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1.
Ha TS  Heo MS  Park CS 《Biophysical journal》2004,86(5):2871-2882
Large-conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK(Ca)) channels are composed of the pore-forming alpha-subunit and the auxiliary beta-subunits. The beta4-subunit is dominantly expressed in the mammalian central nervous system. To understand the physiological roles of the beta4-subunit on the BK(Ca) channel alpha-subunit (Slo), we isolated a full-length complementary DNA of rat beta4-subunit (rbeta4), expressed heterolgously in Xenopus oocytes, and investigated the detailed functional effects using electrophysiological means. When expressed together with rat Slo (rSlo), rbeta4 profoundly altered the gating characteristics of the Slo channel. At a given concentration of intracellular Ca(2+), rSlo/rbeta4 channels were more sensitive to transmembrane voltage changes. The activation and deactivation rates of macroscopic currents were decreased in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. The channel activation by Ca(2+) became more cooperative by the coexpression of rbeta4. Single-channel recordings showed that the increased Hill coefficient for Ca(2+) was due to the changes in the open probability of the rSlo/rbeta4 channel. Single BK(Ca) channels composed of rSlo and rbeta4 also exhibited slower kinetics for steady-state gating compared with rSlo channels. Dwell times of both open and closed events were significantly increased. Because BK(Ca) channels are known to modulate neuroexcitability and the expression of the beta4-subunit is highly concentrated in certain subregions of brain, the electrophysiological properties of individual neurons should be affected profoundly by the expression of this second subunit.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Modulation of the cloned human intermediate-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channel (hIK) by the compound 1-ethyl-2-benzimidazolinone (EBIO) was studied by patch-clamp technique using human embryonic kidney cells (HEK 293) stably expressing the hIK channels. In whole-cell studies, intracellular concentrations of free Ca(2+) were systematically varied, by buffering the pipette solutions. In voltage-clamp, the hIK specific currents increased gradually from 0 to approximately 300 pA/pF without reaching saturation even at the highest Ca(2+) concentration tested (300 nM). In the presence of EBIO (100 microM), the Ca(2+)-activation curve was shifted leftwards, and maximal currents were attained at 100 nM Ca(2+). In current-clamp, steeply Ca(2+)-dependent membrane potentials were recorded and the cells gradually hyperpolarised from -20 to -85 mV when Ca(2+) was augmented from 0 to 300 nM. EBIO strongly hyperpolarised cells buffered at intermediate Ca(2+) concentrations. In contrast, no effects were detected either below 10 nM (no basic channel activation) or at 300 nM Ca(2+) (V(m) close to E(K)). Without Ca(2+), EBIO-induced hyperpolarisations were not obtainable, indicating an obligatory Ca(2+)-dependent mechanism of action. When applied to inside-out patches, EBIO exerted a Ca(2+)-dependent increase in the single-channel open-state probability, showing that the compound modulates hIK channels by a direct action on the alpha-subunit or on a closely associated protein. In conclusion, EBIO activates hIK channels in whole-cell and inside-out patches by a direct mechanism, which requires the presence of internal Ca(2+).  相似文献   

4.
5.
We studied the effect of H(2)O(2) on the gating behavior of large-conductance Ca(2+)-sensitive voltage-dependent K(+) (K(V,Ca)) channels. We recorded potassium currents from single skeletal muscle channels incorporated into bilayers or using macropatches of Xenopus laevis oocytes membranes expressing the human Slowpoke (hSlo) alpha-subunit. Exposure of the intracellular side of K(V,Ca) channels to H(2)O(2) (4-23 mM) leads to a time-dependent decrease of the open probability (P(o)) without affecting the unitary conductance. H(2)O(2) did not affect channel activity when added to the extracellular side. These results provide evidence for an intracellular site(s) of H(2)O(2) action. Desferrioxamine (60 microM) and cysteine (1 mM) completely inhibited the effect of H(2)O(2), indicating that the decrease in P(o) was mediated by hydroxyl radicals. The reducing agent dithiothreitol (DTT) could not fully reverse the effect of H(2)O(2). However, DTT did completely reverse the decrease in P(o) induced by the oxidizing agent 5,5'-dithio-bis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid). The incomplete recovery of K(V,Ca) channel activity promoted by DTT suggests that H(2)O(2) treatment must be modifying other amino acid residues, e.g., as methionine or tryptophan, besides cysteine. Noise analysis of macroscopic currents in Xenopus oocytes expressing hSlo channels showed that H(2)O(2) induced a decrease in current mediated by a decrease both in the number of active channels and P(o).  相似文献   

