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Kevin R. DeMarco

Bio: Kevin R. DeMarco is an academic researcher from University of California, Davis. The author has contributed to research in topics: hERG & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 16 publications receiving 200 citations. Previous affiliations of Kevin R. DeMarco include University of California, Berkeley.

Papers
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TL;DR: These calculations revealed several key drug binding sites formed within the pore lumen that can simultaneously accommodate up to two drug molecules and advance the understanding of molecular mechanisms of antiarrhythmic and local anesthetic drug interactions with hNaV1.5.
Abstract: The human voltage-gated sodium channel, hNaV1.5, is responsible for the rapid upstroke of the cardiac action potential and is target for antiarrhythmic therapy. Despite the clinical relevance of hNaV1.5-targeting drugs, structure-based molecular mechanisms of promising or problematic drugs have not been investigated at atomic scale to inform drug design. Here, we used Rosetta structural modeling and docking as well as molecular dynamics simulations to study the interactions of antiarrhythmic and local anesthetic drugs with hNaV1.5. These calculations revealed several key drug binding sites formed within the pore lumen that can simultaneously accommodate up to two drug molecules. Molecular dynamics simulations identified a hydrophilic access pathway through the intracellular gate and a hydrophobic access pathway through a fenestration between DIII and DIV. Our results advance the understanding of molecular mechanisms of antiarrhythmic and local anesthetic drug interactions with hNaV1.5 and will be useful for rational design of novel therapeutics.

68 citations

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TL;DR: Novel mechanistic insights emerged at all scales of the system, from the specific nature of proarrhythmic drug interaction with the hERG channel, to the fundamental cellular and tissue-level arrhythmia mechanisms.
Abstract: Rationale: Drug-induced proarrhythmia is so tightly associated with prolongation of the QT interval that QT prolongation is an accepted surrogate marker for arrhythmia. But QT interval is too sensi...

46 citations

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TL;DR: Molecular models suggest that oestrogen and dofetilide blockade can concur simultaneously in the hERG channel pore and could lead to important developments in risk stratification and may inform future drug design and screening.
Abstract: Author(s): Yang, Pei-Chi; Perissinotti, Laura L; Lopez-Redondo, Fernando; Wang, Yibo; DeMarco, Kevin R; Jeng, Mao-Tsuen; Vorobyov, Igor; Harvey, Robert D; Kurokawa, Junko; Noskov, Sergei Y; Clancy, Colleen E | Abstract: KEY POINTS:This study represents a first step toward predicting mechanisms of sex-based arrhythmias that may lead to important developments in risk stratification and may inform future drug design and screening We undertook simulations to reveal the conditions (ie pacing, drugs, sympathetic stimulation) required for triggering and sustaining reentrant arrhythmias Using the recently solved cryo-EM structure for the Eag-family channel as a template, we revealed potential interactions of oestrogen with the pore loop hERG mutation (G604S) Molecular models suggest that oestrogen and dofetilide blockade can concur simultaneously in the hERG channel pore ABSTRACT:Female sex is a risk factor for inherited and acquired long-QT associated torsade de pointes (TdP) arrhythmias, and sympathetic discharge is a major factor in triggering TdP in female long-QT syndrome patients We used a combined experimental and computational approach to predict 'the perfect storm' of hormone concentration, IKr block and sympathetic stimulation that induces arrhythmia in females with inherited and acquired long-QT More specifically, we developed mathematical models of acquired and inherited long-QT syndrome in male and female ventricular human myocytes by combining effects of a hormone and a hERG blocker, dofetilide, or hERG mutations These 'male' and 'female' model myocytes and tissues then were used to predict how various sex-based differences underlie arrhythmia risk in the setting of acute sympathetic nervous system discharge The model predicted increased risk for arrhythmia in females when acute sympathetic nervous system discharge was applied in the settings of both inherited and acquired long-QT syndrome Females were predicted to have protection from arrhythmia induction when progesterone is high Males were protected by the presence of testosterone Structural modelling points towards two plausible and distinct mechanisms of oestrogen action enhancing torsadogenic effects: oestradiol interaction with hERG mutations in the pore loop containing G604 or with common TdP-related blockers in the intra-cavity binding site Our study presents findings that constitute the first evidence linking structure to function mechanisms underlying female dominance of arousal-induced arrhythmias

