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1.
Potassium channels are tetrameric proteins that mediate K+-selective transmembrane diffusion. For KcsA, tetramer stability depends on interactions between permeant ions and the channel pore. We have examined the role of pore blockers on the tetramer stability of KirBac1.1. In 150 mm KCl, purified KirBac1.1 protein migrates as a monomer (∼40 kDa) on SDS-PAGE. Addition of Ba2+ (K1/2 ∼ 50 μm) prior to loading results in an additional tetramer band (∼160 kDa). Mutation A109C, at a residue located near the expected Ba2+-binding site, decreased tetramer stabilization by Ba2+ (K1/2 ∼ 300 μm), whereas I131C, located nearby, stabilized tetramers in the absence of Ba2+. Neither mutation affected Ba2+ block of channel activity (using 86Rb+ flux assay). In contrast to Ba2+, Mg2+ had no effect on tetramer stability (even though Mg2+ was a potent blocker). Many studies have shown Cd2+ block of K+ channels as a result of cysteine substitution of cavity-lining M2 (S6) residues, with the implicit interpretation that coordination of a single ion by cysteine side chains along the central axis effectively blocks the pore. We examined blocking and tetramer-stabilizing effects of Cd2+ on KirBac1.1 with cysteine substitutions in M2. Cd2+ block potency followed an α-helical pattern consistent with the crystal structure. Significantly, Cd2+ strongly stabilized tetramers of I138C, located in the center of the inner cavity. This stabilization was additive with the effect of Ba2+, consistent with both ions simultaneously occupying the channel: Ba2+ at the selectivity filter entrance and Cd2+ coordinated by I138C side chains in the inner cavity.Potassium channels are expressed in many cell types and are key players in a wide range of physiological processes. One subset of potassium channels, the inward-rectifying potassium (Kir) channels, are functionally blocked by cytosolic cations such as Mg2+ and polyamines and contribute to the regulation of membrane excitability, cardiac rhythm, vascular tone, insulin release, and salt flow across epithelia (13). There are seven subfamilies of eukaryotic Kir channel genes. Among them, Kir1 encodes weak rectifiers, whereas Kir2 and Kir5 encode strong rectifiers; Kir3 encodes G-protein-regulated channels; and Kir6 encodes ATP-sensitive channels (4). Recently, a related bacterial family of genes (KirBac) has been identified (5, 6), and in 2003, the first member (KirBac1.1) was crystallized (7), providing a structural model for eukaryotic channels.The crystal structure of KirBac1.1 revealed a tetrameric pore structure similar to that seen in KcsA and a novel cytoplasmic domain (7, 8). The selectivity filter of both KirBac1.1 and KcsA consists of an extremely conserved pore loop followed by a central cavity, forming a transmembrane ion-selective permeation pore (7, 8). The linear arrangement of five oxygen rings (four from carbonyl oxygens and one from a Thr side chain) in the selectivity filter coordinates with ions, compensating for the energy barrier caused by K+ dehydration, thereby facilitating the rapid diffusion of K+ across the membrane (812). Two-thirds of the KirBac1.1 amino acid residues constitute the cytosolic domain that is highly conserved among the Kir subfamilies and form the cytosolic vestibule (1316), which, together with the transmembrane pore, generates an 88-Å-long ion conduction pore (7).The prototypic potassium channel KcsA exists very stably as a tetramer, even in the harsh conditions of SDS-PAGE (17). In addition to protein-protein interaction between monomers, protein-lipid