6.
T cell receptor engagement results in the reorganization of intracellular and membrane proteins at the T cell-antigen presenting cell interface forming the immunological synapse (IS), an event required for Ca2+ influx. KCa3.1 channels modulate Ca2+ signaling in activated T cells by regulating the membrane potential. Nothing is known regarding KCa3.1 membrane distribution during T cell activation. Herein, we determined whether KCa3.1 translocates to the IS in human T cells using YFP-tagged KCa3.1 channels. These channels showed electrophysiological and pharmacological properties identical to wild-type channels. IS formation was induced by either anti-CD3/CD28 antibody-coated beads for fixed microscopy experiments or Epstein-Barr virus-infected B cells for fixed and live cell microscopy. In fixed microscopy experiments, T cells were also immunolabeled for F-actin or CD3, which served as IS formation markers. The distribution of KCa3.1 was determined with confocal and fluorescence microscopy. We found that, upon T cell activation, KCa3.1 channels localize with F-actin and CD3 to the IS but remain evenly distributed on the cell membrane when no stimulus is provided. Detailed imaging experiments indicated that KCa3.1 channels are recruited in the IS shortly after antigen presentation and are maintained there for at least 15–30 min. Interestingly, pretreatment of activated T cells with the specific KCa3.1 blocker TRAM-34 blocked Ca2+ influx, but channel redistribution to the IS was not prevented. These results indicate that KCa3.1 channels are a part of the signaling complex that forms at the IS upon antigen presentation. T cell activation; ion channels; membrane distribution  相似文献   

7.
Over the past few years, it has become clear that an important mechanism by which large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channel (BKCa) activity is regulated is the tissue-specific expression of auxiliary β subunits. The first of these to be identified, β1, is expressed predominately in smooth muscle and causes dramatic effects, increasing the apparent affinity of the channel for Ca2+ 10-fold at 0 mV, and shifting the range of voltages over which the channel activates −80 mV at 9.1 μM Ca2+. With this study, we address the question: which aspects of BKCa gating are altered by β1 to bring about these effects: Ca2+ binding, voltage sensing, or the intrinsic energetics of channel opening? The approach we have taken is to express the β1 subunit together with the BKCa α subunit in Xenopus oocytes, and then to compare β1''s steady state effects over a wide range of Ca2+ concentrations and membrane voltages to those predicted by allosteric models whose parameters have been altered to mimic changes in the aspects of gating listed above. The results of our analysis suggest that much of β1''s steady state effects can be accounted for by a reduction in the intrinsic energy the channel must overcome to open and a decrease in its voltage sensitivity, with little change in the affinity of the channel for Ca2+ when it is either open or closed. Interestingly, however, the small changes in Ca2+ binding affinity suggested by our analysis (Kc 7.4 μM → 9.6 μM; Ko = 0.80 μM → 0.65 μM) do appear to be functionally important. We also show that β1 affects the mSlo conductance–voltage relation in the essential absence of Ca2+, shifting it +20 mV and reducing its apparent gating charge 38%, and we develop methods for distinguishing between alterations in Ca2+ binding and other aspects of BKCa channel gating that may be of general use.  相似文献   

