The CLC protein family comprises both Cl- channels and H+-coupled anion transporters. The understanding of the critical role of CLC proteins in a number of physiological functions has greatly contributed to a revision of the classical paradigm that attributed to Cl- ions only a marginal role in human physiology. The endosomal ClC-5 and the lysosomal ClC-7 are the best characterized human CLC transporters. Their dysfunction causes Dent's disease and osteopetrosis, respectively. It had been originally proposed that they would provide a Cl- shunt conductance allowing efficient acidification of intracellular compartments. However, this model seems to conflict with the transport properties of these proteins and with recent physiological evidence. Currently, there is no consensus on their specific physiological role. CLC proteins present also a number of peculiar biophysical properties, such as the dimeric architecture, the co-existence of intrinsically different thermodynamic modes of transport based on similar structural principles, and the gating mechanism recently emerging for the transporters, just to name a few. This review focuses on the biophysical properties and physiological roles of ClC-5 and ClC-7. Journal compilation © 2015 The Physiological Society.

A tale of two CLCs: Biophysical insights toward understanding ClC-5 and ClC-7 function in endosomes and lysosomes

Zifarelli G
2015

Abstract

The CLC protein family comprises both Cl- channels and H+-coupled anion transporters. The understanding of the critical role of CLC proteins in a number of physiological functions has greatly contributed to a revision of the classical paradigm that attributed to Cl- ions only a marginal role in human physiology. The endosomal ClC-5 and the lysosomal ClC-7 are the best characterized human CLC transporters. Their dysfunction causes Dent's disease and osteopetrosis, respectively. It had been originally proposed that they would provide a Cl- shunt conductance allowing efficient acidification of intracellular compartments. However, this model seems to conflict with the transport properties of these proteins and with recent physiological evidence. Currently, there is no consensus on their specific physiological role. CLC proteins present also a number of peculiar biophysical properties, such as the dimeric architecture, the co-existence of intrinsically different thermodynamic modes of transport based on similar structural principles, and the gating mechanism recently emerging for the transporters, just to name a few. This review focuses on the biophysical properties and physiological roles of ClC-5 and ClC-7. Journal compilation © 2015 The Physiological Society.
2015
Istituto di Biofisica - IBF
chloride channel
protei
protein ClC 7
unclassified drug
carrier protein
chloride
chloride channel
CLC-5 chloride channel
CLCN7 protein
human
binding affinity
channel gating
endosome
human
lysosome
nonhuman
priority journal
protein binding
protein expression
protein function
protein structure
protein transport
proton sodium exchange
proton transport
Review
stoichiometry
structure analysis
ion transport
metabolism
physiology
Chloride Channels
Chlorides
Endosomes
Humans
Ion Transport
Lysosomes
Membrane Transport Proteins
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/402718
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