and protein-ion interactions play important roles in stabilizing the KcsA tetramer (1720). The selectivity filter of KcsA, coordinated with K+ ions, can serve as a bridge between the four monomers to maintain the structure of the selectivity filter and the tetrameric architecture of the channel as a whole (11, 21). Blocking ions, such as Ba2+, also act as strong stabilizers (17). In the crystal structure of KcsA, Ba2+ occupies a site equivalent to the S4 K+-binding site within the selectivity filter (22). Other permeant ions (Rb+, Cs+, Tl+, and NH+4) and strong blockers (Sr2+) can also contribute to the thermostability of the KcsA tetramer in SDS-PAGE (17). In contrast, impermeant ions such as Na+ and Li+ or weak blockers such as Mg2+ tend to destabilize the KcsA tetramer (17, 19).Like KcsA, KirBac1.1 purified using decylmaltoside or tridecylmaltoside is active and presumably stable as a tetramer in mild detergent solutions. However, in SDS-PAGE, KirBac1.1 migrates exclusively as a monomer (23). Because KcsA and KirBac1.1 are structurally similar in the transmembrane region of the pore, we hypothesized that permeant and blocking ions would also affect KirBac1.1 tetramer stability in SDS-PAGE. In the present work, the effects of blocking ions such as Ba2+ and Mg2+ on KirBac1.1 tetramer stability were examined to provide insight to the physical nature of their interaction with KirBac1.1, particularly in the selectivity filter and TM2 cavity. The data reveal important differences in the nature of the interaction of Mg2+ and Ba2+ with the channel as well as provide previously unavailable evidence for the nature of Cd2+ coordination within the channel.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated the effects of changing extracellular K+ concentrations on block of the weak inward-rectifier K+ channel Kir1.1b (ROMK2) by the three intracellular cations Mg2+, Na+, and TEA+. Single-channel currents were monitored in inside-out patches made from Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing the channels. With 110 mM K+ in the inside (cytoplasmic) solution and 11 mM K+ in the outside (extracellular) solution, these three cations blocked K+ currents with a range of apparent affinities (Ki (0) = 1.6 mM for Mg2+, 160 mM for Na+, and 1.8 mM for TEA+) but with similar voltage dependence (zδ = 0.58 for Mg2+, 0.71 for Na+, and 0.61 for TEA+) despite having different valences. When external K+ was increased to 110 mM, the apparent affinity of all three blockers was decreased approximately threefold with no significant change in the voltage dependence of block. The possibility that the transmembrane cavity is the site of block was explored by making mutations at the N152 residue, a position previously shown to affect rectification in Kir channels. N152D increased the affinity for block by Mg2+ but not for Na+ or TEA+. In contrast, the N152Y mutation increased the affinity for block by TEA+ but not for Na+ or Mg2+. Replacing the C terminus of the channel with that of the strong inward-rectifier Kir2.1 increased the affinity of block by Mg2+ but had a small effect on that by Na+. TEA+ block was enhanced and had a larger voltage dependence. We used an eight-state kinetic model to simulate these results. The effects of voltage and external K+ could be explained by a model in which the blockers occupy a site, presumably in the transmembrane cavity, at a position that is largely unaffected by changes in the electric field. The effects of voltage and extracellular K+ are explained by shifts in the occupancy of sites within the selectivity filter by K+ ions.  相似文献   

