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1.
Voltage-gated K(+) (Kv) channels are particularly important in the physiology of excitable cells in the heart and the brain. PSD-95 is known to cluster Shaker channels and NMDA receptors and the latter is known to couple through alpha-actinin-2 to the post-synaptic cytoskeleton [Wyszynski et al. (1997) Nature 385, 439-442], but the mechanisms by which Kv channels are linked to the actin cytoskeleton and clustered at specific sites in the heart are unknown. Here we provide evidence that Kv1.5 channels, widely expressed in the cardiovascular system, bind with alpha-actinin-2. Human Kv1.5 interacts via its N-terminus/core region and can be immunoprecipitated with alpha-actinin-2 both after in vitro translation and from HEK cells expressing both proteins. The ion channels and alpha-actinin-2 co-localize at the membrane in HEK cells, where disruption of the actin cytoskeleton and antisense constructs to alpha-actinin-2 modulate the ion and gating current density.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated the interactions of prototypical PDZ domains with both the C- and N-termini of Kv1.5 and other Kv channels. A combination of in vitro binding and yeast two-hybrid assays unexpectedly showed that PDZ domains derived from PSD95 bind both the C- and N-termini of the channels with comparable avidity. From doubly transfected HEK293 cells, Kv1.5 was found to co-immunoprecipitate with the PDZ protein, irrespective of the presence of the canonical C-terminal PDZ-binding motif in Kv1.5. Imaging analysis of the same HEK cell lines demonstrated that co-localization of Kv1.5 with PSD95 at the cell surface is similarly independent of the canonical PDZ-binding motif. Deletion analysis localized the N-terminal PDZ-binding site in Kv1.5 to the T1 region of the channel. Co-expression of PSD95 with Kv1.5 N- and C-terminal deletions in HEK cells had contrasting effects on the magnitudes of the potassium currents across the membranes of these cells. These findings may have important implications for the regulation of channel expression and function by PDZ proteins like PSD95.  相似文献   

3.
Eldstrom J  Choi WS  Steele DF  Fedida D 《FEBS letters》2003,547(1-3):205-211
The functional interaction of the voltage-gated potassium channel hKv1.5 with the PDZ domain containing protein SAP97 has been investigated. In marked contrast with the known dependence of SAP97-induced Kv1 potassium current down-regulation on the channel C-termini, SAP97 increased hKv1.5 current through an indirect interaction with the Kv1.5 N-terminus. Deletion of the Kv1.5 N-terminus eliminated the SAP97-mediated increase in potassium currents whereas deletion of the channel's C-terminal PDZ binding motif had no effect. In contrast with other Kv1-SAP97 interactions, no physical interaction could be detected in vivo or in vitro between the two proteins. The proteins did not co-localize in cardiac myocytes nor did they co-immunoprecipitate from transfected HEK cells. Yeast two-hybrid experiments also failed to detect any interaction between the two proteins, but in one experiment of six, Kv1.5 co-immunoprecipitated very inefficiently with SAP97 from rat ventricular myocytes. Thus, we conclude that the influence of SAP97 on Kv1.5 potassium current levels is dependent upon a novel regulatory mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
In an attempt to find podocyte-expressed proteins that may interact with the tight junction protein MAGI-1, we screened a glomerulus-enriched cDNA library with a probe consisting of both WW domains of MAGI-1. One of the isolated clones contained two WW domain-binding motifs and was identified as a portion of the actin-bundling protein synaptopodin. In vitro binding assays confirmed this interaction between MAGI-1 and synaptopodin and identified the second WW domain of MAGI-1 to be responsible for the interaction. MAGI-1 and synaptopodin can also interact in vivo, as they can be immunoprecipitated together from HEK293 cell lysates. Another actin-bundling protein that is found in glomerular podocytes and shown to be mutated in an inheritable form of glomerulosclerosis is alpha-actinin-4. We show that alpha-actinin-4 is also capable of binding to MAGI-1 in in vitro binding assays and that this interaction is mediated by the fifth PDZ domain of MAGI-1 binding to the C terminus of alpha-actinin-4. Exogenously expressed synaptopodin and alpha-actinin-4 were found to colocalize along with endogenous MAGI-1 at the tight junction of Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. The interaction and colocalization of MAGI-1 with two actin-bundling proteins suggest that MAGI-1 may play a role in actin cytoskeleton dynamics within polarized epithelial cells.  相似文献   