41 citations

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TL;DR: This review is a short survey of the atomistic computational investigations of K+ and Na+ ion channels, focusing on KcsA and several voltage‐gated channels from the KV and NaV families, which have garnered many successes and engendered several long‐standing controversies regarding the nature of their structure–function relationship.
Abstract: Ion channels are implicated in many essential physiological events such as electrical signal propagation and cellular communication. The advent of K+ and Na+ ion channel structure determination has facilitated numerous investigations of molecular determinants of their behaviour. At the same time, rapid development of computer hardware and molecular simulation methodologies has made computational studies of large biological molecules in all-atom representation tractable. The concurrent evolution of experimental structural biology with biomolecular computer modelling has yielded mechanistic details of fundamental processes unavailable through experiments alone, such as ion conduction and ion channel gating. This review is a short survey of the atomistic computational investigations of K+ and Na+ ion channels, focusing on KcsA and several voltage-gated channels from the KV and NaV families, which have garnered many successes and engendered several long-standing controversies regarding the nature of their structure-function relationship. We review the latest advancements and challenges facing the field of molecular modelling and simulation regarding the structural and energetic determinants of ion channel function and their agreement with experimental observations.

32 citations

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TL;DR: This study highlights notable differences in the permeation and inactivation dynamics in a human channel that displays a nonconventional selectivity filter and finds that N629D mutation significantly stabilizes the SF in a state that is permeable to both K+ and Na+.
Abstract: The human ether-a-go-go–related gene (hERG1) channel conducts small outward K+ currents that are critical for cardiomyocyte membrane repolarization. The gain-of-function mutation N629D at the outer mouth of the selectivity filter (SF) disrupts inactivation and K+-selective transport in hERG1, leading to arrhythmogenic phenotypes associated with long-QT syndrome. Here, we combined computational electrophysiology with Markov state model analysis to investigate how SF-level gating modalities control selective cation transport in wild-type (WT) and mutant (N629D) hERG1 variants. Starting from the recently reported cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) open-state channel structure, multiple microseconds-long molecular-dynamics (MD) trajectories were generated using different cation configurations at the filter, voltages, electrolyte concentrations, and force-field parameters. Most of the K+ permeation events observed in hERG1-WT simulations occurred at microsecond timescales, influenced by the spontaneous dehydration/rehydration dynamics at the filter. The SF region displayed conductive, constricted, occluded, and dilated states, in qualitative agreement with the well-documented flickering conductance of hERG1. In line with mutagenesis studies, these gating modalities resulted from dynamic interaction networks involving residues from the SF, outer-mouth vestibule, P-helices, and S5–P segments. We found that N629D mutation significantly stabilizes the SF in a state that is permeable to both K+ and Na+, which is reminiscent of the SF in the nonselective bacterial NaK channel. Increasing the external K+ concentration induced “WT-like” SF dynamics in N629D, in qualitative agreement with the recovery of flickering currents in experiments. Overall, our findings provide an understanding of the molecular mechanisms controlling selective transport in K+ channels with a nonconventional SF sequence.

27 citations


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692 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
09 Jan 2020-Cell
TL;DR: The results provide detailed insights into Nav1.5 structure, pharmacology, activation, inactivation, ion selectivity, and arrhythmias, providing a potential mechanism for pathogenic effects.

186 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: While enhanced sampling methods and increasingly sophisticated treatments of diffusion add substantially to the repertoire of simulation-based approaches, they do not address directly the critical need for force fields with polarizability and multipoles, and constant pH methods.
Abstract: This Review illustrates the evaluation of permeability of lipid membranes from molecular dynamics (MD) simulation primarily using water and oxygen as examples. Membrane entrance, translocation, and exit of these simple permeants (one hydrophilic and one hydrophobic) can be simulated by conventional MD, and permeabilities can be evaluated directly by Fick's First Law, transition rates, and a global Bayesian analysis of the inhomogeneous solubility-diffusion model. The assorted results, many of which are applicable to simulations of nonbiological membranes, highlight the limitations of the homogeneous solubility diffusion model; support the utility of inhomogeneous solubility diffusion and compartmental models; underscore the need for comparison with experiment for both simple solvent systems (such as water/hexadecane) and well-characterized membranes; and demonstrate the need for microsecond simulations for even simple permeants like water and oxygen. Undulations, subdiffusion, fractional viscosity dependence, periodic boundary conditions, and recent developments in the field are also discussed. Last, while enhanced sampling methods and increasingly sophisticated treatments of diffusion add substantially to the repertoire of simulation-based approaches, they do not address directly the critical need for force fields with polarizability and multipoles, and constant pH methods.

