1.A.75.1.1 Piezo1 (FAM38a) mechanosensitive ion channel of 2521 aas and ~ 38 TMSs in a 4 x 9 + 2 TMS arrangement. The protein has a C-terminal DUF3595 (pfam 12166) domain (Coste et al., 2010). Fam38A expression
may cause increased cell migration and metastasis in lung tumours (McHugh et al. 2012). It is imporatnt for gastrointestinal tract function (Alcaino et al. 2017). A high-resolution cryo-electron microscopy structure of the mouse Piezo1 trimer has been determined (Saotome et al. 2017). The detergent-solubilized complex adopts a three-blade propeller shape with a curved transmembrane region containing at least 26 transmembrane helices per protomer. The flexible propeller blades can adopt distinct conformations, and consist of a series of four-TMS bundles termed 'Piezo repeats'. Carboxy-terminal domains line the central ion pore, and the channel is closed by constrictions in the cytosol. A kinked helical beam and anchor domain link the Piezo repeats to the pore, and are poised to control gating allosterically (Saotome et al. 2017). The Piezo1 pore remains fully open if only one subunit is activated, for example by binding the agonist, Yoda1 (Lacroix et al. 2018). The channel mediates uterine artery shear stress mechanotransduction and vasodilation during pregnancy (John et al. 2018). The channel can transport alkali monovalent cations (Na+, K+, Rb+, Cs+ and Li+ as well as Ca2+, tetramethyl ammonium and tetraethyl ammonium, although these last four cations are transported at slow rates (Gnanasambandam et al. 2017). Agonist-induced Piezo1 activation promotes mitochondrial-dependent apoptosis in vascular smooth muscle cells (Yin et al. 2022). Piezo1 is the stretch activated Ca2+ channel in red blood
cells that mediates homeostatic volume control. Vaisey et al. 2022 studied the
organization of Piezo1 in red blood cells. Piezo1
adopts a non-uniform distribution on the red blood cell surface, with a
bias toward the biconcave 'dimple'. Trajectories of diffusing Piezo1
molecules, which exhibit confined Brownian diffusion on short timescales
and hopping on long timescales, also reflect a bias toward the dimple.
This bias can be explained by 'curvature coupling' between the intrinsic
curvature of the Piezo dome and the curvature of the red blood cell
membrane. Piezo1 does not form clusters with itself, nor does it
colocalize with F-actin, Spectrin, or the Gardos channel. Thus, Piezo1
exhibits the properties of a force-through-membrane sensor of curvature
and lateral tension in the red blood cell (Vaisey et al. 2022). Mechanosensitive Piezo1 channels trigger migraine pain in trigeminal nociceptive neurons (Della Pietra et al. 2023). Gain-of-function mutations in PIEZO1 cause dehydrated hereditary stomatocytosis (DHS) or hereditary xerocytosis, an autosomal dominant hemolytic anemia characterized by high reticulocyte count, a tendency to macrocytosis, and mild jaundice, as well as by other variably penetrant clinical features, such as perinatal edema, severe thromboembolic complications after splenectomy, and hepatic iron overload (Andolfo et al. 2023). Mechanical stretching induces fibroblast apoptosis by activating Piezo1 and then destroying the actin cytoskeleton (Li et al. 2023). Force-induced motions of the PIEZO1 blade have been probed with fluorimetry (Ozkan et al. 2023). Low-intensity fluid shear stress causes a unique form of mechanical stress to the cell. A light-gated mouse PIEZO1 channel, in which an azobenzene-based photoswitch covalently tethered to an engineered cysteine, Y2464C, localized at the extracellular apex of the TMS 38, rapidly triggers channel gating upon 365-nm-light irradiation. Peralta et al. 2023 provided evidence that this light-gated channel recapitulates mechanically-activated PIEZO1 functional properties, and show that light-induced molecular motions are similar to those evoked mechanically. GenEPi is a genetically-encoded fluorescent reporter for non-invasive
