| 2000 |
Prestin (SLC26A5) is the motor protein of cochlear outer hair cells; heterologous expression in kidney cells confers voltage-induced shape changes and nonlinear capacitance, demonstrating it is a direct voltage-to-force converter. |
Heterologous expression in HEK cells, voltage-clamp electrophysiology (nonlinear capacitance), outer hair cell motility assay |
Nature |
High |
10821263
|
| 2002 |
Targeted deletion of prestin in mice abolishes outer hair cell electromotility in vitro and causes 40–60 dB loss of cochlear sensitivity in vivo, without disrupting mechano-electrical transduction, establishing prestin as essential for the cochlear amplifier. |
Prestin knockout mouse, in vitro electromotility recording, in vivo auditory threshold measurement (ABR) |
Nature |
High |
12239568
|
| 2000 |
Prestin protein incorporation into the outer hair cell lateral plasma membrane begins from postnatal day 0 and increases progressively, with its time course coinciding with development of electromotility, while GLUT-5 is not incorporated into the lateral membrane until postnatal day 15, supporting prestin (not GLUT-5) as the fundamental motor component. |
Immunofluorescence with specific antibodies, patch-clamp recording of transient charge movement during postnatal development |
The Journal of Neuroscience |
High |
11125015
|
| 2001 |
Prestin's N- and C-termini are cytoplasmic, as determined by epitope-tag immunofluorescence under permeabilizing and non-permeabilizing conditions in transfected cells. |
Epitope-tagged constructs, immunofluorescence in permeabilized vs. non-permeabilized transfected cells |
Neuroreport |
Medium |
11435925
|
| 2005 |
Prestin is a 10-transmembrane domain protein with both intracellular termini required for normal voltage sensing; short truncations of either terminus eliminate or modify activity despite normal membrane targeting. The N-terminus mediates prestin homo-oligomerization, as shown by FRET. |
Truncation/deletion mutagenesis, nonlinear capacitance electrophysiology, FRET between fluorescently tagged prestin constructs |
Biophysical Journal |
Medium |
16113116
|
| 2006 |
Prestin forms stable homo-oligomers (likely tetramers) in native outer hair cells and heterologous expression systems; the dimer is stabilized by a disulfide bond in the hydrophobic core, and the dimer serves as the building block for higher-order oligomers. |
LDS-PAGE, perfluoro-octanoate-PAGE, membrane-based yeast two-hybrid, chemical cross-linking, affinity purification |
The Journal of Biological Chemistry |
High |
16682411
|
| 2006 |
Self-association of prestin in HEK cell membranes demonstrated by FRET (acceptor photobleach and sensitized emission), with average FRET efficiency ~9–10%, confirming prestin-prestin interactions. |
Acceptor photobleach FRET and sensitized emission FRET with CFP/YFP-tagged prestin in HEK cells |
Brain Research |
Medium |
16626645
|
| 2005 |
The C-terminus of prestin (nearly full length, >708 amino acids required) controls plasma membrane targeting and nonlinear capacitance function; specific residues Y520 and Y526 are implicated in basolateral targeting, and V499/Y501 affect function without disrupting membrane expression. |
Series of deletion, point, and chimeric mutants expressed heterologously; nonlinear capacitance measurement; immunofluorescence |
Journal of Cell Science |
Medium |
15976456
|
| 2004 |
Prestin is N-glycosylated at N163 and N166; N-linked glycosylation is not required for plasma membrane targeting but deglycosylation shifts the voltage of peak charge transfer to more depolarized values, quantitatively affecting OHC electromotility. |
Site-directed mutagenesis of glycosylation sites, tunicamycin/glycopeptidase-F treatment, SDS-PAGE, electrophysiology (nonlinear capacitance) |
Journal of Neurochemistry |
High |
15140192
|
| 2007 |
Non-mammalian prestin orthologs (chicken, zebrafish) are electrogenic divalent/chloride anion exchangers (1:1 SO4²⁻/Cl⁻ antiport), blocked by salicylate, revealing that mammalian prestin's electromotility mechanism is closely related to an ancestral anion transport cycle. |
Patch-clamp recordings in heterologously expressed chicken/zebrafish prestin; determination of transport stoichiometry from reversal potentials under defined ion gradients |
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |
High |
17442754
|
| 2003 |
Prestin is specifically expressed in the basolateral (lateral) plasma membrane of outer hair cells; intracellular Cl⁻ acts as an extrinsic voltage sensor: removal of intracellular Cl⁻ eliminates voltage-dependent stiffness and electromotility, showing motor protein stiffness is a major contributor to axial stiffness of OHCs. |
Whole-cell voltage-clamp of isolated guinea pig OHCs; axial stiffness measurement by calibrated fiber; Cl⁻ removal via intracellular perfusion |