5.
The Kv4.2 transient voltage-dependent potassium current contributes to the morphology of the cardiac action potential as well as to neuronal excitability and firing frequency. Here we report profound effects of the Kv4.2 C terminus on the surface expression and activation gating properties of Kv4.2 that are modulated by the direct interaction between KChIP2, an auxiliary regulatory subunit, and the C terminus of Kv4.2. We show that increasingly large truncations of the C terminus of rat Kv4.2 (wild type) cause a progressive decrease of Kv4.2 current along with a shift in voltage-dependent activation that is closely correlated with negative charge deletion. Co-expression of more limited Kv4.2 C-terminal truncation mutants (T588 and T528) with KChIP2 results in a doubling of Kv4.2 protein expression and up to an 8-fold increase in Kv4.2 current amplitude. Pulsechase experiments show that co-expression with KChIP2 slows Kv4.2 wild type degradation 8-fold. Co-expression of KChIP2 with an intermediate-length C-terminal truncation mutant (T474) shifts Kv4.2 activation voltage dependence and enhances expression of Kv4.2 current. The largest truncation mutants (T417 and DeltaC) show an intracellular localization with no measurable currents and no response to KChIP2 co-expression. Co-immunoprecipitation and competitive glutathione S-transferase-binding assays indicate a direct interaction between KChIP2 and the Kv4.2 C terminus with a relative binding affinity comparable with that of the N terminus. Overall, these results suggest that the C-terminal domain of Kv4.2 plays a critical role in voltage-dependent activation and functional expression that is mediated by direct interaction between the Kv4.2 C terminus and KChIP2.  相似文献   

6.
The voltage-gated potassium channel, Kv1.3, is present in human T-lymphocytes. Blockade of Kv1.3 results in T-cell depolarization, inhibition of T-cell activation, and attenuation of immune responses in vivo. A class of benzamide Kv1.3 channel inhibitors has been identified. The structure-activity relationship within this class of compounds in two functional assays, Rb_Kv and T-cell proliferation, is presented. In in vitro assays, trans isomers display moderate selectivity for binding to Kv1.3 over other Kv1.x channels present in human brain.  相似文献   

7.
Voltage-gated Kv1 potassium channels consist of pore-forming alpha subunits and cytoplasmic Kv beta subunits. The latter play diverse roles in modulating the gating, stability, and trafficking of Kv1 channels. The crystallographic structure of the Kv beta2 subunit revealed surprising structural homology with aldo-keto reductases, including a triosephosphate isomerase barrel structure, conservation of key catalytic residues, and a bound NADP(+) cofactor (Gulbis, J. M., Mann, S., and MacKinnon, R. (1999) Cell 90, 943-952). Each Kv1-associated Kv beta subunit (Kv beta 1.1, Kv beta 1.2, Kv beta 2, and Kv beta 3) shares striking amino acid conservation in key catalytic and cofactor binding residues. Here, by a combination of structural modeling and biochemical and cell biological analyses of structure-based mutations, we investigate the potential role for putative Kv beta subunit enzymatic activity in the trafficking of Kv1 channels. We found that all Kv beta subunits promote cell surface expression of coexpressed Kv1.2 alpha subunits in transfected COS-1 cells. Kv beta1.1 and Kv beta 2 point mutants lacking a key catalytic tyrosine residue found in the active site of all aldo-keto reductases have wild-type trafficking characteristics. However, mutations in residues within the NADP(+) binding pocket eliminated effects on Kv1.2 trafficking. In cultured hippocampal neurons, Kv beta subunit coexpression led to axonal targeting of Kv1.2, recapitulating the Kv1.2 localization observed in many brain neurons. Similar to the trafficking results in COS-1 cells, mutations within the cofactor binding pocket reduced axonal targeting of Kv1.2, whereas those in the catalytic tyrosine did not. Together, these data suggest that NADP(+) binding and/or the integrity of the binding pocket structure, but not catalytic activity, of Kv beta subunits is required for intracellular trafficking of Kv1 channel complexes in mammalian cells and for axonal targeting in neurons.  相似文献   