optical monitoring of Piezo1-dependent activity. Yaganoglu et al. 2023 demonstrated that
GenEPi has high spatiotemporal resolution for Piezo1-dependent stimuli
from the single-cell level to that of the entire organism. GenEPi
reveals transient, local mechanical stimuli in the plasma membrane of
single cells, resolves repetitive contraction-triggered stimulation of
beating cardiomyocytes within microtissues, and allows for robust and
reliable monitoring of Piezo1-dependent activity in vivo (Yaganoglu et al. 2023). Membrane stretch provides a mechanism for activation of PIEZO1 channels in chondrocytes (Savadipour et al. 2023). Zhou et al. 2023 found that MyoD (myoblast determination)-family inhibitor proteins
(MDFIC and MDFI) are PIEZO1/2 interacting partners. These
transcriptional regulators bind to PIEZO1/2 channels, regulating channel
inactivation. Using single-particle cryoEM, the authors
mapped the interaction site in MDFIC to a lipidated, C-terminal helix
that inserts laterally into the PIEZO1 pore module. These
Piezo-interacting proteins fit all the criteria for auxiliary subunits,
contribute to explaining the vastly different gating kinetics of
endogenous Piezo channels observed in many cell types, and elucidate
mechanisms potentially involved in human lymphatic vascular disease (Zhou et al. 2023). PIEZO1 is a distal nephron mechanosensor and is required for flow-induced K+ secretion (Carrisoza-Gaytan et al. 2024). The role and mechanism of PIEZO1 as a mechanical sensor in cardiovascular
development, homeostasis, and disease processes, including embryo
survival, angiogenesis, cardiac development repair, vascular
inflammation, lymphangiogenesis, blood pressure regulation, cardiac
hypertrophy, cardiac fibrosis, ventricular remodeling, and heart failure have been reviewed (Jin et al. 2024). Pain is one of the most severe manifestations in knee osteoarthritis (KOA) patients. The
inflammatory response mediated by Piezo1 causes the release of
inflammatory mediators and pro-inflammatory factors leading to pain (He et al. 2024). Results suggest a previously unknown regulatory mechanism involving Piezo1 and influencing Glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1)
production in L epithelial cells, could offer new insights into diabetes
treatments (Huang et al. 2024). Loading directionality plays a role on PIEZO1 expression and the early-stage healing process of peri-implant bone (Mao et al. 2024). Piezo1 enhances macrophage phagocytosis and pyrin activation to ameliorate fungal keratitis (Yang et al. 2025). Mechanical stretch promotes the migration of mesenchymal stem cells via the Piezo1/F-actin/YAP axis (Ma et al. 2025). Smooth muscle cell Piezo1 depletion results in impaired contractile properties in murine small bowel (Bautista et al. 2025). Piezo1 deletion mitigates diabetic cardiomyopathy by maintaining mitochondrial dynamics via the ERK/Drp1 pathway (Niu et al. 2025). Endothelial Piezo1 stimulates angiogenesis to offer protection against intestinal ischemia-reperfusion injury in mice (Wang et al. 2025). Mechanical activation of adipose tissue
macrophages mediated by Piezo1 protects against diet-induced obesity by
regulating sympathetic activity (Leng et al. 2025). A direct link between the loss of PIEZO1's mechanosensitivity and the
pathophysiological phenotype of fetal hydrops raises the therapeutic
potential of using PIEZO1 chemical activators to restore the
mechanosensitivity of PIEZO1 missense mutants that are associated with
genetic diseases such as GLD and hydrops fetalis (Jiang et al. 2025). Cryo-light microscopy with angstrom precision has deciphered structural conformations of PIEZO1 in its native state (Mazal et al. 2025). Piezo1 may play a role in heart failure because of its cytomechanical sensing to diverse cellular pathways (Wang et al. 2025).