The Journal of Neuroscience |
High |
14534242
|
| 2005 |
cGMP (via PKG) modulates prestin's voltage-dependent charge displacement more strongly than cAMP; mutagenesis of two PKG phosphorylation sites on prestin shows they interact and one may influence prestin's membrane targeting. |
Cyclic nucleotide application to prestin-transfected TSA201 cells; site-directed mutagenesis of S/T phosphorylation sites (alanine/aspartate substitutions); nonlinear capacitance recording; confocal microscopy |
The Journal of Physiology |
Medium |
15649974
|
| 2010 |
Crystal structure (1.57 Å) of the cytosolic STAS domain of prestin reveals it begins immediately after the last transmembrane segment and lies beneath the lipid bilayer; disease-associated mutations either cause STAS misfolding or alter interaction surfaces. |
X-ray crystallography, heteronuclear multidimensional NMR spectroscopy, mutational analysis |
Journal of Molecular Biology |
High |
20471983
|
| 2009 |
Mammalian prestin transports anions (formate, oxalate) comparable to SLC26A6; mutations P328A and L326A preserve nonlinear capacitance but abolish anion transport, distinguishing the transport and voltage-sensing functions; 12 of 22 charged transmembrane residues contribute to unitary charge movement. |
Radioactive anion uptake assays (¹⁴C-formate, ¹⁴C-oxalate), site-directed mutagenesis, patch-clamp electrophysiology |
Biophysical Journal |
High |
19383462
|
| 2010 |
CFTR co-localizes with prestin in the lateral membrane of OHCs (but not in IHCs or prestin-knockout OHCs), physically interacts with prestin (confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation), and cAMP-activated CFTR enhances voltage-dependent charge displacement of prestin. |
In situ hybridization, immunofluorescence, co-immunoprecipitation, whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology in OHCs and transfected cells |
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta |
High |
20138822
|
| 2010 |
MAP1S (microtubule-associated protein 1S) binds to the STAS domain of prestin; co-expression with MAP1S increases prestin surface expression 2.8-fold and charge density 2.7-fold, showing MAP1S augments prestin activity by promoting surface trafficking. |
Yeast two-hybrid, reciprocal immunoprecipitation, FRET, quantitative PCR, electrophysiology (charge density measurement) |
The Journal of Biological Chemistry |
High |
20418376
|
| 2011 |
A synthetic chimeric prestin (SynPres) combining mammalian and non-mammalian prestin domains shows that two distinct transmembrane core domains are necessary and sufficient for electromotility/NLC; the amplitude of NLC is determined by monovalent anion transport, indicating electromotility is a dual-step process: anion transport by an alternate-access cycle followed by an anion-dependent electromotility-generating transition. |
Chimeric protein construction, heterologous expression, patch-clamp electrophysiology (NLC), anion transport assay |
The EMBO Journal |
High |
21701557
|
| 2014 |
The structural model of prestin's transmembrane core has a 7+7 inverted repeat architecture with a central cavity as the anion-binding/substrate site; cysteine accessibility scanning and mutagenesis confirm the central cavity is the substrate-binding site controlling electromotile activity. |
Homology modeling, MD simulations, cysteine accessibility scanning (SCAM), mutational analysis of electromotility |
Nature Communications |
Medium |
24710176
|
| 2014 |
Calmodulin (CaM) binds directly to an intrinsically disordered region (IDR) in prestin's C-terminal domain in a calcium-obligate manner; this CaM binding shifts the operating point of prestin to more hyperpolarized potentials, modulating its function. |
Bioinformatic prediction, biochemical binding assays, patch-clamp electrophysiology in isolated OHCs and heterologous cells |
The Journal of Neuroscience |
High |
24453323
|
| 2021 |
Cryo-EM structures of human prestin bound with chloride (contracted state) or salicylate (expanded state) at a common anion site reveal that conformational changes in the anion-binding site are allosterically coupled to changes in transmembrane domain cross-sectional area and surrounding membrane deformation, providing a structure-based mechanism for OHC electromotility. |
Cryo-electron microscopy, computational molecular dynamics simulations, functional assays |
Cell |
High |
34390643
|
| 2021 |
Single-particle cryo-EM of dolphin prestin in six distinct states shows that bound anion identity (Cl⁻ vs SO₄²⁻) tunes prestin conformational states; salicylate competes for the anion-binding site and immobilizes prestin in a new conformation; the anion together with coordinating charged residues and helical dipole act as a dynamic voltage sensor; structural rearrangements at the voltage sensor couple to area expansion at the protein-membrane interface. |
