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1.
High conductance, calcium- and voltage-activated potassium (BK) channels are widely expressed in mammals. In some tissues, the biophysical properties of BK channels are highly affected by coexpression of regulatory (beta) subunits. beta1 and beta2 subunits increase apparent channel calcium sensitivity. The beta1 subunit also decreases the voltage sensitivity of the channel and the beta2 subunit produces an N-type inactivation of BK currents. We further characterized the effects of the beta1 and beta2 subunits on the calcium and voltage sensitivity of the channel, analyzing the data in the context of an allosteric model for BK channel activation by calcium and voltage (Horrigan and Aldrich, 2002). In this study, we used a beta2 subunit without its N-type inactivation domain (beta2IR). The results indicate that the beta2IR subunit, like the beta1 subunit, has a small effect on the calcium binding affinity of the channel. Unlike the beta1 subunit, the beta2IR subunit also has no effect on the voltage sensitivity of the channel. The limiting voltage dependence for steady-state channel activation, unrelated to voltage sensor movements, is unaffected by any of the studied beta subunits. The same is observed for the limiting voltage dependence of the deactivation time constant. Thus, the beta1 subunit must affect the voltage sensitivity by altering the function of the voltage sensors of the channel. Both beta subunits reduce the intrinsic equilibrium constant for channel opening (L0). In the allosteric activation model, the reduction of the voltage dependence for the activation of the voltage sensors accounts for most of the macroscopic steady-state effects of the beta1 subunit, including the increase of the apparent calcium sensitivity of the BK channel. All allosteric coupling factors need to be increased in order to explain the observed effects when the alpha subunit is coexpressed with the beta2IR subunit.  相似文献   

2.
High conductance, calcium- and voltage-activated potassium (BK, MaxiK) channels are widely expressed in mammals. In some tissues, the biophysical properties of BK channels are highly affected by coexpression of regulatory (beta) subunits. The most remarkable effects of beta1 and beta2 subunits are an increase of the calcium sensitivity and the slow down of channel kinetics. However, the detailed characteristics of channels formed by alpha and beta1 or beta2 are dissimilar, the most remarkable difference being a reduction of the voltage sensitivity in the presence of beta1 but not beta2. Here we reveal the molecular regions in these beta subunits that determine their differential functional coupling with the pore-forming alpha-subunit. We made chimeric constructs between beta1 and beta2 subunits, and BK channels formed by alpha and chimeric beta subunits were expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. The electrophysiological characteristics of the resulting channels were determined using the patch clamp technique. Chimeric exchange of the different regions of the beta1 and beta2 subunits demonstrates that the NH3 and COOH termini are the most relevant regions in defining the behavior of either subunit. This strongly suggests that the intracellular domains are crucial for the fine tuning of the effects of these beta subunits. Moreover, the intracellular domains of beta1 are responsible for the reduction of the BK channel voltage dependence. This agrees with previous studies that suggested the intracellular regions of the alpha-subunit to be the target of the modulation by the beta1-subunit.  相似文献   

3.
Lithocholate (LC) (10-300 microM) in physiological solution is sensed by vascular myocyte large conductance, calcium- and voltage-gated potassium (BK) channel beta(1) accessory subunits, leading to channel activation and arterial dilation. However, the structural features in steroid and target that determine LC action are unknown. We tested LC and close analogs on BK channel (pore-forming cbv1+beta(1) subunits) activity using the product of the number of functional ion channels in the membrane patch (N) and the open channel probability (Po). LC (5beta-cholanic acid-3alpha-ol), 5alpha-cholanic acid-3alpha-ol, and 5beta-cholanic acid-3beta-ol increased NPo (EC(50) approximately 45 microM). At maximal increase in NPo, LC increased NPo by 180%, whereas 5alpha-cholanic acid-3alpha-ol and 5beta-cholanic acid-3beta-ol raised NPo by 40%. Thus, the alpha-hydroxyl and the cis A-B ring junction are both required for robust channel potentiation. Lacking both features, 5alpha-cholanic acid-3beta-ol and 5-cholenic acid-3beta-ol were inactive. Three-dimensional structures show that only LC displays a bean shape with clear-cut convex and concave hemispheres; 5alpha-cholanic acid-3alpha-ol and 5beta-cholanic acid-3beta-ol partially matched LC shape, and 5alpha-cholanic acid-3beta-ol and 5-cholenic acid-3beta-ol did not. Increasing polarity in steroid rings (5beta-cholanic acid-3alpha-sulfate) or reducing polarity in lateral chain (5beta-cholanic acid 3alpha-ol methyl ester) rendered poorly active compounds, consistent with steroid insertion between beta(1) and bilayer lipids, with the steroid-charged tail near the aqueous phase. Molecular dynamics identified two regions in beta(1) transmembrane domain 2 that meet unique requirements for bonding with the LC concave hemisphere, where the steroid functional groups are located.  相似文献   

