and allosteric gating of TRPV1 channels and the relevance of accurate polymodal receptor biophysical characterization for drug design in novel pain therapies.


Biophysical Journal | 2012

K+ Conduction and Mg2+ Blockade in a Shaker Kv-Channel Single Point Mutant with an Unusually High Conductance

Cristian Moscoso; Ariela Vergara-Jaque; Valeria Márquez-Miranda; Romina V. Sepúlveda; Ignacio Valencia; Ignacio Diaz-Franulic; Fernando D. González-Nilo; David Naranjo

Potassium channels exhibit a large diversity of single-channel conductances. Shaker is a low-conductance K-channel in which Pro475→Asp, a single-point mutation near the internal pore entrance, promotes 6- to 8-fold higher unitary current. To assess the mechanism for this higher conductance, we measured Shaker-P475D single-channel current in a wide range of symmetrical K(+) concentrations and voltages. Below 300 mM K(+), the current-to-voltage relations (i-V) showed inward rectification that disappeared at 1000 mM K(+). Single-channel conductance reached a maximum of ∼190 pS at saturating [K(+)], a value 4- to 5-fold larger than that estimated for the native channel. Intracellular Mg(2+) blocked this variant with ∼100-fold higher affinity. Near zero voltage, blockade was competitively antagonized by K(+); however, at voltages >100 mV, it was enhanced by K(+). This result is consistent with a lock-in effect in a single-file diffusion regime of Mg(2+) and K(+) along the pore. Molecular-dynamics simulations revealed higher K(+) density in the pore, especially near the Asp-475 side chains, as in the high-conductance MthK bacterial channel. The molecular dynamics also showed that K(+) ions bound distally can coexist with other K(+) or Mg(2+) in the cavity, supporting a lock-in mechanism. The maximal K(+) transport rate and higher occupancy could be due to a decrease in the electrostatic energy profile for K(+) throughout the pore, reducing the energy wells and barriers differentially by ∼0.7 and ∼2 kT, respectively.


Physical Biology | 2017

Thermally activated TRP channels: Molecular sensors for temperature detection

Karen Castillo; Ignacio Diaz-Franulic; Jonathan Canan; Fernando D. González-Nilo; Ramon Latorre

Temperature sensing is one of the oldest capabilities of living organisms, and is essential for sustaining life, because failure to avoid extreme noxious temperatures can result in tissue damage or death. A subset of members of the transient receptor potential (TRP) ion channel family is finely tuned to detect temperatures ranging from extreme cold to noxious heat, giving rise to thermoTRP channels. Structural and functional experiments have shown that thermoTRP channels are allosteric proteins, containing different domains that sense changes in temperature, among other stimuli, triggering pore opening. Although temperature-dependence is well characterized in thermoTRP channels, the molecular nature of temperature-sensing elements remains unknown. Importantly, thermoTRP channels are involved in pain sensation, related to pathological conditions. Here, we provide an overview of thermoTRP channel activation. We also discuss the structural and functional evidence supporting the existence of an intrinsic temperature sensor in this class of channels, and we explore the basic thermodynamic principles for channel activation. Finally, we give a view of their role in painful pathophysiological conditions.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2016

Pore size matters for potassium channel conductance

David Naranjo; Hans Moldenhauer; Matías Pincuntureo; Ignacio Diaz-Franulic

Ion channels are membrane proteins that mediate efficient ion transport across the hydrophobic core of cell membranes, an unlikely process in their absence. K+ channels discriminate K+ over cations with similar radii with extraordinary selectivity and display a wide diversity of ion transport rates, covering differences of two orders of magnitude in unitary conductance. The pore domains of large- and small-conductance K+ channels share a general architectural design comprising a conserved narrow selectivity filter, which forms intimate interactions with permeant ions, flanked by two wider vestibules toward the internal and external openings. In large-conductance K+ channels, the inner vestibule is wide, whereas in small-conductance channels it is narrow. Here we raise the idea that the physical dimensions of the hydrophobic internal vestibule limit ion transport in K+ channels, accounting for their diversity in unitary conductance.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Effective pore size and radius of capture for K + ions in K-channels

Hans Moldenhauer; Ignacio Diaz-Franulic; Fernando D. González-Nilo; David Naranjo

Reconciling protein functional data with crystal structure is arduous because rare conformations or crystallization artifacts occur. Here we present a tool to validate the dimensions of open pore structures of potassium-selective ion channels. We used freely available algorithms to calculate the molecular contour of the pore to determine the effective internal pore radius (rE) in several K-channel crystal structures. rE was operationally defined as the radius of the biggest sphere able to enter the pore from the cytosolic side. We obtained consistent rE estimates for MthK and Kv1.2/2.1 structures, with rE = 5.3–5.9 Å and rE = 4.5–5.2 Å, respectively. We compared these structural estimates with functional assessments of the internal mouth radii of capture (rC) for two electrophysiological counterparts, the large conductance calcium activated K-channel (rC = 2.2 Å) and the Shaker Kv-channel (rC = 0.8 Å), for MthK and Kv1.2/2.1 structures, respectively. Calculating the difference between rE and rC, produced consistent size radii of 3.1–3.7 Å and 3.6–4.4 Å for hydrated K+ ions. These hydrated K+ estimates harmonize with others obtained with diverse experimental and theoretical methods. Thus, these findings validate MthK and the Kv1.2/2.1 structures as templates for open BK and Kv-channels, respectively.


