Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Youshan Yang is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Youshan Yang.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Interaction of the Aromatics Tyr-72/Trp-288 in the Interface of the Extracellular and Transmembrane Domains Is Essential for Proton Gating of Acid-sensing Ion Channels

Tianbo Li; Youshan Yang; Cecilia M. Canessa

Acid-sensing ion channels are proton-activated ion channels expressed in the nervous system. They belong to the family of ENaC/Degenerins whose members share a conserved structure but are activated by widely diverse stimuli. We show that interaction of two aromatic residues, Tyr-72, located immediately after the first transmembrane segment, and Trp-288, located at the tip of a loop of the extracellular domain directed toward the first transmembrane segment, is essential for proton activation of the acid-sensing ion channels. The subdomain containing Trp-288 is a module tethered to the rest of the extracellular domain by short linkers and intrasubunit interactions between residues in the putative “proton sensor.” Mutations in these two areas shift the apparent affinity of protons toward a more acidic range and change the kinetics of activation and desensitization. These results are consisting with displacement of the module relative to the rest of the extracellular domain to allow interaction of Trp-288 with Tyr-72 during gating. We propose that such interaction may provide functional coupling between the extracellular domain and the pore domain.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

The N-terminal domain of Slack determines the formation and trafficking of Slick/Slack heteromeric sodium-activated potassium channels.

Haijun Chen; Jack Kronengold; Yangyang Yan; Valeswara-Rao Gazula; Maile R. Brown; Liqun Ma; Gonzalo Ferreira; Youshan Yang; Arin Bhattacharjee; Fred J. Sigworth; Larry Salkoff; Leonard K. Kaczmarek

Potassium channels activated by intracellular Na+ ions (KNa) play several distinct roles in regulating the firing patterns of neurons, and, at the single channel level, their properties are quite diverse. Two known genes, Slick and Slack, encode KNa channels. We have now found that Slick and Slack subunits coassemble to form heteromeric channels that differ from the homomers in their unitary conductance, kinetic behavior, subcellular localization, and response to activation of protein kinase C. Heteromer formation requires the N-terminal domain of Slack-B, one of the alternative splice variants of the Slack channel. This cytoplasmic N-terminal domain of Slack-B also facilitates the localization of heteromeric KNa channels to the plasma membrane. Immunocytochemical studies indicate that Slick and Slack-B subunits are coexpressed in many central neurons. Our findings provide a molecular explanation for some of the diversity in reported properties of neuronal KNa channels.


Nature Communications | 2011

Outlines of the pore in open and closed conformations describe the gating mechanism of ASIC1.

Tianbo Li; Youshan Yang; Cecilia M. Canessa

The proton-activated sodium channel ASIC1 belongs to the ENaC/Degenerins family of ion channels. Little is known about gating of the pore in any member of this class. Here we outline the shape of the ion pathway of ASIC1 in the open and closed conformations by measuring apparent rates of cysteine modification by thiol-specific reagents in the two transmembrane helices that form the pore (TM1 and TM2). Closed channels have a narrowing in the external end of the pore, whereas open channels have a narrowing midway, the length of TM2 that serves as selectivity filter. Thus, gating of the pore entails straightening the tilt of TM2 without significant rotation. The findings imply that the external narrowing serves as opening, closing and desensitization gate, and that the selectivity filter of ASIC1 is a transient structure that assembles in the open state and is pulled apart in the closed state.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Asn415 in the β11-β12 Linker Decreases Proton-dependent Desensitization of ASIC1

Tianbo Li; Youshan Yang; Cecilia M. Canessa

Neurons of the mammalian nervous system express the proton-sensing ion channel ASIC1. Low concentrations of protons in the normal range of extracellular pH, pH 7.4–7.3, shut the pore by a conformational transition referred as steady-state desensitization. Therefore, the potential of local acidification to open ASIC1 relies on proton affinity for desensitization. This property is important physiologically and also can be exploited to develop strategies to increase or decrease the channel response to protons. In a previous study (Li, T., Yang, Y., and Canessa, C. M. (2010) J. Biol. Chem. 285, 22706–22712), we found that Leu-85 in the β1-β2 linker of the extracellular domain decreases the apparent proton affinity for steady-state desensitization and retards openings, slowing down the time course of the macroscopic currents. Here, we show that Asn-415 in the β11-β12 linker works together with the β1-β2 linker to stabilize a closed conformation that delays transition from the closed to the desensitized state. Substitutions of Asn-415 for Cys, Ser, or Gly render ASIC1 responsive to small increases in proton concentrations near the baseline physiological pH.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Leu85 in the β1-β2 Linker of ASIC1 Slows Activation and Decreases the Apparent Proton Affinity by Stabilizing a Closed Conformation

