Cell
Volume 162, Issue 6, 10 September 2015, Pages 1391-1403
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Article
Ankyrin Repeats Convey Force to Gate the NOMPC Mechanotransduction Channel

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2015.08.024Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • ARs are essential for NOMPC mechanogating in vitro and in vivo

  • Microtubule association is required for NOMPC mechanogating

  • ARs are a main component of the filaments that tether NOMPC to microtubules

  • Transferring the ARs to voltage-gated potassium channels confers mechanosensitivity

Summary

How metazoan mechanotransduction channels sense mechanical stimuli is not well understood. The NOMPC channel in the transient receptor potential (TRP) family, a mechanotransduction channel for Drosophila touch sensation and hearing, contains 29 Ankyrin repeats (ARs) that associate with microtubules. These ARs have been postulated to act as a tether that conveys force to the channel. Here, we report that these N-terminal ARs form a cytoplasmic domain essential for NOMPC mechanogating in vitro, mechanosensitivity of touch receptor neurons in vivo, and touch-induced behaviors of Drosophila larvae. Duplicating the ARs elongates the filaments that tether NOMPC to microtubules in mechanosensory neurons. Moreover, microtubule association is required for NOMPC mechanogating. Importantly, transferring the NOMPC ARs to mechanoinsensitive voltage-gated potassium channels confers mechanosensitivity to the chimeric channels. These experiments strongly support a tether mechanism of mechanogating for the NOMPC channel, providing insights into the basis of mechanosensitivity of mechanotransduction channels.

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Present address: Plant Cell Biology, Oxford Brookes University, Gipsy Lane, Oxford OX3 0BP, UK