3.
High-conductance, Ca2+-activated K+ channels from the basolateral membrane of rabbit distal colon epithelial cells were reconstituted into planar phospholipid bilayers to examine the effect of Mg2+ on the single-channel properties. Mg2+ decreases channel current and conductance in a concentration-dependent manner from both the cytoplasmic and the extracellular side of the channel. In contrast to other K+ channels, Mg2+ does not cause rectification of current through colonic Ca2+-activated K+ channels. In addition, cytoplasmic Mg2+ decreases the reversal potential of the channel. The Mg2+-induced decrease in channel conductance is relieved by high K+ concentrations, indicating competitive interaction between K+ and Mg2+. The monovalent organic cation choline also decreases channel conductance and reversal potential, suggesting that the effect is unspecific. The inhibition of channel current by Mg2+ and choline most likely is a result of electrostatic screening of negative charges located superficially in the channel entrance. But in addition to charge, other properties appear to be necessary for channel inhibition, as Na+ and Ba2+ are no (or only weak) inhibitors. Mg2+ and possibly other cations may play a role in the regulation of current through these channels. Received: 25 August 1995/Revised: 16 November 1995  相似文献   

4.
Inward rectifier potassium (Kir) channels act as cellular diodes, allowing unrestricted flow of potassium (K+) into the cell while preventing currents of large magnitude in the outward direction. The rectification mechanism by which this occurs involves a coupling between K+ and intracellular blockers—magnesium (Mg2+) or polyamines—that simultaneously occupy the permeation pathway. In addition to the transmembrane pore, Kirs possess a large cytoplasmic domain (CD) that provides a favorable electronegative environment for cations. Electrophysiological experiments have shown that the CD is a key regulator of both conductance and rectification. In this study, we calculate and compare averaged equilibrium probability densities of K+ and Cl in open-pore models of the CDs of a weak (Kir1.1-ROMK) and a strong (Kir2.1-IRK) rectifier through explicit-solvent molecular-dynamics simulations in ∼1 M KCl. The CD of both channels concentrates K+ ions greater than threefold inside the cytoplasmic pore while IRK shows an additional K+ accumulation region near the cytoplasmic entrance. Simulations carried out with Mg2+ or spermine (SPM4+) show that these ions interact with pore-lining residues, shielding the surface charge and reducing K+ in both channels. The results also show that SPM4+ behaves differently inside these two channels. Although SPM4+ remains inside the CD of ROMK, it diffuses around the entire volume of the pore. In contrast, this polyatomic cation finds long-lived conformational states inside the IRK pore, interacting with residues E224, D259, and E299. The strong rectifier CD is also capable of sequestering an additional SPM4+ at the cytoplasmic entrance near a cluster of negative residues D249, D274, E275, and D276. Although understanding the actual mechanism of rectification blockade will require high-resolution structural information of the blocked state, these simulations provide insight into how sequence variation in the CD can affect the multi-ion distributions that underlie the mechanisms of conduction, rectification affinity, and kinetics.  相似文献   

5.
The superfamily of prokaryotic inwardly rectifying (KirBac) potassium channels is homologous to mammalian Kir channels. However, relatively little is known about their regulation or about their physiological role in vivo. In this study, we have used random mutagenesis and genetic complementation in K+-auxotrophic Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae to identify activatory mutations in a range of different KirBac channels. We also show that the KirBac6.1 gene (slr5078) is necessary for normal growth of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC6803. Functional analysis and molecular dynamics simulations of selected activatory mutations identified regions within the slide helix, transmembrane helices, and C terminus that function as important regulators of KirBac channel activity, as well as a region close to the selectivity filter of KirBac3.1 that may have an effect on gating. In particular, the mutations identified in TM2 favor a model of KirBac channel gating in which opening of the pore at the helix-bundle crossing plays a far more important role than has recently been proposed.  相似文献   

6.
Voltage-gated K+ channels share a common voltage sensor domain (VSD) consisting of four transmembrane helices, including a highly mobile S4 helix that contains the major gating charges. Activation of ether-a-go-go (EAG) family K+ channels is sensitive to external divalent cations. We show here that divalent cations slow the activation rate of two EAG family channels (Kv12.1 and Kv10.2) by forming a bridge between a residue in the S4 helix and acidic residues in S2. Histidine 328 in the S4 of Kv12.1 favors binding of Zn2+ and Cd2+, whereas the homologous residue Serine 321 in Kv10.2 contributes to effects of Mg2+ and Ni2+. This novel finding provides structural constraints for the position of transmembrane VSD helices in closed, ion-bound EAG family channels. Homology models of Kv12.1 and Kv10.2 VSD structures based on a closed-state model of the Shaker family K+ channel Kv1.2 match these constraints. Our results suggest close conformational conservation between closed EAG and Shaker family channels, despite large differences in voltage sensitivity, activation rates, and activation thresholds.  相似文献   