|
Accession Number: | Q92508 |
Protein Name: | Piezo-type mechanosensitive ion channel component 1 |
Length: | 2521 |
Molecular Weight: | 286790.00 |
Species: | Homo sapiens (Human) [9606] |
Number of TMSs: | 39 |
Location1 / Topology2 / Orientation3: |
Endoplasmic reticulum membrane1 / Multi-pass membrane protein2 |
Substrate |
ion, cation, calcium(2+), lithium(1+), sodium(1+), potassium(1+), rubidium(1+), caesium(1+), tetramethylammonium, tetraethylammonium |
---|
Entrez Gene ID: |
9780
|
Pfam: |
PF12166
|
KEGG: |
hsa:9780
|
|
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[3] “Prediction of the coding sequences of unidentified human genes. VI. The coding sequences of 80 new genes (KIAA0201-KIAA0280) deduced by analysis of cDNA clones from cell line KG-1 and brain.” Nagase T. et.al. 9039502
[4] “The status, quality, and expansion of the NIH full-length cDNA project: the Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC).” The MGC Project Team et.al. 15489334
[5] “Global, in vivo, and site-specific phosphorylation dynamics in signaling networks.” Olsen J.V. et.al. 17081983
[6] “Phosphoproteome analysis of the human mitotic spindle.” Nousiainen M. et.al. 16565220
[7] “Evaluation of the low-specificity protease elastase for large-scale phosphoproteome analysis.” Wang B. et.al. 19007248
[8] “A quantitative atlas of mitotic phosphorylation.” Dephoure N. et.al. 18669648
[9] “Mass-spectrometric identification and relative quantification of N-linked cell surface glycoproteins.” Wollscheid B. et.al. 19349973
[10] “Quantitative phosphoproteomic analysis of T cell receptor signaling reveals system-wide modulation of protein-protein interactions.” Mayya V. et.al. 19690332
[11] “Lysine acetylation targets protein complexes and co-regulates major cellular functions.” Choudhary C. et.al. 19608861
[12] “Integrin activation by Fam38A uses a novel mechanism of R-Ras targeting to the endoplasmic reticulum.” McHugh B.J. et.al. 20016066
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1: MEPHVLGAVL YWLLLPCALL AACLLRFSGL SLVYLLFLLL LPWFPGPTRC GLQGHTGRLL
61: RALLGLSLLF LVAHLALQIC LHIVPRLDQL LGPSCSRWET LSRHIGVTRL DLKDIPNAIR
121: LVAPDLGILV VSSVCLGICG RLARNTRQSP HPRELDDDER DVDASPTAGL QEAATLAPTR
181: RSRLAARFRV TAHWLLVAAG RVLAVTLLAL AGIAHPSALS SVYLLLFLAL CTWWACHFPI
241: STRGFSRLCV AVGCFGAGHL ICLYCYQMPL AQALLPPAGI WARVLGLKDF VGPTNCSSPH
301: ALVLNTGLDW PVYASPGVLL LLCYATASLR KLRAYRPSGQ RKEAAKGYEA RELELAELDQ
361: WPQERESDQH VVPTAPDTEA DNCIVHELTG QSSVLRRPVR PKRAEPREAS PLHSLGHLIM
