EMD-61061

Single-particle
3.0 Å
EMD-61061 Deposition: 03/08/2024
Map released: 26/02/2025
Last modified: 05/03/2025
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links

EMD-61061

Cryo-EM Structure of the Guard Cell Potassium Channel GORK

EMD-61061

Single-particle
3.0 Å
EMD-61061 Deposition: 03/08/2024
Map released: 26/02/2025
Last modified: 05/03/2025
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links
Sample Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana
Sample: GORK Channel Tetramer
Fitted models: 9j0x

Deposition Authors: Zhang X, Zhang P
GORK K + channel structure and gating vital to informing stomatal engineering.
Zhang X, Carroll W, Nguyen TB, Nguyen TH, Yang Z, Ma M, Huang X, Hills A, Guo H, Karnik R, Blatt MR, Zhang P
(2025) Nat Commun , 16 , 1961 - 1961
PUBMED: 40000640
DOI: doi:10.1038/s41467-025-57287-7
ISSN: 2041-1723
Abstract:
The Arabidopsis GORK channel is a major pathway for guard cell K+ efflux that facilitates stomatal closure. GORK is an outwardly-rectifying member of the cyclic-nucleotide binding-homology domain (CNBHD) family of K+ channels with close homologues in all other angiosperms known to date. Its bioengineering has demonstrated the potential for enhanced carbon assimilation and water use efficiency. Here we identify critical domains through structural and functional analysis, highlighting conformations that reflect long-lived closed and pre-open states of GORK. These conformations are marked by interactions at the cytosolic face of the membrane between so-called voltage-sensor, C-linker and CNBHD domains, the latter relocating across 10 Å below the voltage sensor. The interactions center around two coupling sites that functional analysis establish are critical for channel gating. The channel is also subject to putative, ligand-like interactions within the CNBHD, which leads to its gating independence of cyclic nucleotides such as cAMP or cGMP. These findings implicate a multi-step mechanism of semi-independent conformational transitions that underlie channel activity and offer promising new sites for optimizing GORK to engineer stomata.