7.
The uptake of K+ and Ca2+ in Dunaliella salina is mediated by two distinct carriers: a K+ carrier with a high selectivity against Na+, Li+, and choline+ but not towards Rb+, K+, Cs+, or NH4+, and a Ca2+ carrier with a high selectivity against Mg2+. The latter is specifically blocked by La3+ and by Cd2+. Apparent Km values for K+ and Ca2+ uptake are 2.5 and 0.8 millimolar, respectively, and their maximal calculated fluxes are 22 and 0.8 nanomoles per square meter per second, respectively. Effects of permeable ions and ionophores on K+ and Ca2+ uptake suggest that the driving force for their uptake is the transmembrane electrical potential. Inhibitors of ATP production, typical inhibitors of plasma membrane H+-ATPases and protonionophores inhibit K+ and Ca2+ uptake and accelerate K+ efflux. The results suggest that an H+-ATPase in the cell membrane provides the driving force for K+ and Ca2+ uptake. Efflux measurements from 86Rb+ and 45Ca2+ loaded cells suggest that part of the intracellular K+ and most of the intracellular Ca2+ is nonexchangeable with the extracellular pool. Correlations between phosphate and K+ contents and the effect of phosphate on K+ efflux suggest intracellular associations between K+ and polyphosphates. On the basis of these results, it is suggested that: (a) K+ and Ca2+ uptake in D. salina is driven by the transmembrane electrical potential which is generated by the action of an H+-ATPase of the plasma membrane. (b) Part of the intracellular K+ is associated with polyphosphate bodies, while most of the intracellular Ca2+ is accumulated in intracellular organelles in the algal cells.  相似文献   

8.
Red cells of hibernating species have a higher relative rate of Na+–K+ pump activity at low temperature than the red cells of a mammal with a typical sensitivity to cold. The kinetics of ATP stimulation of the Na+–K+ pump were determined in guinea pig and ground squirrel red cells at different temperatures between 5 and 37°C by measuring ouabain-sensitive K+ influx at different levels of ATP. In guinea pig cells, elevation of intracellular free Mg2+ to 2 mmol·l-1 by use of the divalent cation ionophore A23187 caused the apparent affinity of the pump for ATP to increase with cooling to 20°C, rather than to decrease, as occurs in cells not loaded with Mg2+. In ground squirrel cells raising intracellular free Mg2+ had little effect on apparent affinity of the pump for ATP at 20°C. ATP affinity rose slightly with cooling both in Mg2+-enriched and in control ground squirrel cells. Increased intracellular free Mg2+ in guinea pig cells stimulated Na+–K+ pump activity so that at 20°C the pump rate was the same in the Mg2+-enriched guinea pig and control ground squirrel cells. Pump activity in Mg2+-enriched guinea pig cells at 5°C was significantly improved but still lower than pump activity in control cells from ground squirrel. Thus, loss of affinity of the Na+–K+ pump for ATP that occurs with cooling in cold-sensitive guinea pig red cells can be, at least partially, prevented by elevating cytoplasmic free Mg2+. Conversely, in ground squirrel red cells natural rise of free Mg2+ may in part account for the preservation of the ATP affinity of their Na+–K+ pump with cooling.Abbreviations K m Michaelis-Menten constant for apparent affinity - MOPS 3-(N-morpholino)-propanesulphonic acid - [Mg2+]i intracellular concentration of free Mg2+ - OD optical density - RBC red blood cell(s) - T b body temperature  相似文献   

