AbstractL-type calcium channels are Ca2+ binding proteins of great biological importance. They generate an essential intracellular signal of living cells by allowing Ca2+ ions to move across the lipid membrane into the cell, thereby selecting an ion that is in low extracellular abundance. Their mechanism of selection involves four carboxylate groups, containing eight oxygen ions, that belong to the side chains of the “EEEE” locus of the channel protein, a setting similar to that found in many Ca2+-chelating molecules. This study examines the hypothesis that selectivity in this locus is determined by mutual electrostatic screening and volume exclusion between ions and carboxylate oxygens of finite diameters. In this model, the eight half-cha...
L-type Ca channels from porcine cardiac sarcolemma were incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. We ...
L-type Ca channels from porcine cardiac sarcolemma were incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. We ...
AbstractHigh-affinity, intrapore binding of Ca2+ over competing ions is the essential feature in the...
AbstractL-type calcium channels are Ca2+ binding proteins of great biological importance. They gener...
AbstractAnother research group has proposed an interesting model for calcium channel selectivity. Ho...
A physical model of selective `ion binding' in the L-type calcium channel is constructed and consequ...
AbstractCalcium channels have highly charged selectivity filters (4 COO− groups) that attract cation...
Many calcium channels can distinguish between ions of the same charge but different size. For exampl...
Many calcium channels can distinguish between ions of the same charge but different size. For exampl...
AbstractCalcium channels have highly charged selectivity filters (4 COO− groups) that attract cation...
AbstractThe mechanisms underlying ion transport and selectivity in calcium channels are examined usi...
AbstractMany calcium channels can distinguish between ions of the same charge but different size. Fo...
Ion channel selectivity is essential for their function, yet the molecular basis of a channel's abil...
AbstractL-type Ca channels contain a cluster of four charged glutamate residues (EEEE locus), which ...
L-type Ca channels from porcine cardiac sarcolemma were incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. We ...
L-type Ca channels from porcine cardiac sarcolemma were incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. We ...
L-type Ca channels from porcine cardiac sarcolemma were incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. We ...
AbstractHigh-affinity, intrapore binding of Ca2+ over competing ions is the essential feature in the...
AbstractL-type calcium channels are Ca2+ binding proteins of great biological importance. They gener...
AbstractAnother research group has proposed an interesting model for calcium channel selectivity. Ho...
A physical model of selective `ion binding' in the L-type calcium channel is constructed and consequ...
AbstractCalcium channels have highly charged selectivity filters (4 COO− groups) that attract cation...
Many calcium channels can distinguish between ions of the same charge but different size. For exampl...
Many calcium channels can distinguish between ions of the same charge but different size. For exampl...
AbstractCalcium channels have highly charged selectivity filters (4 COO− groups) that attract cation...
AbstractThe mechanisms underlying ion transport and selectivity in calcium channels are examined usi...
AbstractMany calcium channels can distinguish between ions of the same charge but different size. Fo...
Ion channel selectivity is essential for their function, yet the molecular basis of a channel's abil...
AbstractL-type Ca channels contain a cluster of four charged glutamate residues (EEEE locus), which ...
L-type Ca channels from porcine cardiac sarcolemma were incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. We ...
L-type Ca channels from porcine cardiac sarcolemma were incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. We ...
L-type Ca channels from porcine cardiac sarcolemma were incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. We ...
AbstractHigh-affinity, intrapore binding of Ca2+ over competing ions is the essential feature in the...