Neurotoxicity Research | 2017

Knockdown of Myo-Inositol Transporter SMIT1 Normalizes Cholinergic and Glutamatergic Function in an Immortalized Cell Line Established from the Cerebral Cortex of a Trisomy 16 Fetal Mouse, an Animal Model of Human Trisomy 21 (Down Syndrome)

Ana M. Cárdenas; Paola Fernández-Olivares; Ignacio Diaz-Franulic; Arlek M. González-Jamett; Takeshi Shimahara; Juan Segura-Aguilar; Raúl Caviedes; Pablo Caviedes

The Na+/myo-inositol cotransporter (SMIT1) is overexpressed in human Down syndrome (DS) and in trisomy 16 fetal mice (Ts16), an animal model of the human condition. SMIT1 overexpression determines increased levels of intracellular myo-inositol, a precursor of phophoinositide synthesis. SMIT1 is overexpressed in CTb cells, an immortalized cell line established from the cerebral cortex of a Ts16 mouse fetus. CTb cells exhibit impaired cytosolic Ca2+ signals in response to glutamatergic and cholinergic stimuli (increased amplitude and delayed time-dependent kinetics in the decay post-stimulation), compared to our CNh cell line, derived from the cerebral cortex of a euploid animal. Considering the role of myo-inositol in intracellular signaling, we normalized SMIT1 expression in CTb cells using specific mRNA antisenses. Forty-eight hours post-transfection, SMIT1 levels in CTb cells reached values comparable to those of CNh cells. At this time, decay kinetics of Ca2+ signals induced by either glutamate, nicotine, or muscarine were accelerated in transfected CTb cells, to values similar to those of CNh cells. The amplitude of glutamate-induced cytosolic Ca2+ signals in CTb cells was also normalized. The results suggest that SMIT1 overexpression contributes to abnormal cholinergic and glutamatergic Ca2+ signals in the trisomic condition, and knockdown of DS-related genes in our Ts16-derived cell line could constitute a relevant tool to study DS-related neuronal dysfunction.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Gating-induced large aqueous volumetric remodeling and aspartate tolerance in the voltage sensor domain of Shaker K+ channels

Ignacio Diaz-Franulic; Vivian Gonzalez-Perez; Hans Moldenhauer; Nieves Navarro-Quezada; David Naranjo

Significance The neuronal action potential is a self-propagating transient depolarization traveling along the neuron membrane. This signal is produced by the coordinated activation of voltage-gated ion channels (VGCs), a family of ion-selective transmembrane proteins activated by depolarization. Sodium and calcium VGCs reinforce the signal, while potassium VGCs terminate it. A conserved voltage sensor domain (VSD) in VGCs responds with an unresolved conformational change driven by the transmembrane electrophoretic displacements of four arginine side chains. We show that those arginine side chains are stabilized by water impregnating the VSD and that, upon activation, displace large and dissimilar aqueous volumes at both protein faces. This charge translocation entails a transporter-like remodeling of water–protein interfaces that should create mechanical spikes accompanying action potentials. Neurons encode electrical signals with critically tuned voltage-gated ion channels and enzymes. Dedicated voltage sensor domains (VSDs) in these membrane proteins activate coordinately with an unresolved structural change. Such change conveys the transmembrane translocation of four positively charged arginine side chains, the voltage-sensing residues (VSRs; R1–R4). Countercharges and lipid phosphohead groups likely stabilize these VSRs within the low-dielectric core of the protein. However, the role of hydration, a sign-independent charge stabilizer, remains unclear. We replaced all VSRs and their neighboring residues with negatively charged aspartates in a voltage-gated potassium channel. The ensuing mild functional effects indicate that hydration is also important in VSR stabilization. The voltage dependency of the VSR aspartate variants approached the expected arithmetic summation of charges at VSR positions, as if negative and positive side chains faced similar pathways. In contrast, aspartates introduced between R2 and R3 did not affect voltage dependence as if the side chains moved outside the electric field or together with it, undergoing a large displacement and volumetric remodeling. Accordingly, VSR performed osmotic work at both internal and external aqueous interfaces. Individual VSR contributions to volumetric works approached arithmetical additivity but were largely dissimilar. While R1 and R4 displaced small volumes, R2 and R3 volumetric works were massive and vectorially opposed, favoring large aqueous remodeling during VSD activation. These diverse volumetric works are, at least for R2 and R3, not compatible with VSR translocation across a unique stationary charge transfer center. Instead, VSRs may follow separated pathways across a fluctuating low-dielectric septum.


Biophysical Journal | 2018

Thermal Diffusion Pathways of TRPV1

Fernando D. González-Nilo; Ignacio Diaz-Franulic; Romina V. Sepúlveda; Felipe A. Gomez-Becerra; German Miño-Galaz; Ramon Latorre

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