8.
ADAM12 belongs to the transmembrane metalloprotease ADAM ("a disintegrin and metalloprotease") family. ADAM12 has been implicated in muscle cell differentiation and fusion, but its precise function remains unknown. Here, we show that ADAM12 is dramatically up-regulated in regenerated, newly formed fibers in vivo. In C2C12 cells, ADAM12 is expressed at low levels in undifferentiated myoblasts and is transiently up-regulated at the onset of differentiation when myoblasts fuse into multinucleated myotubes, whereas other ADAMs, such as ADAMs 9, 10, 15, 17, and 19, are expressed at all stages of differentiation. Using the yeast two-hybrid screen, we found that the muscle-specific alpha-actinin-2 strongly binds to the cytoplasmic tail of ADAM12. In vitro binding assays with GST fusion proteins confirmed the specific interaction. The major binding site for alpha-actinin-2 was mapped to a short sequence in the membrane-proximal region of ADAM12 cytoplasmic tail; a second binding site was identified in the membrane-distal region. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments confirm the in vivo association of ADAM12 cytoplasmic domain with alpha-actinin-2. Overexpression of the entire cytosolic ADAM12 tail acted in a dominant negative fashion by inhibiting fusion of C2C12 cells, whereas expression of a cytosolic ADAM12 lacking the major alpha-actinin-2 binding site had no effect on cell fusion. Our results suggest that interaction of ADAM12 with alpha-actinin-2 is important for ADAM12 function.  相似文献   

9.
Wang L  Takimoto K  Levitan ES 《FEBS letters》2003,547(1-3):162-164
Kvbeta2 subunits associate with Kv1 and Kv4 K+ channels, but the basis of preferential association is not understood. For example, detergent resistance suggests stronger auxiliary subunit association with Kv4.2 than with Kv1.2, but Kvbeta2 preferentially localizes with the latter channels in brain. Here we examine the interaction of Kvbeta2 with two native binding partners in brain: Kv4.3 and Kv1.4. We show that the auxiliary subunit binds more efficiently to Kv1.4 than to Kv4.3 in mammalian cells. However, preexisting Kvbeta2 complexes with Kv1.4 and Kv4.3 have similar detergent sensitivity. Thus, preferential steady state binding may reflect a difference in initial association rather than stability. We also find that that the cytoplasmic C-terminus of Kv4.3 inhibits Kvbeta2 association. Apparently, a region proximal to the Kv4.3 pore contributes to the inefficient auxiliary subunit interaction that produces preferential binding of Kvbeta2 to Kv1 channels.  相似文献   

10.
Tyrosine phosphorylation evokes functional changes in a variety of ion channels. Modulation of the actin cytoskeleton also affects the function of some channels. Little is known about how these avenues of ion channel regulation may interact. We report that the potassium channel Kv1.2 associates with the actin-binding protein cortactin and that the binding is modulated by tyrosine phosphorylation. Immunocytochemical and biochemical analyses show that Kv1.2 and cortactin co-localize to the cortical actin cytoskeleton at the leading edges of the cell. Binding assays using purified recombinant proteins reveal a 19-amino acid span within the carboxyl terminus of Kv1.2 that is necessary for direct cortactin binding. Phosphorylation of specific tyrosines within the C terminus of Kv1.2 attenuates that binding. In HEK293 cells, activation of the M1 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor evokes tyrosine phosphorylation-dependent suppression of Kv1.2 ionic current. We show that M1 receptor activation also reduces the interaction of cortactin with Kv1.2 and that mutant Kv1.2 channels deficient for cortactin binding exhibit strongly attenuated ionic current. These results demonstrate a dynamic, phosphorylation-dependent interaction between Kv1.2 and the actin cytoskeleton-binding protein cortactin and suggest a role for that interaction in the regulation of Kv1.2 ionic current.  相似文献   

11.
Kv1.3 activity is determined by raft association. In addition to Kv1.3, leukocytes also express Kv1.5, and both channels control physiological responses. Because the oligomeric composition may modify the channel targeting to the membrane, we investigated heterotetrameric Kv1.3/Kv1.5 channel traffic and targeting in HEK cells. Kv1.3 and Kv1.5 generate multiple heterotetramers with differential surface expression according to the subunit composition. FRET analysis and pharmacology confirm the presence of functional hybrid channels. Raft association was evaluated by cholesterol depletion, caveolae colocalization, and lateral diffusion at the cell surface. Immunoprecipitation showed that both Kv1.3 and heteromeric channels associate with caveolar raft domains. However, homomeric Kv1.3 channels showed higher association with caveolin traffic. Moreover, FRAP analysis revealed higher mobility for hybrid Kv1.3/Kv1.5 than Kv1.3 homotetramers, suggesting that heteromers target to distinct surface microdomains. Studies with lipopolysaccharide-activated macrophages further supported that different physiological mechanisms govern Kv1.3 and Kv1.5 targeting to rafts. Our results implicate the traffic and localization of Kv1.3/Kv1.5 heteromers in the complex regulation of immune system cells.  相似文献   