4.
Both beta1 and beta2 auxiliary subunits of the BK-type K(+) channel family profoundly regulate the apparent Ca(2)+ sensitivity of BK-type Ca(2)+-activated K(+) channels. Each produces a pronounced leftward shift in the voltage of half-activation (V(0.5)) at a given Ca(2)+ concentration, particularly at Ca(2)+ above 1 microM. In contrast, the rapidly inactivating beta3b auxiliary produces a leftward shift in activation at Ca(2)+ below 1 microM. In the companion work (Lingle, C.J., X.-H. Zeng, J.-P. Ding, and X.-M. Xia. 2001. J. Gen. Physiol. 117:583-605, this issue), we have shown that some of the apparent beta3b-mediated shift in activation at low Ca(2)+ arises from rapid unblocking of inactivated channels, unlike the actions of the beta1 and beta2 subunits. Here, we compare effects of the beta3b subunit that arise from inactivation, per se, versus those that may arise from other functional effects of the subunit. In particular, we examine gating properties of the beta3b subunit and compare it to beta3b constructs lacking either the NH(2)- or COOH terminus or both. The results demonstrate that, although the NH(2) terminus appears to be the primary determinant of the beta3b-mediated shift in V(0.5) at low Ca(2)+, removal of the NH(2) terminus reveals two other interesting aspects of the action of the beta3b subunit. First, the conductance-voltage curves for activation of channels containing the beta3b subunit are best described by a double Boltzmann shape, which is proposed to arise from two independent voltage-dependent activation steps. Second, the presence of the beta3b subunit results in channels that exhibit an anomalous instantaneous outward current rectification that is correlated with a voltage dependence in the time-averaged single-channel current. The two effects appear to be unrelated, but indicative of the variety of ways that interactions between beta and alpha subunits can affect BK channel function. The COOH terminus of the beta3b subunit produces no discernible functional effects.  相似文献   

5.
Large conductance, calcium- and voltage-gated potassium (BK) channels are ubiquitous and critical for neuronal function, immunity, and smooth muscle contractility. BK channels are thought to be regulated by phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)) only through phospholipase C (PLC)-generated PIP(2) metabolites that target Ca(2+) stores and protein kinase C and, eventually, the BK channel. Here, we report that PIP(2) activates BK channels independently of PIP(2) metabolites. PIP(2) enhances Ca(2+)-driven gating and alters both open and closed channel distributions without affecting voltage gating and unitary conductance. Recovery from activation was strongly dependent on PIP(2) acyl chain length, with channels exposed to water-soluble diC4 and diC8 showing much faster recovery than those exposed to PIP(2) (diC16). The PIP(2)-channel interaction requires negative charge and the inositol moiety in the phospholipid headgroup, and the sequence RKK in the S6-S7 cytosolic linker of the BK channel-forming (cbv1) subunit. PIP(2)-induced activation is drastically potentiated by accessory beta(1) (but not beta(4)) channel subunits. Moreover, PIP(2) robustly activates BK channels in vascular myocytes, where beta(1) subunits are abundantly expressed, but not in skeletal myocytes, where these subunits are barely detectable. These data demonstrate that the final PIP(2) effect is determined by channel accessory subunits, and such mechanism is subunit specific. In HEK293 cells, cotransfection of cbv1+beta(1) and PI4-kinaseIIalpha robustly activates BK channels, suggesting a role for endogenous PIP(2) in modulating channel activity. Indeed, in membrane patches excised from vascular myocytes, BK channel activity runs down and Mg-ATP recovers it, this recovery being abolished by PIP(2) antibodies applied to the cytosolic membrane surface. Moreover, in intact arterial myocytes under physiological conditions, PLC inhibition on top of blockade of downstream signaling leads to drastic BK channel activation. Finally, pharmacological treatment that raises PIP(2) levels and activates BK channels dilates de-endothelized arteries that regulate cerebral blood flow. These data indicate that endogenous PIP(2) directly activates vascular myocyte BK channels to control vascular tone.  相似文献   