Single-particle cryo-EM (six states), patch-clamp electrophysiology, pharmacological characterization |
Nature |
High |
34695838
|
| 2022 |
Cryo-EM structure of gerbil prestin at 3.6 Å reveals it forms a swapped dimer with 14 TM segments in two 7+7 inverted repeats; captured in an inward-open (contracted) state; mutation of the chloride-binding site removes salicylate competition with anions while retaining NLC, undermining the extrinsic voltage sensor hypothesis. |
Single-particle cryo-EM, site-directed mutagenesis of chloride-binding site, patch-clamp electrophysiology |
Nature Communications |
High |
35022426
|
| 2022 |
Cryo-EM structures of thermostabilized prestin with chloride, sulfate, or salicylate show rigid-body movement between core and gate domains; mutations at the dimeric interface severely diminish NLC, indicating gate domain stabilization facilitates core domain movement for NLC expression. |
Cryo-EM, site-directed mutagenesis of dimeric interface, patch-clamp electrophysiology (NLC) |
Nature Communications |
High |
36266333
|
| 2012 |
The V499G/Y501H mutation (with V499 as the primary site) impairs fast motor kinetics and voltage operating range of prestin without eliminating voltage-induced motor activity; V499G/Y501H prestin forms heteromers with wild-type prestin but does not dominantly impair wild-type kinetics, suggesting prestin subunits function independently within a multimer. |
Site-directed mutagenesis, patch-clamp electrophysiology (NLC kinetics), heteromeric co-expression |
The Journal of Biological Chemistry |
High |
23212912
|
| 2007 |
Prestin-prestin homomeric interactions and prestin-GLUT5 heteromeric interactions in OHC-relevant cell models, confirmed by membrane co-localization, FRET (FACS, acceptor photobleaching, FLIM), and co-immunoprecipitation. |
Confocal co-localization, FRET by FACS/acceptor photobleaching/FRET-FLIM, co-immunoprecipitation in HEK293T cells |
Developmental Neurobiology |
Medium |
17443803
|
| 2008 |
Membrane cholesterol modulates prestin-associated nonlinear capacitance: increasing cholesterol causes a hyperpolarizing shift in peak voltage (Vpkc) and decreases total charge movement linearly; docosahexaenoic acid causes a hyperpolarizing shift with increased charge movement. |
Cholesterol/DHA loading of HEK293 cells expressing prestin, patch-clamp electrophysiology (NLC) |
The Journal of Biological Chemistry |
Medium |
18567583
|
| 2007 |
Prestin localizes to membrane microdomains (lipid rafts) in HEK293 cells; depletion of membrane cholesterol alters prestin localization and reduces nonlinear capacitance, showing that microdomain localization is required for full prestin activity. |
Immunocolocalization, sucrose density gradient fractionation, cholesterol depletion, patch-clamp (NLC) |
Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery |
Medium |
17321873
|
| 2009 |
Glycosylation regulates prestin self-association and cellular trafficking; the non-glycosylated double mutant prestin(NN163/166AA) is enriched as monomers and more mobile in the plasma membrane; oligomerization depends on glycosylation but is not essential for NLC in HEK293 cells; in the presence of increased cholesterol, non-glycosylated prestin shows cholesterol-dependent decrease in surface expression and loss of NLC. |
Glycosylation site mutagenesis, cholesterol manipulation, flow cytometry, confocal microscopy, patch-clamp (NLC) |
Journal of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology |
Medium |
19898896
|
| 2012 |
Rat prestin mediates SCN⁻ transport currents (electrogenic) proportional to prestin expression level, establishing that mammalian prestin retains electrogenic anion transport capability; comparison with zebrafish prestin and SLC26A7 shows SCN⁻ transport is conserved in the SLC26 family. |
Heterologous expression, patch-clamp recording, variation of SCN⁻ concentration, noise analysis |
The Journal of Physiology |
Medium |
22063625
|
| 2012 |
Mammalian prestin acts as a weak Cl⁻/HCO₃⁻ electrogenic antiporter; HCO₃⁻ transport by prestin-transfected cells was demonstrated by accelerated recovery from acid load and shift in reversal potential, requiring a chloride gradient. |
Intracellular pH sensor (pHluorin, BCECF), whole-cell patch-clamp, heterologous expression and OHC recordings |
The Journal of Physiology |
Medium |
22890707
|
| 2013 |
Disparities between prestin's voltage-sensor charge movement (NLC) and electromotility as a function of intracellular chloride reveal that chloride drives slow state transitions; a kinetic model with fast anion-binding and fast voltage-dependent transitions coupled by a slower intermediary transition recapitulates the data, suggesting an intermediary 'transporter legacy' gateway. |