8.
Phospholamban (PLB) inhibits the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR)Ca2+-ATPase, and this inhibition is relieved bycAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA)-mediated phosphorylation. The roleof PLB in regulating Ca2+ release throughryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ release channels, measured asCa2+ sparks, was examined using smooth muscle cells ofcerebral arteries from PLB-deficient ("knockout") mice(PLB-KO). Ca2+ sparks were monitored opticallyusing the fluorescent Ca2+ indicator fluo 3 or electricallyby measuring transient large-conductance Ca2+-activatedK+ (BK) channel currents activated by Ca2+sparks. Basal Ca2+ spark and transient BK current frequencywere elevated in cerebral artery myocytes of PLB-KO mice. Forskolin, anactivator of adenylyl cyclase, increased the frequency ofCa2+ sparks and transient BK currents in cerebral arteriesfrom control mice. However, forskolin had little effect on thefrequency of Ca2+ sparks and transient BK currents fromPLB-KO cerebral arteries. Forskolin or PLB-KO increased SRCa2+ load, as measured by caffeine-induced Ca2+transients. This study provides the first evidence that PLB is criticalfor frequency modulation of Ca2+ sparks and associated BKcurrents by PKA in smooth muscle.

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9.
Gao Q  Zhang SZ  Cao CM  Bruce IC  Xia Q 《Cytokine》2005,32(5):199-205
Pretreatment with tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) is known to trigger cardioprotection and it can activate multiple downstream signaling cascades. However, it is not known whether the mitochondrial permeability transition pore and the Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channel (K(Ca) channel) are involved in the TNF-alpha-induced cardioprotection. In the present study, we examined whether TNF-alpha inhibits pore opening and activates the K(Ca) channel in the cardioprotection. In isolated rat hearts subjected to 30 min of regional ischemia and 120 min of reperfusion, pretreatment with 10 U/ml TNF-alpha for 7 min followed by 10 min washout improved the recovery of rate-pressure product (RPP=left ventricular developed pressure x heart rate) and coronary flow (CF) during reperfusion, and reduced the infarct size and release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). Administration of 20 micromol/L atractyloside, a pore opener, for the last 5 min of ischemia and first 15 min of reperfusion, and pretreatment with 1 micromol/L paxilline, an inhibitor of the K(Ca) channel, for 5 min before ischemia, attenuated the recovery of RPP and CF, and the reductions of infarct size and release of LDH induced by TNF-alpha. On the other hand, administration of 10 micromol/L NS 1619, an opener of the K(Ca) channel, for 10 min before ischemia, decreased the infarct size and LDH release, and improved contractile functions and CF; these effects were attenuated by atractyloside. Pretreatment with 0.2 micromol/L cyclosporin A for the last 5 min of ischemia and first 15 min of reperfusion showed similar effects to those of TNF-alpha, and they were not attenuated by paxilline. In mitochondria isolated from hearts pretreated with 10 U/ml TNF-alpha for 7 min, a significant inhibition of Ca(2+)-induced swelling was observed. Furthermore, paxilline attenuated the inhibition of Ca(2+)-induced mitochondrial swelling by TNF-alpha. These findings indicate that TNF-alpha protects the myocardium against ischemia and reperfusion injury by inhibiting mitochondrial permeability transition pore opening as well as activating K(Ca) channels, probably the mitochondrial K(Ca) channel, which is upstream from the pore.  相似文献   

10.
Peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)) is a contractile agonist of rat middle cerebral arteries. To determine the mechanism responsible for this component of ONOO(-) bioactivity, the present study examined the effect of ONOO(-) on ionic current and channel activity in rat cerebral arteries. Whole cell recordings of voltage-clamped cells were made under conditions designed to optimize K(+) current. The effects of iberiotoxin, a selective inhibitor of large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (BK) channels, and ONOO(-) (10-100 microM) were determined. At a pipette potential of +50 mV, ONOO(-) inhibited 39% of iberiotoxin-sensitive current. ONOO(-) was selective for iberiotoxin-sensitive current, whereas decomposed ONOO(-) had no effect. In excised, inside-out membrane patches, channel activity was recorded using symmetrical K(+) solutions. Unitary currents were sensitive to increases in internal Ca(2+) concentration, consistent with activity due to BK channels. Internal ONOO(-) dose dependently inhibited channel activity by decreasing open probability and mean open times. The inhibitory effect of ONOO(-) could be overcome by reduced glutathione. Glutathione, added after ONOO(-), restored whole cell current amplitude to control levels and reverted single-channel gating to control behavior. The inhibitory effect of ONOO(-) on membrane K(+) current is consistent with its contractile effects in isolated cerebral arteries and single myocytes. Taken together, our data suggest that ONOO(-) has the potential to alter cerebral vascular tone by inhibiting BK channel activity.  相似文献   