6.
Pharmacologic approaches to activate K+ channels represent an emerging strategy to regulate membrane excitability. Here we report the identification and characterization of a lipid soluble toxin, mallotoxin (rottlerin), which potently activates the large conductance voltage and Ca2+-activated K+ channel (BK) expressed in a heterologous expression system and human vascular smooth muscle cells, shifting the conductance/voltage relationship by >100 mV. Probing the mechanism of action, we discover that the BK channel can be activated in the absence of divalent cations (Ca2+, Mg2+), suggesting that the mallotoxin mechanism of action involves the voltage-dependent gating of the channel. Mallotoxin-activated channels remain incrementally sensitive to Ca2+ and beta subunits. In comparison to other small hydrophobic poisons, anesthetic agents, and protein toxins that inhibit ion channel activity, mallotoxin potently activates channel activity. In certain respects, mallotoxin acts as a BK channel beta1 subunit mimetic, preserving BK channel Ca2+ sensitivity yet adjusting the set-point for BK channel activation to a more hyperpolarized membrane potential.  相似文献   

7.
BK channel β subunits (β1–β4) modulate the function of channels formed by slo1 subunits to produce tissue-specific phenotypes. The molecular mechanism of how the homologous β subunits differentially alter BK channel functions and the role of different BK channel functions in various physiologic processes remain unclear. By studying channels expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes, we show a novel disulfide-cross-linked dimer conopeptide, Vt3.1 that preferentially inhibits BK channels containing the β4 subunit, which is most abundantly expressed in brain and important for neuronal functions. Vt3.1 inhibits the currents by a maximum of 71%, shifts the G-V relation by 45 mV approximately half-saturation concentrations, and alters both open and closed time of single channel activities, indicating that the toxin alters voltage dependence of the channel. Vt3.1 contains basic residues and inhibits voltage-dependent activation by electrostatic interactions with acidic residues in the extracellular loops of the slo1 and β4 subunits. These results suggest a large interaction surface between the slo1 subunit of BK channels and the β4 subunit, providing structural insight into the molecular interactions between slo1 and β4 subunits. The results also suggest that Vt3.1 is an excellent tool for studying β subunit modulation of BK channels and for understanding the physiological roles of BK channels in neurophysiology.  相似文献   