12.
Alpha-subunits of the voltage-gated potassium channel (Kv) subfamily Kv9 show no channel activity after homomultimeric expression in heterologous expression systems. This report shows that heteromultimeric expression of rKv9.1 and rKv9.3 specifically suppresses the currents mediated by alpha-subunits of the Kv2 and Kv3 subfamilies but does not affect currents mediated by alpha-subunits of the Kv1 and Kv4 subfamilies. To understand the molecular basis of the electrical silence of Kv9 homomultimeric channels, crucial functional domains (amino and carboxy terminus, S4 segment, and pore region) were exchanged between Kv9 alpha-subunits and rKv1.3. Electrophysiological studies of these chimeras revealed that the pore region is involved in determining the nonconductive behavior of homomultimeric Kv9 channels. This analysis was extended by protein interaction assays, aiming to identify the region of Kv9 subunits responsible for the specific suppression of rKv2.1- and rKv3.4-mediated currents. We could show that the amino-terminal domain of Kv9 alpha-subunits does not support homomultimeric assembly but interacts specifically with the rKv2.1 amino-terminal region. Conversely, the specific intersubfamily assembly of rKv3.4 with rKv9.1 or rKv9.3 is governed by the hydrophobic core and not the amino-terminal domain.  相似文献   

13.
Voltage‐gated Kv7.2 potassium channels regulate neuronal excitability. The gating of these channels is tightly controlled by various mediators and neurotransmitters acting via G protein‐coupled receptors; the underlying signaling cascades involve phosphatidylinositol‐4,5‐bisphosphate (PIP2), Ca2+/calmodulin, and phosphorylation. Recent studies found that the PIP2 sensitivity of Kv7.2 channels is affected by two posttranslational modifications, phosphorylation and methylation, harboured within putative PIP2‐binding domains. In this study, we updated phosphorylation and methylation sites in Kv7.2 either heterologously expressed in mammalian cells or as GST‐fusion proteins exposed to recombinant protein kinases by using LC–MS/MS. In vitro kinase assays revealed that CDK5, protein kinase C (PKC) alpha, PKA, p38 MAPK, CamKIIα, and GSK3β could mediate phosphorylation. Taken together, we provided a comprehensive map of phosphorylation and methylation in Kv7.2 within protein–protein and protein–lipid interaction domains. This may help to interpret the functional roles of individual PTM sites in Kv7.2 channels. All MS data are available via ProteomeXchange with the identifier PXD005567.  相似文献   

14.
Yamakawa T  Saith S  Li Y  Gao X  Gaisano HY  Tsushima RG 《Biochemistry》2007,46(38):10942-10949
Kv4.2 channels are responsible in the heart for the Ca2+-independent transient outward currents and are important in regulating myocardial excitability and Ca2+ homeostasis. We have identified previously the expression of syntaxin 1A (STX1A) on the cardiac ventricular myocyte plasma membranes, and its modulation of cardiac ATP-sensitive K+ channels. We speculated that STX1A interacts with other cardiac ion channels, thus we examined the interaction of STX1A with Kv4.2 channels. Co-immunoprecipitation and GST pulldown assays demonstrated a direct interaction of STX1A with the Kv4.2 N-terminus. We next investigated the functional alterations of Kv4.2 gating by STX1A in Xenopus oocytes. Coexpression of Kv4.2 with STX1A (1) resulted in a reduction of Kv4.2 current amplitude; (2) caused a depolarizing shift of the steady-state inactivation curve; (3) enhanced the rate of current decay; and (4) accelerated the rate of recovery from inactivation. Additional coexpression of botulinum neurotoxin C, which cleaves STX1A, reversed the effects of STX1A on Kv4.2. STX1A inhibited partially the gating changes by KChIP2, suggesting a competitive interaction of these proteins for an overlapping binding region on the N-terminus of Kv4.2. Indeed, the N-terminal truncation mutants of Kv4.2 (Kv4.2Delta2-40 and Kv4.2Delta7-11), which form part of the KChIP2 binding site, displayed reduced sensitivity to STX1A modulation. Our study suggests that STX1A directly modulates Kv4.2 current amplitude and gating through its interaction with an overlapping region of the KChIP binding motif domain on the Kv4.2 N-terminus.  相似文献   