421: DQSYVCALIA MMVWSITYHS WLTFVLLLWA CLIWTVRSRH QLAMLCSPCI LLYGMTLCCL
481: RYVWAMDLRP ELPTTLGPVS LRQLGLEHTR YPCLDLGAML LYTLTFWLLL RQFVKEKLLK
541: WAESPAALTE VTVADTEPTR TQTLLQSLGE LVKGVYAKYW IYVCAGMFIV VSFAGRLVVY
601: KIVYMFLFLL CLTLFQVYYS LWRKLLKAFW WLVVAYTMLV LIAVYTFQFQ DFPAYWRNLT
661: GFTDEQLGDL GLEQFSVSEL FSSILVPGFF LLACILQLHY FHRPFMQLTD MEHVSLPGTR
721: LPRWAHRQDA VSGTPLLREE QQEHQQQQQE EEEEEEDSRD EGLGVATPHQ ATQVPEGAAK
781: WGLVAERLLE LAAGFSDVLS RVQVFLRRLL ELHVFKLVAL YTVWVALKEV SVMNLLLVVL
841: WAFALPYPRF RPMASCLSTV WTCVIIVCKM LYQLKVVNPQ EYSSNCTEPF PNSTNLLPTE
901: ISQSLLYRGP VDPANWFGVR KGFPNLGYIQ NHLQVLLLLV FEAIVYRRQE HYRRQHQLAP
961: LPAQAVFASG TRQQLDQDLL GCLKYFINFF FYKFGLEICF LMAVNVIGQR MNFLVTLHGC
1021: WLVAILTRRH RQAIARLWPN YCLFLALFLL YQYLLCLGMP PALCIDYPWR WSRAVPMNSA
1081: LIKWLYLPDF FRAPNSTNLI SDFLLLLCAS QQWQVFSAER TEEWQRMAGV NTDRLEPLRG
1141: EPNPVPNFIH CRSYLDMLKV AVFRYLFWLV LVVVFVTGAT RISIFGLGYL LACFYLLLFG
1201: TALLQRDTRA RLVLWDCLIL YNVTVIISKN MLSLLACVFV EQMQTGFCWV IQLFSLVCTV
1261: KGYYDPKEMM DRDQDCLLPV EEAGIIWDSV CFFFLLLQRR VFLSHYYLHV RADLQATALL
1321: ASRGFALYNA ANLKSIDFHR RIEEKSLAQL KRQMERIRAK QEKHRQGRVD RSRPQDTLGP
1381: KDPGLEPGPD SPGGSSPPRR QWWRPWLDHA TVIHSGDYFL FESDSEEEEE AVPEDPRPSA
1441: QSAFQLAYQA WVTNAQAVLR RRQQEQEQAR QEQAGQLPTG GGPSQEVEPA EGPEEAAAGR
1501: SHVVQRVLST AQFLWMLGQA LVDELTRWLQ EFTRHHGTMS DVLRAERYLL TQELLQGGEV
1561: HRGVLDQLYT SQAEATLPGP TEAPNAPSTV SSGLGAEEPL SSMTDDMGSP LSTGYHTRSG
1621: SEEAVTDPGE REAGASLYQG LMRTASELLL DRRLRIPELE EAELFAEGQG RALRLLRAVY
1681: QCVAAHSELL CYFIIILNHM VTASAGSLVL PVLVFLWAML SIPRPSKRFW MTAIVFTEIA
1741: VVVKYLFQFG FFPWNSHVVL RRYENKPYFP PRILGLEKTD GYIKYDLVQL MALFFHRSQL
1801: LCYGLWDHEE DSPSKEHDKS GEEEQGAEEG PGVPAATTED HIQVEARVGP TDGTPEPQVE
1861: LRPRDTRRIS LRFRRRKKEG PARKGAAAIE AEDREEEEGE EEKEAPTGRE KRPSRSGGRV
1921: RAAGRRLQGF CLSLAQGTYR PLRRFFHDIL HTKYRAATDV YALMFLADVV DFIIIIFGFW
1981: AFGKHSAATD ITSSLSDDQV PEAFLVMLLI QFSTMVVDRA LYLRKTVLGK LAFQVALVLA
2041: IHLWMFFILP AVTERMFNQN VVAQLWYFVK CIYFALSAYQ IRCGYPTRIL GNFLTKKYNH
2101: LNLFLFQGFR LVPFLVELRA VMDWVWTDTT LSLSSWMCVE DIYANIFIIK CSRETEKKYP
2161: QPKGQKKKKI VKYGMGGLII LFLIAIIWFP LLFMSLVRSV VGVVNQPIDV TVTLKLGGYE
2221: PLFTMSAQQP SIIPFTAQAY EELSRQFDPQ PLAMQFISQY SPEDIVTAQI EGSSGALWRI
2281: SPPSRAQMKR ELYNGTADIT LRFTWNFQRD LAKGGTVEYA NEKHMLALAP NSTARRQLAS
2341: LLEGTSDQSV VIPNLFPKYI RAPNGPEANP VKQLQPNEEA DYLGVRIQLR REQGAGATGF
2401: LEWWVIELQE CRTDCNLLPM VIFSDKVSPP SLGFLAGYGI MGLYVSIVLV IGKFVRGFFS
2461: EISHSIMFEE LPCVDRILKL CQDIFLVRET RELELEEELY AKLIFLYRSP ETMIKWTREK
2521: E