R. French - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by R. French

Research paper thumbnail of Interactions between a pore-blocking peptide and the voltage sensor of the sodium channel: an electrostatic approach to channel geometry

Neuron, 1996

Few experimental data illuminate the relationship between the molecular structures that mediate i... more Few experimental data illuminate the relationship between the molecular structures that mediate ion conduction through voltage-dependent ion channels and the structures responsible for sensing transmembrane voltage and controlling gating. To fill this void, we have used a strongly cationic, mutated mu-conotoxin peptide, which only partially blocks current through voltage-dependent sodium channels, to study voltage-dependent activation gating in both bound and unbound channels. When the peptide binds to the ion-conducting pore, it inhibit channel opening, necessitating stronger depolarization for channel activation. We show that this activation shift could result entirely from electrostatic inhibition of the movement of the voltage-sensing S4 charges and estimate the approximate physical distance through which the S4 charges move.

Research paper thumbnail of Inadequate cervical cytology-the need to audit individual smear takers' inadequate rates

Cytopathology, 1999

In order to assess the performance of individual smear takers, their rates of inadequate smears, ... more In order to assess the performance of individual smear takers, their rates of inadequate smears, due to insufficient material, were monitored between 1992 and 1996. Although the yearly average clinic inadequate rates were all at acceptable levels, there was great variation of rates between smear takers, ranging from 0% to 19.5%. Identification of individuals with unacceptably high inadequate rates allowed them to undergo further training. Continuous monitoring of these inadequate rates can be used to measure levels of performance amongst all smear takers, but is particularly useful for new smear takers, or those who have required retraining.

Research paper thumbnail of Dissecting lidocaine action: diethylamide and phenol mimic separate modes of lidocaine block of sodium channels from heart and skeletal muscle

Biophysical Journal, 1993

We have investigated block of sodium channels by diethylamide and phenol, which resemble the hydr... more We have investigated block of sodium channels by diethylamide and phenol, which resemble the hydrophilic tertiary amine head and the hydrophobic aromatic tail of the lidocaine molecule, respectively. Diethylamide and phenol separately mimicked the fast and slow modes of block caused by lidocaine. Experiments were performed using single batrachotoxinactivated bovine cardiac and rat skeletal muscle sodium channels incorporated into neutral planar lipid bilayers. Diethylamide, only from the intracellular side, caused a voltage-dependent reduction in apparent single channel amplitude ('fast' block). Block was similar for cardiac and skeletal muscle channels, and increased in potency when extracellular sodium was replaced by N-methylglucamine, consistent with an intrapore blocking site. Thus, although occurring at 15-fold higher concentrations, block by diethylamide closely resembles the fast mode of block by lidocaine (Zamponi, G. W., D. D. Doyle, and R. J. French. 1993. Biophys. J. 65:80-90). For cardiac sodium channels, phenol bound to a closed state causing the appearance of long blocked events whose duration increased with phenol concentration. This slow block depended neither on voltage nor on the side of application, and disappeared upon treatment of the channel with trypsin. For skeletal muscle channels, slow phenol block occurred with only very low probability. Thus, phenol block resembles the slow mode of block observed for lidocaine (Zamponi, G. W., D. D. Doyle, and R. J. French. 1993. Biophys. J. 65:91-100). Our data suggest that there are separate sites for fast lidocaine block of the open channel and slow block of the "inactivated" channel. Fast block by diethylamide inhibited the long, spontaneous, trypsin-sensitive (inactivation-like) closures of cardiac channels, and hence secondarily antagonized slow block by phenol or lidocaine. This antagonism would potentiate shifts in the balance between the two modes of action of a tertiary amine drug caused by changes in the relative concentrations of the charged (fast blocking) and neutral (slow blocking) forms of the drug.