15.
Kv beta 2 enhances the rate of inactivation and level of expression of Kv1.4 currents. The crystal structure of Kv beta 2 binds NADP(+), and it has been suggested that Kv beta 2 is an oxidoreductase enzyme (). To investigate how this function might relate to channel modulation, we made point mutations in Kv beta 2 in either the NADPH docking or putative catalytic sites. Using the yeast two-hybrid system, we found that these mutations did not disrupt the interaction of Kv beta 2 with Kv alpha 1 channels. To characterize the Kv beta 2 mutants functionally, we coinjected wild-type or mutant Kv beta 2 cRNAs and Kv1.4 cRNA in Xenopus laevis oocytes. Kv beta 2 increased both the amplitude and rate of inactivation of Kv1.4 currents. The cellular content of Kv1.4 protein was unchanged on Western blot, but the amount in the plasmalemma was increased. Mutations in either the orientation or putative catalytic sites for NADPH abolished the expression-enhancing effect on Kv1.4 current. Western blots showed that both types of mutation reduced Kv1.4 protein. Like the wild-type Kv beta 2, both types of mutation increased the rate of inactivation of Kv1.4, confirming the physical association of mutant Kv beta 2 subunits with Kv1.4. Thus, mutations that should interfere with NADPH function uncouple the expression-enhancing effect of Kv beta 2 on Kv1.4 currents from its effect on the rate of inactivation. These results suggest that the binding of NADPH and the putative oxidoreductase activity of Kv beta 2 may play a role in the processing of Kv1.4.  相似文献   

16.
Voltage-gated K(+) (Kv) channels are key determinants of cardiac and neuronal excitability. A substantial body of evidence has accumulated in support of a role for Src family tyrosine kinases in the regulation of Kv channels. In this study, we examined the possibility that c-Src tyrosine kinase participates in the modulation of the transient voltage-dependent K(+) channel Kv4.3. Supporting a mechanistic link between Kv4.3 and c-Src, confocal microscopy analysis of HEK293 cells stably transfected with Kv4.3 showed high degree of co-localization of the two proteins at the plasma membrane. Our results further demonstrate an association between Kv4.3 and c-Src by co-immunoprecipitation and GST pull-down assays, this interaction being mediated by the SH2 and SH3 domains of c-Src. Furthermore, we show that Kv4.3 is tyrosine phosphorylated under basal conditions. The functional relevance of the observed interaction between Kv4.3 and c-Src was established in patch-clamp experiments, where application of the Src inhibitor PP2 caused a decrease in Kv4.3 peak current amplitude, but not the inactive structural analogue PP3. Conversely, intracellular application of recombinant c-Src kinase or the protein tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor bpV(phen) increased Kv4.3 peak current amplitude. In conclusion, our findings provide evidence that c-Src-induced Kv4.3 channel activation involves their association in a macromolecular complex and suggest a role for c-Src-Kv4.3 pathway in regulating cardiac and neuronal excitability.  相似文献   

17.
Kv channel-interacting proteins (KChIPs) and neuronal calcium sensor-1 (NCS-1) have been shown to interact with Kv4 channel alpha-subunits to regulate the expression and/or gating of these channels. Here we examine the specificity and sites of these proteins for interaction with Kv channel proteins. Immunoprecipitation and green fluorescent protein imaging show that KChIPs (but not NCS-1) effectively bind to Kv4.3 protein and localize at the plasma membrane when channel proteins are coexpressed. Analysis with chimeric proteins between KChIP2 and NCS-1 reveals that the three regions of KChIP2 (the linker between the first and second EF hands, the one between the third and fourth EF hands, and the C-terminal peptide after the fourth EF hand) are necessary and sufficient for its effective binding to Kv4.3 protein. The chimera with these three KChIP2 portions slowed inactivation and facilitated recovery from inactivation of Kv4.3 current. These results indicate that the sequence difference in these three regions between KChIPs and NCS-1 determines the specificity and affinity for interaction with Kv4 protein. Because the three identified regions surround the large hydrophobic crevice based on the NCS-1 crystal structure, this crevice may be the association site of KChIPs for the channel protein.  相似文献   