176 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Current level of understanding allows for the design of a nanopore which promotes wetting over dewetting or vice versa, but to design a novel nanopore, which enables fast, selective, and gated flow of water de novo would remain challenging, suggesting a need for further detailed simulations alongside experimental evaluation of more complex nanopore systems.
Abstract: This Review explores the dynamic behavior of water within nanopores and biological channels in lipid bilayer membranes. We focus on molecular simulation studies, alongside selected structural and other experimental investigations. Structures of biological nanopores and channels are reviewed, emphasizing those high-resolution crystal structures, which reveal water molecules within the transmembrane pores, which can be used to aid the interpretation of simulation studies. Different levels of molecular simulations of water within nanopores are described, with a focus on molecular dynamics (MD). In particular, models of water for MD simulations are discussed in detail to provide an evaluation of their use in simulations of water in nanopores. Simulation studies of the behavior of water in idealized models of nanopores have revealed aspects of the organization and dynamics of nanoconfined water, including wetting/dewetting in narrow hydrophobic nanopores. A survey of simulation studies in a range of nonbiological nanopores is presented, including carbon nanotubes, synthetic nanopores, model peptide nanopores, track-etched nanopores in polymer membranes, and hydroxylated and functionalized nanoporous silica. These reveal a complex relationship between pore size/geometry, the nature of the pore lining, and rates of water transport. Wider nanopores with hydrophobic linings favor water flow whereas narrower hydrophobic pores may show dewetting. Simulation studies over the past decade of the behavior of water in a range of biological nanopores are described, including porins and β-barrel protein nanopores, aquaporins and related polar solute pores, and a number of different classes of ion channels. Water is shown to play a key role in proton transport in biological channels and in hydrophobic gating of ion channels. An overall picture emerges, whereby the behavior of water in a nanopore may be predicted as a function of its hydrophobicity and radius. This informs our understanding of the functions of diverse channel structures and will aid the design of novel nanopores. Thus, our current level of understanding allows for the design of a nanopore which promotes wetting over dewetting or vice versa. However, to design a novel nanopore, which enables fast, selective, and gated flow of water de novo would remain challenging, suggesting a need for further detailed simulations alongside experimental evaluation of more complex nanopore systems.

103 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Modern simulations offer a range of molecular-level insights into ion channel function and modulation as a learning platform for mechanistic discovery and drug development.
Abstract: Membrane ion channels are the fundamental electrical components in the nervous system. Recent developments in X-ray crystallography and cryo-EM microscopy have revealed what these proteins look like in atomic detail but do not tell us how they function. Molecular dynamics simulations have progressed to the point that we can now simulate realistic molecular assemblies to produce quantitative calculations of the thermodynamic and kinetic quantities that control function. In this review, we summarize the state of atomistic simulation methods for ion channels to understand their conduction, activation, and drug modulation mechanisms. We are at a crossroads in atomistic simulation, where long time scale observation can provide unbiased exploration of mechanisms, supplemented by biased free energy methodologies. We illustrate the use of these approaches to describe ion conduction and selectivity in voltage-gated sodium and acid-sensing ion channels. Studies of channel gating present a significant challenge, as activation occurs on longer time scales. Enhanced sampling approaches can ensure convergence on minimum free energy pathways for activation, as illustrated here for pentameric ligand-gated ion channels that are principal to nervous system function and the actions of general anesthetics. We also examine recent studies of local anesthetic and antiepileptic drug binding to a sodium channel, revealing sites and pathways that may offer new targets for drug development. Modern simulations thus offer a range of molecular-level insights into ion channel function and modulation as a learning platform for mechanistic discovery and drug development.

83 citations