8.
Large conductance, Ca(2+)- and voltage-activated K(+) (BK) channels are exquisitely regulated to suit their diverse roles in a large variety of physiological processes. BK channels are composed of pore-forming alpha subunits and a family of tissue-specific accessory beta subunits. The smooth muscle-specific beta1 subunit has an essential role in regulating smooth muscle contraction and modulates BK channel steady-state open probability and gating kinetics. Effects of beta1 on channel's gating energetics are not completely understood. One of the difficulties is that it has not yet been possible to measure the effects of beta1 on channel's intrinsic closed-to-open transition (in the absence of voltage sensor activation and Ca(2+) binding) due to the very low open probability in the presence of beta1. In this study, we used a mutation of the alpha subunit (F315Y) that increases channel openings by greater than four orders of magnitude to directly compare channels' intrinsic open probabilities in the presence and absence of the beta1 subunit. Effects of beta1 on steady-state open probabilities of both wild-type alpha and the F315Y mutation were analyzed using the dual allosteric HA model. We found that mouse beta1 has two major effects on channel's gating energetics. beta1 reduces the intrinsic closed-to-open equilibrium that underlies the inhibition of BK channel opening seen in submicromolar Ca(2+). Further, P(O) measurements at limiting slope allow us to infer that beta1 shifts open channel voltage sensor activation to negative membrane potentials, which contributes to enhanced channel opening seen at micromolar Ca(2+) concentrations. Using the F315Y alpha subunit with deletion mutants of beta1, we also demonstrate that the small N- and C-terminal intracellular domains of beta1 play important roles in altering channel's intrinsic opening and voltage sensor activation. In summary, these results demonstrate that beta1 has distinct effects on BK channel intrinsic gating and voltage sensor activation that can be functionally uncoupled by mutations in the intracellular domains.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Chen M  Gan G  Wu Y  Wang L  Wu Y  Ding J 《PloS one》2008,3(5):e2114
The auxiliary beta subunits of large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (BK) channels greatly contribute to the diversity of BK (mSlo1 alpha) channels, which is fundamental to the adequate function in many tissues. Here we describe a functional element of the extracellular segment of hbeta2 auxiliary subunits that acts as the positively charged rings to modify the BK channel conductance. Four consecutive lysines of the hbeta2 extracellular loop, which reside sufficiently close to the extracellular entryway of the pore, constitute three positively charged rings. These rings can decrease the extracellular K(+) concentration and prevent the Charybdotoxin (ChTX) from approaching the extracellular entrance of channels through electrostatic mechanism, leading to the reduction of K(+) inflow or the outward rectification of BK channels. Our results demonstrate that the lysine rings formed by the hbeta2 auxiliary subunits influences the inward current of BK channels, providing a mechanism by which current can be rapidly diminished during cellular repolarization. Furthermore, this study will be helpful to understand the functional diversity of BK channels contributed by different auxiliary beta subunits.  相似文献   

11.
Large-conductance (BK-type) Ca(2+)-activated potassium channels are activated by membrane depolarization and cytoplasmic Ca(2+). BK channels are expressed in a broad variety of cells and have a corresponding diversity in properties. Underlying much of the functional diversity is a family of four tissue-specific accessory subunits (beta1-beta4). Biophysical characterization has shown that the beta4 subunit confers properties of the so-called "type II" BK channel isotypes seen in brain. These properties include slow gating kinetics and resistance to iberiotoxin and charybdotoxin blockade. In addition, the beta4 subunit reduces the apparent voltage sensitivity of channel activation and has complex effects on apparent Ca(2+) sensitivity. Specifically, channel activity at low Ca(2+) is inhibited, while at high Ca(2+), activity is enhanced. The goal of this study is to understand the mechanism underlying beta4 subunit action in the context of a dual allosteric model for BK channel gating. We observed that beta4's most profound effect is a decrease in P(o) (at least 11-fold) in the absence of calcium binding and voltage sensor activation. However, beta4 promotes channel opening by increasing voltage dependence of P(o)-V relations at negative membrane potentials. In the context of the dual allosteric model for BK channels, we find these properties are explained by distinct and opposing actions of beta4 on BK channels. beta4 reduces channel opening by decreasing the intrinsic gating equilibrium (L(0)), and decreasing the allosteric coupling between calcium binding and voltage sensor activation (E). However, beta4 has a compensatory effect on channel opening following depolarization by shifting open channel voltage sensor activation (Vh(o)) to more negative membrane potentials. The consequence is that beta4 causes a net positive shift of the G-V relationship (relative to alpha subunit alone) at low calcium. At higher calcium, the contribution by Vh(o) and an increase in allosteric coupling to Ca(2+) binding (C) promotes a negative G-V shift of alpha+beta4 channels as compared to alpha subunits alone. This manner of modulation predicts that type II BK channels are downregulated by beta4 at resting voltages through effects on L(0). However, beta4 confers a compensatory effect on voltage sensor activation that increases channel opening during depolarization.  相似文献   

