On the molecular nature of large-pore channels

J Syrjanen, K Michalski, T Kawate… - Journal of molecular …, 2021 - Elsevier
Journal of molecular biology, 2021Elsevier
Membrane transport is a fundamental means to control basic cellular processes such as
apoptosis, inflammation, and neurodegeneration and is mediated by a number of
transporters, pumps, and channels. Accumulating evidence over the last half century has
shown that a type of so-called “large-pore channel” exists in various tissues and organs in
gap-junctional and non-gap-junctional forms in order to flow not only ions but also
metabolites such as ATP. They are formed by a number of protein families with little or no …
Abstract
Membrane transport is a fundamental means to control basic cellular processes such as apoptosis, inflammation, and neurodegeneration and is mediated by a number of transporters, pumps, and channels. Accumulating evidence over the last half century has shown that a type of so-called “large-pore channel” exists in various tissues and organs in gap-junctional and non-gap-junctional forms in order to flow not only ions but also metabolites such as ATP. They are formed by a number of protein families with little or no evolutionary linkages including connexin, innexin, pannexin, leucine-rich repeat-containing 8 (LRRC8), and calcium homeostasis modulator (CALHM). This review summarizes the history and concept of large-pore channels starting from connexin gap junction channels to the more recent developments in innexin, pannexin, LRRC8, and CALHM. We describe structural and functional features of large-pore channels that are crucial for their diverse functions on the basis of available structures.
Elsevier