Research paper thumbnail of Dual actions of procainamide on batrachotoxin-activated sodium channels: open channel block and prevention of inactivation

Biophysical Journal, 1993

We have investigated the action of procainamide on batrachotoxin (BTX)-activated sodium channels ... more We have investigated the action of procainamide on batrachotoxin (BTX)-activated sodium channels from bovine heart and rat skeletal muscle. When applied to the intracellular side, procainamide induced rapid, open-channel block. We estimated rate constants using amplitude distribution analysis (Yellen, G. 1984. J. Gen. Physiol. 84:157). Membrane depolarization increased the blocking rate and slowed unblock. The rate constants were similar in both magnitude and voltage dependence for cardiac and skeletal muscle channels. Qualitatively, this block resembled the fast open-channel block by . 1993. Biophys. J. 65:80), but procainamide was about sevenfold less potent. Molecular modeling suggests that the difference in potency between procainamide and lidocaine might arise from the relative orientation of their aromatic rings, or from differences in the structure of the aryl-amine link. For the cardiac channels, procainamide reduced the frequency of transitions to a long-lived closed state which shows features characteristic of inactivation (Zamponi, G. W., D. D. Doyle, and R. J. French. 1993. Biophys J. 65:91). Mean durations of kinetically identified closed states were not affected. The degree of fast block and of inhibition of the slow closures were correlated. Internally applied QX-314, a lidocaine derivative and also a fast blocker, produced a similar effect. Thus, drug binding to the fast blocking site appears to inhibit inactivation in BTX-activated cardiac channels.

Research paper thumbnail of State-dependent block underlies the tissue specificity of lidocaine action on batrachotoxin-activated cardiac sodium channels

Biophysical Journal, 1993

We have identified two kinetically distinct modes of block, by lidocaine, of cardiac sodium chann... more We have identified two kinetically distinct modes of block, by lidocaine, of cardiac sodium channels, activated by batrachotoxin and incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. Here, we analyze the slow blocking mode which appears as a series of nonconducting events that increase in frequency and duration with increasing lidocaine concentrations. This type of block occurred rarely, if at all, for the skeletal muscle sodium channel subtype. Kinetic analysis showed that a linear open-closedblocked model is sufficient to account for the major features of our data. Slow block occurs from a long closed state that is a distinguishing characteristic of cardiac channels under these conditions. Slow block showed no significant voltage dependence in the range of -60 to -20 mV for which the detailed kinetic analysis was performed, and was not elicited by application of the permanently charged lidocaine derivative QX-314. By contrast, the fast block, described in the companion paper, results from drug binding to the open state, and is similar for cardiac and skeletal muscle sodium channels. Application of trypsin to the cytoplasmic end of the channel eliminates both the spontaneous, long, gating closures and slow block. Thus, the lidocainesensitive closed state of batrachotoxin-activated cardiac sodium channels exhibits a protease susceptibility resembling that of the inactivated state of unmodified sodium channels. It is the slow block caused by lidocaine binding to this closed state that underlies the channel-subtype specificity of lidocaine action in our experiments.

Research paper thumbnail of Amine blockers of the cytoplasmic mouth of sodium channels: a small structural change can abolish voltage dependence

Biophysical Journal, 1994

Many drugs block sodium channels from the cytoplasmic end (Moczydlowski, E., A. Uehara, X. Guo, a... more Many drugs block sodium channels from the cytoplasmic end (Moczydlowski, E., A. Uehara, X. Guo, and J. Heiny.

Research paper thumbnail of Trans-Channel Interactions in Batrachotoxin-Modified Rat Skeletal Muscle Sodium Channels: Kinetic Analysis of Mutual Inhibition between μ-Conotoxin GIIIA Derivatives and Amine Blockers

Biophysical Journal, 2008

External m-conotoxins and internal amine blockers inhibit each other's block of voltage-gated sod... more External m-conotoxins and internal amine blockers inhibit each other's block of voltage-gated sodium channels. We explore the basis of this interaction by measuring the shifts in voltage-dependence of channel inhibition by internal amines induced by two m-conotoxin derivatives with different charge distributions and net charges. Charge changes on the toxin were made at residue 13, which is thought to penetrate most deeply into the channel, making it likely to have the strongest individual interaction with an internal charged ligand. When an R13Q or R13E molecule was bound to the channel, the voltage dependence of diethylammonium (DEA)-block shifted toward more depolarized potentials (23 mV for R13Q, and 16 mV for R13E). An electrostatic model of the repulsion between DEA and the toxin simulated these data, with a distance between residue 13 of the m-conotoxin and the DEA-binding site of ;15 Å . Surprisingly, for tetrapropylammonium, the shifts were only 9 mV for R13Q, and 7 mV for R13E. The smaller shifts associated with R13E, the toxin with a smaller net charge, are generally consistent with an electrostatic interaction. However, the smaller shifts observed for tetrapropylammonium than for DEA suggest that other factors must be involved. Two observations indicate that the coupling of permeant ion occupancy of the channel to blocker binding may contribute to the overall amine-toxin interaction: 1), R13Q binding decreases the apparent affinity of sodium for the conducting pore by ;4-fold; and 2), increasing external [Na 1 ] decreases block by DEA at constant voltage. Thus, even though a number of studies suggest that sodium channels are occupied by no more than one ion most of the time, measurable coupling occurs between permeant ions and toxin or amine blockers. Such interactions likely determine, in part, the strength of trans-channel, amine-conotoxin interactions.