12.
Voltage-gated calcium (Ca2+) channels provide the pathway for Ca2+ influxes that underlie Ca2+ -dependent responses in muscles, nerves and other excitable cells. They are also targets of a wide variety of drugs and toxins. Ca2+ channels are multisubunit protein complexes consisting of a pore-forming alpha(1) subunit and other modulatory subunits, including the beta subunit. Here, we review the structure and function of schistosome Ca2+ channel subunits, with particular emphasis on variant Ca2+ channel beta subunits (Ca(v)betavar) found in these parasites. In particular, we examine the role these beta subunits may play in the action of praziquantel, the current drug of choice against schistosomiasis. We also present evidence that Ca(v)betavar homologs are found in other praziquantel-sensitive platyhelminths such as the pork tapeworm, Taenia solium, and that these variant beta subunits may thus represent a platyhelminth-specific gene family.  相似文献   

13.
Acid sensing ion channels (ASICs), Ca2+ and voltage-activated potassium channels (BK) are widely present throughout the central nervous system. Previous studies have shown that when expressed together in heterologous cells, ASICs inhibit BK channels, and this inhibition is relieved by acidic extracellular pH. We hypothesized that ASIC and BK channels might interact in neurons, and that ASICs may regulate BK channel activity. We found that ASICs inhibited BK currents in cultured wild-type cortical neurons, but not in ASIC1a/2/3 triple knockout neurons. The inhibition in the wild-type was partially relieved by a drop in extracellular pH to 6. To test the consequences of ASIC-BK interaction for neuronal excitability, we compared action potential firing in cultured cortical neurons from wild-type and ASIC1a/2/3 null mice. We found that in the knockout, action potentials were narrow and exhibited increased after-hyperpolarization. Moreover, the excitability of these neurons was significantly increased. These findings are consistent with increased BK channel activity in the neurons from ASIC1a/2/3 null mice. Our data suggest that ASICs can act as endogenous pH-dependent inhibitors of BK channels, and thereby can reduce neuronal excitability.  相似文献   

14.
Coexpression of the beta subunit (KV,Cabeta) with the alpha subunit of mammalian large conductance Ca2+- activated K+ (BK) channels greatly increases the apparent Ca2+ sensitivity of the channel. Using single-channel analysis to investigate the mechanism for this increase, we found that the beta subunit increased open probability (Po) by increasing burst duration 20-100-fold, while having little effect on the durations of the gaps (closed intervals) between bursts or on the numbers of detected open and closed states entered during gating. The effect of the beta subunit was not equivalent to raising intracellular Ca2+ in the absence of the beta subunit, suggesting that the beta subunit does not act by increasing all the Ca2+ binding rates proportionally. The beta subunit also inhibited transitions to subconductance levels. It is the retention of the BK channel in the bursting states by the beta subunit that increases the apparent Ca2+ sensitivity of the channel. In the presence of the beta subunit, each burst of openings is greatly amplified in duration through increases in both the numbers of openings per burst and in the mean open times. Native BK channels from cultured rat skeletal muscle were found to have bursting kinetics similar to channels expressed from alpha subunits alone.  相似文献   

15.
Large-conductance, calcium-activated K+ (BK) channels are widely distributed throughout the nervous system and play an essential role in regulation of action potential duration and firing frequency, along with neurotransmitter release at the presynaptic terminal. We have previously demonstrated that select mutations in cysteine string protein (CSPα), a presynaptic J-protein and co-chaperone, increase BK channel expression. This observation raised the possibility that wild-type CSPα normally functions to limit neuronal BK channel expression. Here we show by Western blot analysis of transfected neuroblastoma cells that when BK channels are present at elevated levels, CSPα acts to reduce expression. Moreover, we demonstrate that the accessory subunits, BKβ4 and BKβ1 do not alter CSPα-mediated reduction of expressed BKα subunits. Structure-function analysis reveals that the N-terminal J-domain of CSPα is critical for the observed regulation of BK channels levels. Finally, we demonstrate that CSPα limits BK current amplitude, while the loss-of-function homologue CSPαHPD-AAA increases BK current. Our observations indicate that CSPα has a role in regulating synaptic excitability and neurotransmission by limiting expression of BK channels.  相似文献   