Tianbo Li; Youshan Yang; Cecilia M. Canessa

Acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs) are proton-activated channels expressed in neurons of the central and peripheral nervous systems where they modulate neuronal activity in response to external increases in proton concentration. The size of ASIC1 currents evoked by a given local acidification is determined by the number of channels in the plasma membrane and by the apparent proton affinities for activation and steady-state desensitization of the channel. Thus, the magnitude of the pH drop and the value of the baseline pH both are functionally important. Recent characterization of ASIC1s from an increasing number of species has made evident that proton affinities of these channels vary across vertebrates. We found that in species with high baseline plasma pH, e.g. frog, shark, and fish, ASIC1 has high proton affinity compared with the mammalian channel. The β1-β2 linker in the extracellular domain, specifically by the substitution M85L, determines the interspecies differences in proton affinities and also the time course of ASIC1 macroscopic currents. The mechanism underlying these observations is a delay in channel opening after application of protons, most likely by stabilizing a closed conformation that decreases the apparent affinity to protons and also slows the rise and decay phases of the current. Together, the results suggest evolutionary adaptation of ASIC1 to match the value of the species-specific plasma pH. At the molecular level, adaptation is achieved by substitutions of nonionizable residues rather than by modification of the channel proton sensor.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Impact of Recovery from Desensitization on Acid Sensing Ion Channel-1a (ASIC1a) Current and Response to High-frequency Stimulation

Tianbo Li; Youshan Yang; Cecilia M. Canessa

Background: Consecutive proton stimulation reduces ASIC1a peak currents leading to silencing of channels. Results: Kinetic analysis using a fast perfusion system shows that human ASIC1a has two desensitized states with markedly different stabilities. Conclusion: High frequency trains of short stimuli prevent desensitization. Significance: The results predict steady ASIC1a responses to high frequency release of protons as in synaptic transmission. ASIC1a is a neuronal sodium channel activated by external H+ ions. To date, all the characterization of ASIC1a has been conducted applying long H+ stimuli lasting several seconds. Such experimental protocols weaken and even silence ASIC1a currents to repetitive stimulation. In this work, we examined ASIC1a currents by methods that use rapid application and removal of H+. We found that brief H+ stimuli, <100 ms, even if applied at high frequency, prevent desensitization thereby generate full and steady peak currents of human ASIC1a. Kinetic analysis of recovery from desensitization of hASIC1a revealed two desensitized states: short- and long-lasting with time constants of τDs ≤0.5 and τDl = 229 s, while in chicken ASIC1a the two desensitized states have similar values τD 4.5 s. It is the large difference in stability of the two desensitized states that makes hASIC1a desensitization more pronounced and complex than in cASIC1a. Furthermore, recovery from desensitization was unrelated to cytosolic variations in pH, ATP, PIP2, or redox state but was dependent on the hydrophobicity of key residues in the first transmembrane segment (TM1). In conclusion, brief H+-stimuli maintain steady the magnitude of peak currents thereby the ASIC1a channel is well poised to partake in high frequency signals in the brain.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2011

Asp433 in the closing gate of ASIC1 determines stability of the open state without changing properties of the selectivity filter or Ca2+ block

Tianbo Li; Youshan Yang; Cecilia M. Canessa

A constriction formed by the crossing of the second transmembrane domains of ASIC1, residues G432 to G436, forms the narrowest segment of the pore in the crystal structure of chicken ASIC1, presumably in the desensitized state, suggesting that it constitutes the “desensitization gate” and the “selectivity filter.” Residues Gly-432 and Asp-433 occlude the pore, preventing the passage of ions from the extracellular side. Here, we examined the role of Asp-433 and Gly-432 in channel kinetics, ion selectivity, conductance, and Ca2+ block in lamprey ASIC1 that is a channel with little intrinsic desensitization in the pH range of maximal activity, pH 7.0. The results show that the duration of open times depends on residue 433, with Asp supporting the longest openings followed by Glu, Gln, or Asn, whereas other residues keep the channel closed. This is consistent with residue Asp-433 forming the pore’s closing gate and the properties of the side chain either stabilizing (hydrophobic amino acids) or destabilizing (Asp) the gate. The data also show residue 432 influencing the duration of openings, but here only Gly and Ala support long openings, whereas all other residues keep channels closed. The negative charge of Asp-433 was not required for block of the open pore by Ca2+ or for determining ion selectivity and unitary conductance. We conclude that the conserved residue Asp-433 forms the closing gate of the pore and thereby determines the duration of individual openings while desensitization, defined as the permanent closure of all or a fraction of channels by the continual presence of H+, modulates the on or off position of the closing gate. The latter effect depends on less conserved regions of the channel, such as TM1 and the extracellular domain. The constriction made by Asp-433 and Gly-432 does not select for ions in the open conformation, implying that the closing gate and selectivity filter are separate structural elements in the ion pathway of ASIC1. The results also predict a significantly different conformation of TM2 in the open state that relieves the constriction made by TM2, allowing the passage of ions unimpeded by the side chain of Asp-433.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

A method for activation of endogenous acid-sensing ion channel 1a (ASIC1a) in the nervous system with high spatial and temporal precision.