Research paper thumbnail of Action of derivatives of .mu.-conotoxin GIIIA on sodium channels. Single amino acid substitutions in the toxin separately affect association and dissociation rates

Biochemistry, 1992

We have studied binding and block of sodium channels by 12 derivatives of the 22-residue peptide ... more We have studied binding and block of sodium channels by 12 derivatives of the 22-residue peptide mu-conotoxin GIIIA (mu-CTX) in which single amino acids were substituted as follows: Arg or Lys by Gln, Gln-18 by Lys, Asp by Asn, and HO-Pro by Pro. Derivatives were synthesized as described by Becker et al. [(1989) Eur. J. Biochem. 185, 79]. Binding was measured by displacement of labeled saxitoxin from eel electroplax membranes (100 mM choline chloride, 10 mM HEPES-NaOH, pH 7.4). Blocking kinetics were evaluated from steady-state, single-channel recordings from rat skeletal muscle sodium channels incorporated into planar, neutral phospholipid/decane bilayers (200 mM NaCl, 10 mM HEPES-NaOH, pH 7.0). Blocking events generally appeared as periods of seconds to minutes in which current through the single channel was completely eliminated. A notable exception was seen for the substitution Arg-13-Gln for which the "blocked" events showed measurable conductances of about 20-40% of the open state. The substitution of Arg-13 reduced binding to electroplax membranes to undetectable levels and increased the apparent dissociation constant determined for skeletal muscle channels by greater than 80-fold compared with the native peptide. Other substitutions caused smaller decreases in affinity. The decreased potency of the toxin derivatives resulted both from increases in the rates of dissociation from the channel, and from decreases in association rates. Our data support the suggestion by Sato et al. [(1991) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 16989] that Arg-13 associates intimately with the binding site on the channel. In addition, our results suggest that certain residues affect almost exclusively the approach and docking of the toxin with its binding site, others appear to be important only to the strength of the association once binding has taken place, and yet others affect both.

Research paper thumbnail of An overview of the SUIF compiler system

Research paper thumbnail of Fast lidocaine block of cardiac and skeletal muscle sodium channels: one site with two routes of access

We have studied the block by lidocaine and its quaternary derivative, QX-314, of single, batracho... more We have studied the block by lidocaine and its quaternary derivative, QX-314, of single, batrachotoxin (BTX)activated cardiac and skeletal muscle sodium channels incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. Lidocaine and QX-314, applied to the intracellular side, appear to induce incompletely resolved, rapid transitions between the open and the blocked state of BTX-activated sodium channels from both heart and skeletal muscle. We used amplitude distribution analysis (Yellen, G. 1984. J. Gen. Physiol. 84:157-186.) to estimate the rate constants for block and unblock. Block by lidocaine and QX-314 from the cytoplasmic side exhibits rate constants with similar voltage dependence. The blocking rate increases with depolarization, and the unblocking rate increases with hyperpolarization. Fast lidocaine block was virtually identical for sodium channels from skeletal (rat, sheep) and cardiac (beef, sheep) muscle. Lidocaine block from the extracellular side occurred at similar concentrations. However, for externally applied lidocaine, the blocking rate was voltage-independent, and was proportional to concentration of the uncharged, rather than the charged, form of the drug. In contrast, unblocking rates for internally and externally applied lidocaine were identical in magnitude and voltage dependence. Our kinetic data suggest that lidocaine, coming from the acqueous phase on the cytoplasmic side in the charged form, associates and dissociates freely with the fast block effector site, whereas external lidocaine, in the uncharged form, approaches the same site via a direct, hydrophobic path.