9.
Z. Ping  I. Yabe  S. Muto 《Protoplasma》1992,171(1-2):7-18
Summary K+, Cl, and Ca2+ channels in the vacuolar membrane of tobacco cell suspension cultures have been investigated using the patch-clamp technique. In symmetrical 100mM K+, K+ channels opened at positive vacuolar membrane potentials (cytoplasmic side as reference) had different conductances of 57 pS and 24 pS. K+ channel opened at negative vacuolar membrane potentials had a conductance of 43 pS. The K+ channels showed a significant discrimination against Na+ and Cl. The Cl channel opened at positive vacuolar membrane potentials for cytoplasmic Cl influx had a high conductance of 110pS in symmetrical 100mM Cl. When K+ and Cl channels were excluded from opening, no traces were found of Ca2+ channel activity for vacuolar Ca2+ release induced by inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate or other events. However, we found a 19pS Ca2+ channel which allowed influx of cytoplasmic Ca2+ into the vacuole when the Ca2+ concentration on the cytoplasmic side was high. When Ca2+ was substituted by Ba2+, the conductance of the 19 pS channel became 30 pS and the channel showed a selectivity sequence of Ba2+Sr2+Ca2+Mg2+=10.60.60.21. The reversal potentials of the channel shifted with the change in Ca2+ concentration on the vacuolar side. The channel could be efficiently blocked from the cytoplasmic side by Cd2+, but was insensitive to La3+, Gd3+, Ni2+, verapamil, and nifedipine. The related ion channels in freshly isolated vacuoles from red beet root cells were also recorded. The coexistence of the K+, Cl, and Ca2+ channels in the vacuolar membrane of tobacco cells might imply a precise classification and cooperation of the channels in the physiological process of plant cells.  相似文献   

10.
Summary 1. The ability of various divalent metal ions to substitute for Ca2+ in activating distinct types of Ca2+-dependent K+ [K+(Ca2+] channels has been investigated in excised, inside-out membrane patches of human erthrocytes and of clonal N1E-115 mouse neuroblastoma cells using the patch clamp technique. The effects of the various metal ions have been compared and related to the effects of Ca2+.2. At concentrations between 1 and 100 µM Pb2+, Cd2+ and Co2+ activate intermediate conductance K+(Ca2+) channels in erythrocytes and large conductance K+(Ca2+) channels in neuroblastoma cells. Pb2+ and Co2+, but not Cd2+, activate small conductance K+(Ca2+) channels in neuroblastoma cells. Mg2+ and Fe2+ do not activate any of the K+(Ca2+) channels.3. Rank orders of the potencies for K+(Ca2+) activation are Pb2+, Cd2+>Ca2+, Co2+>>Mg2+, Fe2+ for the intermediate erythrocyte K+(Ca2+) channel, and Pb2+, Cd2+>Ca2+>Co2+>>Mg2+, Fe2+ for the small, and Pb2+>Ca2+>Co2+>>Cd2+, Mg2+, Fe2+ for the large K+(Ca2+) channel in neuroblastoma cells.4. At high concentrations Pb2+, Cd2+, and Co2+ block K+(Ca2+) channels in erythrocytes by reducing the opening frequency of the channels and by reducing the single channel amplitude. The potency orders of the two blocking effects are Pb2+>Cd2+, Co2+>>Ca2+, and Cd2+>Pb2+, Co2+>>Ca2+, respectively, and are distinct from the potency orders for activation.5. It is concluded that the different subtypes of K+(Ca2+) channels contain distinct regulatory sites involved in metal ion binding and channel opening. The K+(Ca2+) channel in erythrocytes appears to contain additional metal ion interaction sites involved in channel block.  相似文献   

11.
The suppression of the cyclic nucleotide‐gated channel (CNGC) AtCNGC10 alters K+ transport in Arabidopsis plants. Other CNGCs have been shown to transport Ca2+, K+, Li+, Cs+ and Rb+ across the plasma membrane when expressed in heterologous systems; however, the ability of the AtCNGC10 channel to transport nutrients other than K+ in plants has not been previously tested. The ion fluxes along different zones of the seedling roots, as estimated by the non‐invasive ion‐specific microelectrode technique, were significantly different in two AtCNGC10 antisense lines (A2 and A3) in comparison to the wild type (WT). Most notably, the influxes of H+, Ca2+ and Mg2+ in the meristem and distal elongation zones of the antisense A2 and A3 lines were significantly lower than in the WT. The lower Ca2+ influx from the external media corresponded to a lower intracellular Ca2+ activity, which was estimated by fluorescence lifetime imaging measurements (FLIM). On the other hand, the intracellular pH values in the meristem zone of the roots of A2 and A3 seedlings were significantly lower (more acidic) than that of the WT, which might indicate a feedback block of H+ influx into meristematic cells caused by low intracellular pH. Under the control conditions, mature plants from the A2 and A3 lines contained significantly higher K+ and lower Ca2+ and Mg2+ content in the shoots, indicating disturbed long‐distance ion transport of these cations, possibly because of changes in xylem loading/retrieval and/or phloem loading. Exposing the plants in the flowering stage to various K+, Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentrations in the solution led to altered K+, Ca2+ and Mg2+ content in the shoots of A2 and A3 plants in comparison with the WT, suggesting a primary role of AtCNGC10 in Ca2+ (and probably Mg2+) transport in plants, which in turn regulates K+ transporters' activities.  相似文献   