18.
In many voltage-gated K(+) channels, N-type inactivation significantly accelerates the onset of C-type inactivation, but effects on recovery from inactivation are small or absent. We have exploited the Na(+) permeability of C-type-inactivated K(+) channels to characterize a strong interaction between the inactivation peptide of Kv1.4 and the C-type-inactivated state of Kv1.4 and Kv1.5. The presence of the Kv1.4 inactivation peptide results in a slower decay of the Na(+) tail currents normally observed through C-type-inactivated channels, an effective blockade of the peak Na(+) tail current, and also a delay of the peak tail current. These effects are mimicked by addition of quaternary ammonium ions to the pipette-filling solution. These observations support a common mechanism of action of the inactivation peptide and intracellular quaternary ammonium ions, and also demonstrate that the Kv channel inner vestibule is cytosolically exposed before and after the onset of C-type inactivation. We have also examined the process of N-type inactivation under conditions where C-type inactivation is removed, to compare the interaction of the inactivation peptide with open and C-type-inactivated channels. In C-type-deficient forms of Kv1.4 or Kv1.5 channels, the Kv1.4 inactivation ball behaves like an open channel blocker, and the resultant slowing of deactivation tail currents is considerably weaker than observed in C-type-inactivated channels. We present a kinetic model that duplicates the effects of the inactivation peptide on the slow Na(+) tail of C-type-inactivated channels. Stable binding between the inactivation peptide and the C-type-inactivated state results in slower current decay, and a reduction of the Na(+) tail current magnitude, due to slower transition of channels through the Na(+)-permeable states traversed during recovery from inactivation.  相似文献   

19.
Previously, we have demonstrated physical and functional interactions of the voltage-gated potassium channel Kv2.1 with the plasma membrane protein components of the exocytotic SNARE complex, syntaxin 1A, and the t-SNARE, syntaxin 1A/SNAP-25, complex. Importantly, the physical interaction of Kv2.1 with syntaxin was shown to be involved in the facilitation of secretion from PC12 cells, which was independent of potassium currents. Recently, we showed that also VAMP2, the vesicular SNARE, interacts physically and functionally with Kv2.1. Here, we first set out to test the interaction of the full SNARE, syntaxin/SNAP-25/VAMP2, complex with the channel. Using the interaction of VAMP2 with Kv2.1 in Xenopus oocytes as a probe, we showed that coexpression of the t-SNARE complex with VAMP2 abolished the VAMP2 effect on channel inactivation and reduced the amount of VAMP2 that coprecipitated with Kv2.1. Further, in vitro pull down assays showed that the full SNARE complex failed to interact with Kv2.1 N- and C-termini in tandem, in contrast to the individual SNARE components. This suggests that the interactions of the SNARE components with Kv2.1 are abolished upon their recruitment into a full SNARE complex, which does not interact with the channel. Other important findings arising from the in vitro study are that the t-SNARE complex, in addition to syntaxin, interacts with a specific C-terminal channel domain, C1a, shown to mediate the facilitation of release by Kv2.1 and that the presence of Kv2.1 N-terminus has crucial contribution to these interactions. These findings provide important insights into the understanding of the complex molecular events involved in the novel phenomenon of secretion facilitation in neuroendocrine cells by Kv2.1.  相似文献   

20.
The voltage gated Kv1.5 channels conduct the ultrarapid delayed rectifier current (IKur) and play critical role in repolarization of action potential duration. It is the most rapidly activated channel and has very little or no inactivated states. In human cardiac cells, these channels are expressed more extensively in atrial myocytes than ventricle. From the evidences of its localization and functions, Kv1.5 has been declared a selective drug target for the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF). In this present study, we have tried to identify the rapidly activating property of Kv1.5 and studied its mode of inhibition using molecular modeling, docking, and simulation techniques. Channel in open conformation is found to be stabilized quickly within the dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine membrane, whereas most of the secondary structure elements were lost in closed state conformation. The obvious reason behind its ultra-rapid property is possibly due to the amino acid alteration in S4–S5 linker; the replacement of Lysine by Glutamine and vice versa. The popular published drugs as well as newly identified lead molecules were able to inhibit the Kv1.5 in a very similar pattern, mainly through the nonpolar interactions, and formed sable complexes. V512 is found as the main contributor for the interaction along with the other important residues such as V505, I508, A509, V512, P513, and V516. Furthermore, two screened novel compounds show surprisingly better inhibitory potency and can be considered for the future perspective of antiarrhythmic survey.  相似文献   

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