Abstract
Transient Receptor Potential Ankyrin 1 (TRPA1) is a tetrameric, nonselective cation channel expressed on nociceptive sensory nerves whose activation elicits nocifensive responses (e.g. pain). TRPA1 is activated by electrophiles found in foods and pollution, or produced during inflammation and oxidative stress, via covalent modification of reactive cysteines, but the mechanism underlying electrophilic activation of TRPA1 is poorly understood. Here we studied TRPA1 activation by the irreversible electrophiles iodoacetamide and N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) following transient expression in HEK293 cells. We found that in Ca(2+) imaging studies C621 is critical for electrophile-induced TRPA1 activation, but the role of C665 in TRPA1 activation is dependent on the size of the electrophile. We identified slower TRPA1 activation in whole-cell recordings compared to studies with intact cells, which is rescued by pipette solution supplementation with the antioxidant glutathione. Single-channel recordings identified two distinct electrophilic-induced TRPA1 activation phases: a partial activation that, in some channels, switched to full activation with continued electrophile exposure. Full activation but not the initial activation was regulated by C665. Fitting of open time distributions suggests that full activation correlated with an additional (and long) exponential component, thus suggesting the phases are manifestations of distinct activation states. Our results suggest that distinct NEM-induced TRPA1 activation states are evoked by sequential modification of C621 then C665.