- Arrigoni, Cristina;
- Lolicato, Marco;
- Shaya, David;
- Rohaim, Ahmed;
- Findeisen, Felix;
- Fong, Lam-Kiu;
- Colleran, Claire M;
- Dominik, Pawel;
- Kim, Sangwoo S;
- Schuermann, Jonathan P;
- DeGrado, William F;
- Grabe, Michael;
- Kossiakoff, Anthony A;
- Minor, Daniel L
Every voltage-gated ion channel (VGIC) has a pore domain (PD) made from four subunits, each comprising an antiparallel transmembrane helix pair bridged by a loop. The extent to which PD subunit structure requires quaternary interactions is unclear. Here, we present crystal structures of a set of bacterial voltage-gated sodium channel (BacNaV) 'pore only' proteins that reveal a surprising collection of non-canonical quaternary arrangements in which the PD tertiary structure is maintained. This context-independent structural robustness, supported by molecular dynamics simulations, indicates that VGIC-PD tertiary structure is independent of quaternary interactions. This fold occurs throughout the VGIC superfamily and in diverse transmembrane and soluble proteins. Strikingly, characterization of PD subunit-binding Fabs indicates that non-canonical quaternary PD conformations can occur in full-length VGICs. Together, our data demonstrate that the VGIC-PD is an autonomously folded unit. This property has implications for VGIC biogenesis, understanding functional states, de novo channel design, and VGIC structural origins.