12.
M. Tester  E. A. C. MacRobbie 《Planta》1990,180(4):569-581
The action of a wide range of drugs effective on Ca2+ channels in animal tissues has been measured on Ca2+ channels open during the action potential of the giant-celled green alga,Chara corallina. Of the organic effectors used, only the 1,4-dihydropyridines were found to inhibit reversibly Ca2+ influx, including, unexpectedly, Bay K 8644 and both isomers of 202–791. Methoxyverapamil (D-600), diltiazem, and the diphenylbutylpiperidines, fluspirilene and pimozide were found not to affect the Ca2+ influx. Conversely, bepridil greatly and irreversibly stimulated Ca2+ influx, and with time, stopped cytoplasmic streaming (which is sensitive to increases in cytoplasmic Ca2+). By apparently altering the cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels with various drugs, it was found that (with the exception of the inorganic cation, La3+) treatments likely to lead to an increase in cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels caused an increase in the rate of closure of the K+ channels. Similarly, treatments likely to lead to a decrease in cytoplasmic Ca2+ decreased the rate of K+ channel closure. The main effect of bepridil on the K+ channels was to increase the rate of voltage-dependent channel closure. The same effect was obtained upon increasing the external concentration of Ca2+, but it is likely that this was due to effects on the external face of the K+ channel. Addition of any of the 1,4-dihydropyridines had the opposite effect on the K+ channels, slowing the rate of channel closure. They sometimes also reduced K+ conductance, but this could well be a direct effect on the K+ channel; high concentrations (50 to 100 μM) of bepridil also reduced K+ conductance. No effect of photon irradiance or of abscisic acid could be consistently shown on the K+ channels. These results indicate a control of the gating of K+ channels by cytoplasmic Ca2+, with increased free Ca2+ levels leading to an increased rate of K+-channel closure. As well as inhibiting Ca2+ channels, it is suggested that La3+ acts on a Ca2+-binding site of the K+ channel, mimicking the effect of Ca2+ and increasing the rate of channel closure.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Interactions between cations in modifying the binding of hexokinases I and II to mitochondria was examined with reference to the intracellular condition. Mitochondria-binding of either of hexokinases I and II, both prepared from mouse ascites ELD cells, was markedly increased by Mg2+ as has been known well. However, even in the absence of Mgs+, marked binding was attained by 100 mM K+ alone especially for hexokinase I, which seemed generally more ready to bind to mitochondria. On the other hand, the effect of Mg2+ to increase the binding was reduced by the addition of K+, and the decreasing effect of K+ was much more marked for hexokinase II than I. These results indicate that, in addition to Mg2+, monovalent cations as represented by K+, also have marked effect on the binding, and the effect is different for each of hexokinases I and II, which may be responsible for the difference in the intracellular distribution between these hexokinases.  相似文献   

14.
The presence of glucose resulted in a two- to three-fold increase in levels of Cd2+accumulated by Saccharomyces cerevisiae after 5 h compared with those observed in the absence of glucose. However, time-dependent Cd2+ uptake continued in the absence of glucose over 5 h, resulting in an appreciable increase in cellular Cd2+levels. Substantial K+ efflux but little Mg2+ and negligible Ca2+release was observed. Cell fractionation revealed that the bulk of intracellular Cd2+ was located in the vacuolar (25%) and bound (60%) fractions. Accumulation of Cd2+ ions impacted most noticeably on K+ rather than Mg2+ levels in intracellular compartments. Cytoplasmic and particularly vacuolar K+ levels decreased as Cd2+ sequestration continued resulting in increased extracellular levels. In contrast, corresponding intracellular Mg2+ pools were only modestly affected with a slight increase and decrease observed in the cytoplasmic and vacuolar fractions respectively. However, levels of bound Mg2+ decreased in response to continued Cd2+ accumulation. Received 07 March 1999/ Accepted in revised form 26 June 1999  相似文献   