11.
BK channels modulate neurotransmitter release due to their activation by voltage and Ca(2+). Intracellular Mg(2+) also modulates BK channels in multiple ways with opposite effects on channel function. Previous single-channel studies have shown that Mg(2+) blocks the pore of BK channels in a voltage-dependent manner. We have confirmed this result by studying macroscopic currents of the mslo1 channel. We find that Mg(2+) activates mslo1 BK channels independently of Ca(2+) and voltage by preferentially binding to their open conformation. The mslo3 channel, which lacks Ca(2+) binding sites in the tail, is not activated by Mg(2+). However, coexpression of the mslo1 core and mslo3 tail produces channels with Mg(2+) sensitivity similar to mslo1 channels, indicating that Mg(2+) sites differ from Ca(2+) sites. We discovered that Mg(2+) also binds to Ca(2+) sites and competitively inhibits Ca(2+)-dependent activation. Quantitative computation of these effects reveals that the overall effect of Mg(2+) under physiological conditions is to enhance BK channel function.  相似文献   

12.
Using the patch-clamp technique, we have identified an intermediate conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channel from bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) erythrocytes and have investigated the regulation of channel activity by cytosolic ATP. The channel was highly selective for K(+) over Na(+), gave a linear I-V relationship with symmetrical 117.5 mM K(+) solutions and had a single-channel conductance of 60 pS. Channel activity was dependent on Ca(2+) concentration (K(1/2) = 600 nM) but voltage-independent. These basic characteristics are similar to those of human and frog erythrocyte Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (Gardos) channels previously reported. However, cytoplasmic application of ATP reduced channel activity with block exhibiting a novel bell-shaped concentration dependence. The channel was inhibited most by approximately 10 microM ATP (P(0) reduced to 5% of control) but less blocked by lower and higher concentrations of ATP. Moreover, the novel type of ATP block did not require Mg(2+), was independent of PKA or PKC, and was mimicked by a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog, AMP-PNP. This suggests that ATP exerts its effect by direct binding to sites on the channel or associated regulatory proteins, but not by phosphorylation of either of these components.  相似文献   

13.
Coexpression of the beta(1) subunit with the alpha subunit (mSlo) of BK channels increases the apparent Ca(2+) sensitivity of the channel. This study investigates whether the mechanism underlying the increased Ca(2+) sensitivity requires Ca(2+), by comparing the gating in 0 Ca(2+)(i) of BK channels composed of alpha subunits to those composed of alpha+beta(1) subunits. The beta(1) subunit increased burst duration approximately 20-fold and the duration of gaps between bursts approximately 3-fold, giving an approximately 10-fold increase in open probability (P(o)) in 0 Ca(2+)(i). The effect of the beta(1) subunit on increasing burst duration was little changed over a wide range of P(o) achieved by varying either Ca(2+)(i) or depolarization. The effect of the beta(1) subunit on increasing the durations of the gaps between bursts in 0 Ca(2+)(i) was preserved over a range of voltage, but was switched off as Ca(2+)(i) was increased into the activation range. The Ca(2+)-independent, beta(1) subunit-induced increase in burst duration accounted for 80% of the leftward shift in the P(o) vs. Ca(2+)(i) curve that reflects the increased Ca(2+) sensitivity induced by the beta(1) subunit. The Ca(2+)-dependent effect of the beta(1) subunit on the gaps between bursts accounted for the remaining 20% of the leftward shift. Our observation that the major effects of the beta(1) subunit are independent of Ca(2+)(i) suggests that the beta(1) subunit mainly alters the energy barriers of Ca(2+)-independent transitions. The changes in gating induced by the beta(1) subunit differ from those induced by depolarization, as increasing P(o) by depolarization or by the beta(1) subunit gave different gating kinetics. The complex gating kinetics for both alpha and alpha+beta(1) channels in 0 Ca(2+)(i) arise from transitions among two to three open and three to five closed states and are inconsistent with Monod-Wyman-Changeux type models, which predict gating among only one open and one closed state in 0 Ca(2+)(i).  相似文献   

