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A Novel Single-Domain Na+-Selective Voltage-Gated Channel in Photosynthetic Eukaryotes

journal contribution
posted on 2025-08-13, 11:48 authored by KE Helliwell, A Chrachri, JA Koester, S Wharam, AR Taylor, GL Wheeler, C Brownlee
The evolution of Na1-selective four-domain voltage-gated channels (4D-Navs) in animals allowed rapid Na1-dependent electrical excitability, and enabled the development of sophisticated systems for rapid and long-range signaling. While bacteria encode single-domain Na1-selective voltage-gated channels (BacNav), they typically exhibit much slower kinetics than 4D-Navs, and are not thought to have crossed the prokaryote–eukaryote boundary. As such, the capacity for rapid Na1-selective signaling is considered to be confined to certain animal taxa, and absent from photosynthetic eukaryotes. Certainly, in land plants, such as the Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) where fast electrical excitability has been described, this is most likely based on fast anion channels. Here, we report a unique class of eukaryotic Na1-selective, single-domain channels (EukCatBs) that are present primarily in haptophyte algae, including the ecologically important calcifying coccolithophores, Emiliania huxleyi and Scyphosphaera apsteinii. The EukCatB channels exhibit very rapid voltage-dependent activation and inactivation kinetics, and isoform-specific sensitivity to the highly selective 4D-Nav blocker tetrodotoxin. The results demonstrate that the capacity for rapid Na1-based signaling in eukaryotes is not restricted to animals or to the presence of 4D-Navs. The EukCatB channels therefore represent an independent evolution of fast Na1-based electrical signaling in eukaryotes that likely contribute to sophisticated cellular control mechanisms operating on very short time scales in unicellular algae.

Funding

0949744

1638838

ERC–ADG–670390

European Research Council (ERC)

NE/R015449/2

National Science Foundation (NSF)

Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)

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© 2020 American Society of Plant Biologists. All Rights Reserved.

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available from the American Society of Plant Biologists via the DOI in this record

Journal

Plant Physiology

Publisher

American Society of Plant Biologists

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2021-01-27T15:42:16Z

Citation

Vol. 184 (4), pp. 1674 - 1683

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