15.
Conformational changes of the Na+/K+-ATPase isolated large cytoplasmic segment connecting transmembrane helices M4 and M5 (C45) induced by the interaction with enzyme ligands (i.e. Mg2+ and/or ATP) were investigated by means of the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence measurement and molecular dynamic simulations. Our data revealed that this model system consisting of only two domains retained the ability to adopt open or closed conformation, i.e. behavior, which is expected from the crystal structures of relative Ca2+-ATPase from sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum for the corresponding part of the entire enzyme. Our data revealed that the C45 is found in the closed conformation in the absence of any ligand, in the presence of Mg2+ only, or in the simultaneous presence of Mg2+ and ATP. Binding of the ATP alone (i.e. in the absence of Mg2+) induced open conformation of the C45. The fact that the transmembrane part of the enzyme was absent in our experiments suggested that the observed conformational changes are consequences only of the interaction with ATP or Mg2+ and may not be related to the transported cations binding/release, as generally believed. Our data are consistent with the model, where ATP binding to the low-affinity site induces conformational change of the cytoplasmic part of the enzyme, traditionally attributed to E2 → E1 transition, and subsequent Mg2+ binding to the enzyme-ATP complex induces in turn conformational change traditionally attributed to E1 → E2 transition.  相似文献   

16.
In epithelia, Cl- channels play a prominent role in fluid and electrolyte transport. Of particular importance is the cAMP-dependent cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator Cl- channel (CFTR) with mutations of the CFTR encoding gene causing cystic fibrosis. The bulk transepithelial transport of Cl- ions and electrolytes needs however to be coupled to an increase in K+ conductance in order to recycle K+ and maintain an electrical driving force for anion exit across the apical membrane. In several epithelia, this K+ efflux is ensured by K+ channels, including KCa3.1, which is expressed at both the apical and basolateral membranes. We show here for the first time that CFTR and KCa3.1 can physically interact. We first performed a two-hybrid screen to identify which KCa3.1 cytosolic domains might mediate an interaction with CFTR. Our results showed that both the N-terminal fragment M1-M40 of KCa3.1 and part of the KCa3.1 calmodulin binding domain (residues L345-A400) interact with the NBD2 segment (G1237-Y1420) and C- region of CFTR (residues T1387-L1480), respectively. An association of CFTR and F508del-CFTR with KCa3.1 was further confirmed in co-immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrating the formation of immunoprecipitable CFTR/KCa3.1 complexes in CFBE cells. Co-expression of KCa3.1 and CFTR in HEK cells did not impact CFTR expression at the cell surface, and KCa3.1 trafficking appeared independent of CFTR stimulation. Finally, evidence is presented through cross-correlation spectroscopy measurements that KCa3.1 and CFTR colocalize at the plasma membrane and that KCa3.1 channels tend to aggregate consequent to an enhanced interaction with CFTR channels at the plasma membrane following an increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration. Altogether, these results suggest 1) that the physical interaction KCa3.1/CFTR can occur early during the biogenesis of both proteins and 2) that KCa3.1 and CFTR form a dynamic complex, the formation of which depends on internal Ca2+.  相似文献   