Research paper thumbnail of Interactions between a pore-blocking peptide and the voltage sensor of the sodium channel: an electrostatic approach to channel geometry

Neuron, 1996

Few experimental data illuminate the relationship between the molecular structures that mediate i... more Few experimental data illuminate the relationship between the molecular structures that mediate ion conduction through voltage-dependent ion channels and the structures responsible for sensing transmembrane voltage and controlling gating. To fill this void, we have used a strongly cationic, mutated mu-conotoxin peptide, which only partially blocks current through voltage-dependent sodium channels, to study voltage-dependent activation gating in both bound and unbound channels. When the peptide binds to the ion-conducting pore, it inhibit channel opening, necessitating stronger depolarization for channel activation. We show that this activation shift could result entirely from electrostatic inhibition of the movement of the voltage-sensing S4 charges and estimate the approximate physical distance through which the S4 charges move.

Research paper thumbnail of Inadequate cervical cytology-the need to audit individual smear takers' inadequate rates

Cytopathology, 1999

In order to assess the performance of individual smear takers, their rates of inadequate smears, ... more In order to assess the performance of individual smear takers, their rates of inadequate smears, due to insufficient material, were monitored between 1992 and 1996. Although the yearly average clinic inadequate rates were all at acceptable levels, there was great variation of rates between smear takers, ranging from 0% to 19.5%. Identification of individuals with unacceptably high inadequate rates allowed them to undergo further training. Continuous monitoring of these inadequate rates can be used to measure levels of performance amongst all smear takers, but is particularly useful for new smear takers, or those who have required retraining.

Research paper thumbnail of Dissecting lidocaine action: diethylamide and phenol mimic separate modes of lidocaine block of sodium channels from heart and skeletal muscle

Biophysical Journal, 1993

We have investigated block of sodium channels by diethylamide and phenol, which resemble the hydr... more We have investigated block of sodium channels by diethylamide and phenol, which resemble the hydrophilic tertiary amine head and the hydrophobic aromatic tail of the lidocaine molecule, respectively. Diethylamide and phenol separately mimicked the fast and slow modes of block caused by lidocaine. Experiments were performed using single batrachotoxinactivated bovine cardiac and rat skeletal muscle sodium channels incorporated into neutral planar lipid bilayers. Diethylamide, only from the intracellular side, caused a voltage-dependent reduction in apparent single channel amplitude ('fast' block). Block was similar for cardiac and skeletal muscle channels, and increased in potency when extracellular sodium was replaced by N-methylglucamine, consistent with an intrapore blocking site. Thus, although occurring at 15-fold higher concentrations, block by diethylamide closely resembles the fast mode of block by lidocaine (Zamponi, G. W., D. D. Doyle, and R. J. French. 1993. Biophys. J. 65:80-90). For cardiac sodium channels, phenol bound to a closed state causing the appearance of long blocked events whose duration increased with phenol concentration. This slow block depended neither on voltage nor on the side of application, and disappeared upon treatment of the channel with trypsin. For skeletal muscle channels, slow phenol block occurred with only very low probability. Thus, phenol block resembles the slow mode of block observed for lidocaine (Zamponi, G. W., D. D. Doyle, and R. J. French. 1993. Biophys. J. 65:91-100). Our data suggest that there are separate sites for fast lidocaine block of the open channel and slow block of the "inactivated" channel. Fast block by diethylamide inhibited the long, spontaneous, trypsin-sensitive (inactivation-like) closures of cardiac channels, and hence secondarily antagonized slow block by phenol or lidocaine. This antagonism would potentiate shifts in the balance between the two modes of action of a tertiary amine drug caused by changes in the relative concentrations of the charged (fast blocking) and neutral (slow blocking) forms of the drug.

Research paper thumbnail of Dual actions of procainamide on batrachotoxin-activated sodium channels: open channel block and prevention of inactivation

Biophysical Journal, 1993

We have investigated the action of procainamide on batrachotoxin (BTX)-activated sodium channels ... more We have investigated the action of procainamide on batrachotoxin (BTX)-activated sodium channels from bovine heart and rat skeletal muscle. When applied to the intracellular side, procainamide induced rapid, open-channel block. We estimated rate constants using amplitude distribution analysis (Yellen, G. 1984. J. Gen. Physiol. 84:157). Membrane depolarization increased the blocking rate and slowed unblock. The rate constants were similar in both magnitude and voltage dependence for cardiac and skeletal muscle channels. Qualitatively, this block resembled the fast open-channel block by . 1993. Biophys. J. 65:80), but procainamide was about sevenfold less potent. Molecular modeling suggests that the difference in potency between procainamide and lidocaine might arise from the relative orientation of their aromatic rings, or from differences in the structure of the aryl-amine link. For the cardiac channels, procainamide reduced the frequency of transitions to a long-lived closed state which shows features characteristic of inactivation (Zamponi, G. W., D. D. Doyle, and R. J. French. 1993. Biophys J. 65:91). Mean durations of kinetically identified closed states were not affected. The degree of fast block and of inhibition of the slow closures were correlated. Internally applied QX-314, a lidocaine derivative and also a fast blocker, produced a similar effect. Thus, drug binding to the fast blocking site appears to inhibit inactivation in BTX-activated cardiac channels.

Research paper thumbnail of State-dependent block underlies the tissue specificity of lidocaine action on batrachotoxin-activated cardiac sodium channels

Biophysical Journal, 1993

We have identified two kinetically distinct modes of block, by lidocaine, of cardiac sodium chann... more We have identified two kinetically distinct modes of block, by lidocaine, of cardiac sodium channels, activated by batrachotoxin and incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. Here, we analyze the slow blocking mode which appears as a series of nonconducting events that increase in frequency and duration with increasing lidocaine concentrations. This type of block occurred rarely, if at all, for the skeletal muscle sodium channel subtype. Kinetic analysis showed that a linear open-closedblocked model is sufficient to account for the major features of our data. Slow block occurs from a long closed state that is a distinguishing characteristic of cardiac channels under these conditions. Slow block showed no significant voltage dependence in the range of -60 to -20 mV for which the detailed kinetic analysis was performed, and was not elicited by application of the permanently charged lidocaine derivative QX-314. By contrast, the fast block, described in the companion paper, results from drug binding to the open state, and is similar for cardiac and skeletal muscle sodium channels. Application of trypsin to the cytoplasmic end of the channel eliminates both the spontaneous, long, gating closures and slow block. Thus, the lidocainesensitive closed state of batrachotoxin-activated cardiac sodium channels exhibits a protease susceptibility resembling that of the inactivated state of unmodified sodium channels. It is the slow block caused by lidocaine binding to this closed state that underlies the channel-subtype specificity of lidocaine action in our experiments.

Research paper thumbnail of Amine blockers of the cytoplasmic mouth of sodium channels: a small structural change can abolish voltage dependence

Biophysical Journal, 1994

Many drugs block sodium channels from the cytoplasmic end (Moczydlowski, E., A. Uehara, X. Guo, a... more Many drugs block sodium channels from the cytoplasmic end (Moczydlowski, E., A. Uehara, X. Guo, and J. Heiny.

Research paper thumbnail of Trans-Channel Interactions in Batrachotoxin-Modified Rat Skeletal Muscle Sodium Channels: Kinetic Analysis of Mutual Inhibition between μ-Conotoxin GIIIA Derivatives and Amine Blockers

Biophysical Journal, 2008

External m-conotoxins and internal amine blockers inhibit each other's block of voltage-gated sod... more External m-conotoxins and internal amine blockers inhibit each other's block of voltage-gated sodium channels. We explore the basis of this interaction by measuring the shifts in voltage-dependence of channel inhibition by internal amines induced by two m-conotoxin derivatives with different charge distributions and net charges. Charge changes on the toxin were made at residue 13, which is thought to penetrate most deeply into the channel, making it likely to have the strongest individual interaction with an internal charged ligand. When an R13Q or R13E molecule was bound to the channel, the voltage dependence of diethylammonium (DEA)-block shifted toward more depolarized potentials (23 mV for R13Q, and 16 mV for R13E). An electrostatic model of the repulsion between DEA and the toxin simulated these data, with a distance between residue 13 of the m-conotoxin and the DEA-binding site of ;15 Å . Surprisingly, for tetrapropylammonium, the shifts were only 9 mV for R13Q, and 7 mV for R13E. The smaller shifts associated with R13E, the toxin with a smaller net charge, are generally consistent with an electrostatic interaction. However, the smaller shifts observed for tetrapropylammonium than for DEA suggest that other factors must be involved. Two observations indicate that the coupling of permeant ion occupancy of the channel to blocker binding may contribute to the overall amine-toxin interaction: 1), R13Q binding decreases the apparent affinity of sodium for the conducting pore by ;4-fold; and 2), increasing external [Na 1 ] decreases block by DEA at constant voltage. Thus, even though a number of studies suggest that sodium channels are occupied by no more than one ion most of the time, measurable coupling occurs between permeant ions and toxin or amine blockers. Such interactions likely determine, in part, the strength of trans-channel, amine-conotoxin interactions.