Simultaneous NLC and electromotility measurement, whole-cell patch-clamp, kinetic modeling |
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |
Medium |
23431177
|
| 2021 |
Prestin (Slc26a5) is expressed in cardiac myocytes and amplifies actin-myosin force generation; prestin-knockout mice show significant alterations in cardiac contractility, establishing a motor function of prestin beyond the inner ear. |
Prestin-KO mouse model, cardiac contractility measurements, electrophysiology (nonlinear capacitance in cardiomyocytes) |
Cell Reports |
Medium |
33951436
|
| 2023 |
Restoring fast motor kinetics in mice expressing a slowed prestin missense variant rescues cochlear amplification, demonstrating that prestin's fast motor kinetics is essential for mammalian cochlear amplification; the anion transport-disrupting point mutation does not alter cochlear function, suggesting weak anion transport of prestin is not essential in the mammalian cochlea. |
Knockin mouse model (slowed prestin variant), auditory function tests (ABR/DPOAE), electromotility measurements |
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |
High |
36893263
|
| 2003 |
Prestin is expressed in vestibular hair cells of rodents, but is localized to the cytoplasm (not lateral plasma membrane) in vestibular hair cells and does not produce voltage-dependent capacitance; OHC-type somatic electromotility is absent in vestibular hair cells despite prestin expression. |
RT-PCR, in situ hybridization, immunolocalization, whole-cell patch-clamp in vestibular hair cells |
Hearing Research |
Medium |
14553901
|
| 2010 |
Prestin is expressed on the whole OHC basolateral membrane including the basal pole (not just lateral wall), though staining is weaker at the base; prestin is absent from the cuticular plate, stereocilia, cytoplasm, and nuclei. |
Immunofluorescence with confocal microscopy, co-staining with membrane dye di-8-ANEPPS, hypotonic challenge to separate membrane layers in mouse/rat/guinea pig OHCs |
Brain Research |
Medium |
16709400
|
| 2007 |
A single point mutation A100W in prestin eliminates prestin-associated charge movement and diminishes electromechanical force generation in membrane tethers without altering passive membrane mechanics, demonstrating that prestin-associated charge transfer is required for maximal electromechanical force. |
Site-directed mutagenesis, membrane tether pulling from HEK cells, optical tweezers measurement of electromechanical force |
Biophysical Journal |
Medium |
17468166
|
| 2018 |
Charged residues in the extracellular loop of prestin (and pendrin) play significant roles in setting the voltage-operating points of nonlinear capacitance; pendrin also exhibits large NLC, suggesting voltage sensing is not unique to prestin within SLC26 and works independently of anion transport. |
Site-directed mutagenesis of extracellular loop charged residues, patch-clamp electrophysiology (NLC) in transfected cells |
The Journal of Biological Chemistry |
Medium |
29777056
|
| 2022 |
Coarse-grained MD simulations show prestin causes anisotropic membrane deformation that mediates preferential lateral organization of prestin dimers with constructively aligned deformation patterns, reducing membrane rigidity and hypothesized to maximize OHC reshaping. |
Coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations (>0.5 ms collective sampling) |
Nature Communications |
Low |
36371434
|
| 2014 |
Chloride and salicylate manipulations show that the outer hair cell motor produces voltage-dependent changes in membrane surface area (area motor model); unit linear motor capacitance fluctuation is ~140 zeptofarads, and salicylate augments this by locking motors in the expanded state. |
Whole-cell patch-clamp with simultaneous nonlinear and linear capacitance measurements, chloride and salicylate manipulation |
The Journal of Biological Chemistry |
Medium |
24554714
|
| 2016 |
Chloride controls prestin kinetics (and hence apparent charge magnitude at any given frequency) but not the total voltage-sensor charge Qmax; as interrogation frequency decreases, Qmax asymptotes to a level independent of chloride concentration. |
Multifrequency admittance, expanded displacement current integration, OHC electromotility measurement, whole-cell voltage-clamp |
Biophysical Journal |
Medium |
27276272
|
| 2014 |
Gerbil prestin (SLC26A5) mediates physiological (mM-range) chloride flux in HEK cells expressing the protein, demonstrated using a novel chloride-sensitive YFP sensor fused to prestin. |
Genetically encoded chloride indicator (monomeric Cl-YFP) fused to prestin, fluorescence-based Cl⁻ flux assay in HEK cells |
PLoS ONE |
Medium |
24901231
|