17.
Large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channels are responsible for changes in chemical and physical signals such as Ca2+, Mg2+ and membrane potentials. Previously, we reported that a BK channel cloned from chick heart (SAKCaC) is activated by membrane stretch. Molecular cloning and subsequent functional characterization of SAKCaC have shown that both the membrane stretch and intracellular Ca2+ signal allosterically regulate the channel activity via the linker of the gating ring complex. Here we investigate how these two gating principles interact with each other. We found that stretch force activated SAKCaC in the absence of cytoplasmic Ca2+. Lack of Ca2+ bowl (a calcium binding motif) in SAKCaC diminished the Ca2+-dependent activation, but the mechanosensitivity of channel was intact. We also found that the abrogation of STREX (a proposed mechanosensing apparatus) in SAKCaC abolished the mechanosensitivity without altering the Ca2+ sensitivity of channels. These observations indicate that membrane stretch and intracellular Ca2+ could independently modulate SAKCaC activity.  相似文献   

18.
We investigated the action of adenosine and GTP on KATP channels, using inside-out patch clamp recordings from dissociated single fibers of rat flexor digitorum brevis (FDB) skeletal muscle. In excised patches, KATP channels could be activated by a combination of an extracellular adenosine agonist and intracellular Mg2+-ATP and GTP or GTP-γ-S. The activation required hydrolyzable ATP and could be partially reversed with Mg2+, suggesting that it may involve a G-protein dependent phosphorylation of KATP channels. We found that KATP channels of the rat FDB could not be activated by Mg2+-ATP alone or by Mg2+-ATP in the presence of extracellular adenosine. Patches whose channel activity had been `rundown' by Ca2+ could not be recovered by adenosine, GTP or Mg2+-ATP. KATP channels activated by adenosine receptor agonists had a similar ATP sensitivity to those under control conditions; but adenosine appears to be able to switch these KATP channels from an inactive to an active mode. Received: 29 December 1995/Revised: 22 March 1996  相似文献   

19.
K+ are selectively coordinated in the selectivity filter and concerted K+ and water movements in this region ensure high conduction rates in K+ channels. In channels with long pores many K+ binding sites are located intracellular to the selectivity filter (inner vestibule), but their contribution to permeation has not been well studied. We investigated this phenomenon by slowing the ion permeation process via blocking inwardly rectifying Kir2.1 channels with Ba2+ in the selectivity filter and observing the effect of K+ in the inner vestibule on Ba2+ exit. The dose-response effect of the intracellular K+ concentration ([K+]i) on Ba2+ exit was recorded with and without intracellular polyamines, which compete with K+ for binding sites. Ba2+ exit was facilitated by the cooperative binding of at least three K+. Site-directed mutagenesis studies suggest that K+ interacting with Ba2+ bound in the selectivity filter were located in the region between selectivity filter and cytoplasmic pore, i.e. the water cavity and G-loop. One of the K+ binding sites was located at residue D172 and another was possibly at M301. This study provides functional evidence for the three K+ binding sites in the inner vestibule previously identified by crystal structure study.  相似文献   

20.
Potassium channels are a diverse family of integral membrane proteins through which K+ can pass selectively. There is ongoing debate about the nature of conformational changes associated with the opening/closing and conductive/nonconductive states of potassium channels. The channels partly exert their function by varying their conductance through a mechanism known as C-type inactivation. Shortly after the activation of K+ channels, their selectivity filter stops conducting ions at a rate that depends on various stimuli. The molecular mechanism of C-type inactivation has not been fully understood yet. However, the X-ray structure of the KcsA channel obtained in the presence of low K+ concentration is thought to be representative of a K+ channel in the C-type inactivated state. Here, extensive, fully atomistic molecular dynamics and free-energy simulations of the low-K+ KcsA structure in an explicit lipid bilayer are performed to evaluate the stability of this structure and the selectivity of its binding sites. We find that the low-K+ KcsA structure is stable on the timescale of the molecular dynamics simulations performed, and that ions preferably remain in S1 and S4. In the absence of ions, the selectivity filter evolves toward an asymmetric architecture, as already observed in other computations of the high-K+ structure of KcsA and KirBac. The low-K+ KcsA structure is not permeable by Na+, K+, or Rb+, and the selectivity of its binding sites is different from that of the high-K+ structure.  相似文献   

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