Tianbo Li; Youshan Yang; Cecilia M. Canessa

Background: Current methods for changing interstitial pH are inadequate to activate ASIC1a in the CNS. Results: Protons extruded by ArchT elicit ASIC1a currents expressed in same and adjacent cells. Conclusion: Photostimulation of ArchT in astrocytes activates ASIC1a in nearby neurons leading to train of action potentials. Significance: This optogenetic-based method applied to awake animals enables examining ASIC1a role in modulating CNS physiology and behavior. Protons activate acid-sensing ion channel 1a (ASIC1a) in the central nervous system (CNS) although the impact of such activation on brain outputs remains elusive. Progress elucidating the functional roles of ASIC1a in the CNS has been hindered by technical difficulties of achieving acidification with spatial and temporal precision. We have implemented a method to control optically the opening of ASIC1a in brain slices and also in awake animals. The light-driven H+ pump ArchT was expressed in astrocytes of mouse cortex by injection of adenoviral vectors containing a strong and astrocyte-specific promoter. Illumination with amber light acidified the surrounding interstitium and led to activation of endogenous ASIC1a channels and firing of action potentials in neurons localized in close proximity to ArchT-expressing astrocytes. We conclude that this optogenetic method offers a minimally invasive approach that enables examining the biological consequences of ASIC1a currents in any structure of the CNS and in the modulation of animal behaviors.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2010

Two residues in the extracellular domain convert a nonfunctional ASIC1 into a proton-activated channel

Tianbo Li; Youshan Yang; Cecilia M. Canessa

Acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs) are proton-activated sodium channels of the nervous system. Mammals express four ASICs, and orthologs of these genes have been found in all chordates examined to date. Despite a high degree of sequence conservation of all ASICs across species, the response to a given increase in external proton concentration varies markedly: from large and slowly inactivating inward currents to no detectable currents. The underlying bases of this functional variability and whether it stems from differences in proton-binding sites or in structures that translate conformational changes have not been determined yet. We show here that the ASIC1 ortholog of an early vertebrate, lamprey ASIC1, does not respond to protons; however, only two amino acid substitutions for the corresponding ones in rat ASIC1, Q77L and T85L, convert lamprey ASIC1 into a highly sensitive proton-activated channel with apparent H(+) affinity of pH(50) 7.2. Addition of C73H increases the magnitude of the currents by fivefold, and W64R confers desensitization similar to that of the mammalian counterpart. Most amino acid substitutions in these four positions increase the rates of opening and closing the pore, whereas only few, namely, the ones in rat ASIC1, slow the rates. The four residues are located in a contiguous segment made by the beta1-beta2-linker, beta1-strand, and the external segment of the first transmembrane helix. We conclude that the segment thus defined modulates the kinetics of opening and closing the pore and that fast kinetics of desensitization rather than lack of acid sensor accounts for the absence of proton-induced currents in the parent lamprey ASIC1.


Peptides | 2011

A novel conotoxin, qc16a, with a unique cysteine framework and folding

Mingyu Ye; Jing Hong; Mi Zhou; Lijun Huang; Xiao-Xia Shao; Youshan Yang; Fred J. Sigworth; Chengwu Chi; Donghai Lin; Chunguang Wang

A novel conotoxin, qc16a, was identified from the venom of vermivorous Conus quercinus. qc16a has only 11 amino acid residues, DCQPCGHNVCC, with a unique cysteine pattern. Its disulfide connectivity was determined to be I-IV, II-III. The NMR structure shows that qc16a adopts a ribbon conformation with a simple beta-turn motif formed by residues Gly6, His7 and Asn8. qc16a causes depression symptom in mice when injected intracranially. Point mutation results showed that Asp1, His7 and Asn8 are all essential for the activity of qc16a. Electrophysiologically, qc16a has no strong effect on the whole-cell currents of neurons and the currents of Drosophila Shaker channels, human BK channels and Na(V)1.7 channels. Its specific target still remains to be identified.

Collaboration


Dive into the Youshan Yang's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge