[6] VRACs are crucial to the regulation of cell size by transporting chloride ions and various organic osmolytes, such as taurine or glutamate, across the plasma membrane,[7] and that is not the only function these channels have been linked to.
While LRRC8A is one of many proteins that can be part of VRAC, it is the most important subunit for the channel’s ability to function.
[10] This is where the other LRRC8 proteins come in, as the different composition of these subunits affects the range of specificity for VRACs.
[11][12] The transmembrane portion of LRRC8 proteins are similar to those in Pannexins.
[13] LRRC8A alone can form a hexameric VRAC, for which the cyro-EM structure has been determined in its mice and human versions.