14.
We previouslycharacterized 1-ethyl-2-benzimidazolinone (1-EBIO), as well as theclinically useful benzoxazoles, chlorzoxazone (CZ), and zoxazolamine(ZOX), as pharmacological activators of the intermediate-conductanceCa2+-activated K+ channel, hIK1. The mechanismof activation of hIK1, as well as the highly homologoussmall-conductance, Ca2+-dependent K+ channel,rSK2, was determined following heterologous expression inXenopus oocytes using two-electrode voltage clamp (TEVC) and excised, inside-out patch-clamp techniques. 1-EBIO, CZ, and ZOX activated both hIK1 and rSK2 in TEVC and excised inside-out patch-clamp experiments. In excised, inside-out patches, 1-EBIO and CZ induced aconcentration-dependent activation of hIK1, with half-maximal (K1/2) values of 84 µM and 98 µM, respectively.Similarly, CZ activated rSK2 with a K1/2 of 87 µM. In the absence of CZ, the Ca2+-dependent activationof hIK1 was best fit with a K1/2 of 700 nM and aHill coefficient (n) of 2.0. rSK2 was activated byCa2+ with a K1/2 of 700 nM and ann of 2.5. Addition of CZ had no effect on either theK1/2 or n for Ca2+-dependentactivation of either hIK1 or rSK2. Rather, CZ increased channelactivity at all Ca2+ concentrations(Vmax). Event-duration analysis revealed hIK1 wasminimally described by two open and three closed times. Activation by1-EBIO had no effect on o1, o2, orc1, whereas c2 and c3 werereduced from 9.0 and 92.6 ms to 5.0 and 44.1 ms, respectively. Inconclusion, we define 1-EBIO, CZ, and ZOX as the first known activatorsof hIK1 and rSK2. Openers of IK and SK channels may be therapeuticallybeneficial in cystic fibrosis and vascular diseases.

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15.
High-conductanceCa2+-activatedK+(KCa) channels werestudied in mouse skeletal muscle fibers using thepatch-clamp technique. In inside-out patches, application of negativepressure to the patch induced a dose-dependent and reversibleactivation of KCa channels.Stretch-induced increase in channel activity was found to be of thesame magnitude in the presence and in the absence ofCa2+ in the pipette. Thedose-response relationships betweenKCa channel activity andintracellular Ca2+ and betweenKCa channel activity and membranepotential revealed that voltage andCa2+ sensitivity were not alteredby membrane stretch. In cell-attached patches, in the presence of highexternal Ca2+ concentration,stretch-induced activation was also observed. We conclude that membranestretch is a potential mode of regulation of skeletal muscleKCa channel activity and could beinvolved in the regulation of muscle excitability duringcontraction-relaxation cycles.

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16.
Using the patch-clamp technique, we demonstrate that, in depolarized cell-attached patches from mouse skeletal muscle fibers, a short hyperpolarization to resting value is followed by a transient activation of Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels (K(Ca)) upon return to depolarized levels. These results indicate that sparse sites of passive Ca(2+) influx at resting potentials are responsible for a subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) load high enough to induce K(Ca) channel activation upon muscle activation. We then investigate this phenomenon in mdx dystrophin-deficient muscle fibers, in which an elevated Ca(2+) influx and a subsequent subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) overload are suspected. The number of Ca(2+) entry sites detected with K(Ca) was found to be greater in mdx muscle. K(Ca) activity reflecting subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) load was also found to be independent of the activity of leak channels carrying inward currents at negative potentials in mdx muscle. These results indicate that the sites of passive Ca(2+) influx newly described in this study could represent the Ca(2+) influx pathways responsible for the subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) overload in mdx muscle fibers.  相似文献   