Research paper thumbnail of Action of derivatives of .mu.-conotoxin GIIIA on sodium channels. Single amino acid substitutions in the toxin separately affect association and dissociation rates

Biochemistry, 1992

We have studied binding and block of sodium channels by 12 derivatives of the 22-residue peptide ... more We have studied binding and block of sodium channels by 12 derivatives of the 22-residue peptide mu-conotoxin GIIIA (mu-CTX) in which single amino acids were substituted as follows: Arg or Lys by Gln, Gln-18 by Lys, Asp by Asn, and HO-Pro by Pro. Derivatives were synthesized as described by Becker et al. [(1989) Eur. J. Biochem. 185, 79]. Binding was measured by displacement of labeled saxitoxin from eel electroplax membranes (100 mM choline chloride, 10 mM HEPES-NaOH, pH 7.4). Blocking kinetics were evaluated from steady-state, single-channel recordings from rat skeletal muscle sodium channels incorporated into planar, neutral phospholipid/decane bilayers (200 mM NaCl, 10 mM HEPES-NaOH, pH 7.0). Blocking events generally appeared as periods of seconds to minutes in which current through the single channel was completely eliminated. A notable exception was seen for the substitution Arg-13-Gln for which the "blocked" events showed measurable conductances of about 20-40% of the open state. The substitution of Arg-13 reduced binding to electroplax membranes to undetectable levels and increased the apparent dissociation constant determined for skeletal muscle channels by greater than 80-fold compared with the native peptide. Other substitutions caused smaller decreases in affinity. The decreased potency of the toxin derivatives resulted both from increases in the rates of dissociation from the channel, and from decreases in association rates. Our data support the suggestion by Sato et al. [(1991) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 16989] that Arg-13 associates intimately with the binding site on the channel. In addition, our results suggest that certain residues affect almost exclusively the approach and docking of the toxin with its binding site, others appear to be important only to the strength of the association once binding has taken place, and yet others affect both.

Research paper thumbnail of An overview of the SUIF compiler system

Research paper thumbnail of Fast lidocaine block of cardiac and skeletal muscle sodium channels: one site with two routes of access

We have studied the block by lidocaine and its quaternary derivative, QX-314, of single, batracho... more We have studied the block by lidocaine and its quaternary derivative, QX-314, of single, batrachotoxin (BTX)activated cardiac and skeletal muscle sodium channels incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. Lidocaine and QX-314, applied to the intracellular side, appear to induce incompletely resolved, rapid transitions between the open and the blocked state of BTX-activated sodium channels from both heart and skeletal muscle. We used amplitude distribution analysis (Yellen, G. 1984. J. Gen. Physiol. 84:157-186.) to estimate the rate constants for block and unblock. Block by lidocaine and QX-314 from the cytoplasmic side exhibits rate constants with similar voltage dependence. The blocking rate increases with depolarization, and the unblocking rate increases with hyperpolarization. Fast lidocaine block was virtually identical for sodium channels from skeletal (rat, sheep) and cardiac (beef, sheep) muscle. Lidocaine block from the extracellular side occurred at similar concentrations. However, for externally applied lidocaine, the blocking rate was voltage-independent, and was proportional to concentration of the uncharged, rather than the charged, form of the drug. In contrast, unblocking rates for internally and externally applied lidocaine were identical in magnitude and voltage dependence. Our kinetic data suggest that lidocaine, coming from the acqueous phase on the cytoplasmic side in the charged form, associates and dissociates freely with the fast block effector site, whereas external lidocaine, in the uncharged form, approaches the same site via a direct, hydrophobic path.