17.
K Lucchesi  E Moczydlowski 《Neuron》1990,4(1):141-148
Toxin I (DTX-I), a 60-residue peptide belonging to the dendrotoxin family of Mamba snake neurotoxins, is a potent inhibitor of various types of voltage-gated K+ currents. To investigate the sensitivity of another major class of K+ channels to DTX-I, the effect of this toxin was studied on single Ca2(+)-activated K+ channels from rat skeletal muscle incorporated into planar bilayers. Internal (intracellular) DTX-I was found to induce reversibly a long-lived (tau = 40 s), inwardly rectifying subconductance state with 66% of the normal open-state current at +20 mV. Analysis of the kinetics of substate formation and the current-voltage behavior of the substate suggest that binding of DTX-I modifies conduction of K+ ions through the pore without affecting the Ca2+ dependence or voltage dependence of gating. These results identify a unique internal binding site for DTX-I (Kd = 90 nM in 50 mM KCl) on a ubiquitous class of high-conductance, Ca2(+)-activated K+ channels.  相似文献   

18.
Hyperpolarizing large-conductance, Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels (BK) are important modulators of vascular smooth muscle and endothelial cell function. In vascular smooth muscle cells, BK are composed of pore-forming alpha subunits and modulatory beta subunits. However, expression, composition, and function of BK subunits in endothelium have not been studied so far. In patch-clamp experiments we identified BK (283 pS) in intact endothelium of porcine aortic tissue slices. The BK opener DHS-I (0.05-0.3 micromol/l), stimulating BK activity only in the presence of beta subunits, had no effect on BK in endothelium whereas the alpha subunit selective BK opener NS1619 (20 micromol/l) markedly increased channel activity. Correspondingly, mRNA expression of the beta subunit was undetectable in endothelium, whereas alpha subunit expression was demonstrated. To investigate the functional role of beta subunits, we transfected the beta subunit into a human endothelial cell line (EA.hy 926). beta subunit expression resulted in an increased Ca(2+) sensitivity of BK activity: the potential of half-maximal activation (V(1/2)) shifted from 73.4 mV to 49.6 mV at 1 micromol/l [Ca(2+)](i) and an decrease of the EC(50) value for [Ca(2+)](i) by 1 microM at +60 mV was observed. This study demonstrates that BK channels in endothelium are composed of alpha subunits without association to beta subunits. The lack of the beta subunit indicates a substantially different channel regulation in endothelial cells compared to vascular smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

19.
Mechanical deformation of normal ATP-replete human erythrocytes increased their permeability to Ca2+ sufficiently to turn on the Ca(2+)-activated K+ channel (the Gardos channel). When Ca2+ is absent, mechanical deformation of normal erythrocytes induces an equivalent increase the permeability of both Na+ and K+, In the presence of 0.1 to 1 mM Ca2+, a further increase in the K+ efflux rate was seen. There was no increase in Na+ flux above that induced by deformation itself. The involvement of the Ca(2+)-activated H channel was verified by showing the specific inhibitors of the channel, quinine and charybdotoxin, prevent the Ca(2+)-induced increase in K+ efflux. These results are consistent with a model of sickle cell dehydration proposed by Bookchin et al. ((1987) Prog. Clin. Biol. Res. 240, 193-200). The estimated rate of Ca2+ entry under these conditions (37 degrees C, 1000 dyne/cm2, and laminar shear) was about 1 mmol/loc per h.  相似文献   

20.
A novel method based on the maximum overlap wavelet transform of dwell time series is proposed. Information on local multifractal properties of the series, namely local Hurst exponents or Holder exponents, was obtained. The results confirm the presence of multifractality and intrinsic correlations in the Ca(2+)-activated K+ channel dwell time series. The data on the local multifractal structure of the series can be interpreted in terms of processes having self-organized criticality. The proposed approach allows one to widen the store of methods for the analysis of single ion channel activity.  相似文献   

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