16.
17.
We demonstrated previously that BK (KCa1.1) channel activity (NPo) increases in response to bisphenol A (BPA). Moreover, BK channels containing regulatory β1 subunits were more sensitive to the stimulatory effect of BPA. How BPA increases BK channel NPo remains mostly unknown. Estradiol activates BK channels by binding to an extracellular site, but neither the existence nor location of a BPA binding site has been demonstrated. We tested the hypothesis that an extracellular binding site is responsible for activation of BK channels by BPA. We synthesized membrane-impermeant BPA-monosulfate (BPA-MS) and used patch clamp electrophysiology to study channels composed of α or α + β1 subunits in cell-attached (C-A), whole-cell (W-C), and inside-out (I-O) patches. In C-A patches, bath application of BPA-MS (100 μM) had no effect on the NPo of BK channels, regardless of their subunit composition. Importantly, however, subsequent addition of membrane-permeant BPA (100 μM) increased the NPo of both α and α + β1 channels in C-A patches. The C-A data indicate that in order to alter BK channel NPo, BPA must interact with the channel itself (or some closely associated partner) and diffusible messengers are not involved. In W-C patches, 100 μM BPA-MS activated current in cells expressing α subunits, whereas cells expressing α + β1 subunits responded similarly to a log-order lower concentration (10 μM). The W-C data suggest that an extracellular activation site exists, but do not eliminate the possibility that an intracellular site may also be present. In I-O patches, where the cytoplasmic face was exposed to the bath, BPA-MS had no effect on the NPo of BK α subunits, but BPA increased it. BPA-MS increased the NPo of α + β1 channels in I-O patches, but not as much as BPA. We conclude that BPA activates BK α via an extracellular site and that BPA-sensitivity is increased by the β1 subunit, which may also constitute part of an intracellular binding site.  相似文献   

18.
The beta(2) subunit of the large conductance Ca(2+)- and voltage-activated K(+) channel (BK(Ca)) modulates a number of channel functions, such as the apparent Ca(2+)/voltage sensitivity, pharmacological and kinetic properties of the channel. In addition, the N terminus of the beta(2) subunit acts as an inactivating particle that produces a relatively fast inactivation of the ionic conductance. Applying voltage clamp fluorometry to fluorescently labeled human BK(Ca) channels (hSlo), we have investigated the mechanisms of operation of the beta(2) subunit. We found that the leftward shift on the voltage axis of channel activation curves (G(V)) produced by coexpression with beta(2) subunits is associated with a shift in the same direction of the fluorescence vs. voltage curves (F(V)), which are reporting the voltage dependence of the main voltage-sensing region of hSlo (S4-transmembrane domain). In addition, we investigated the inactivating mechanism of the beta(2) subunits by comparing its properties with the ones of the typical N-type inactivation process of Shaker channel. While fluorescence recordings from the inactivated Shaker channels revealed the immobilization of the S4 segments in the active conformation, we did not observe a similar feature in BK(Ca) channels coexpressed with the beta(2) subunit. The experimental observations are consistent with the view that the beta(2) subunit of BK(Ca) channels facilitates channel activation by changing the voltage sensor equilibrium and that the beta(2)-induced inactivation process does not follow a typical N-type mechanism.  相似文献   

19.
Proteins arising from the Slo family assemble into homotetramers to form functional large-conductance, Ca2+- and voltage-activated K+ channels, or BK channels. These channels are also found in association with accessory beta subunits, which modulate several aspects of channel gating and expression. Coexpression with either of two such subunits, beta2 or beta3b, confers time-dependent inactivation onto BK currents. mSlo1+beta3b channels display inactivation that is very rapid but incomplete. Previous studies involving macroscopic recordings from these channels have argued for the existence of a second, short-lived conducting state in rapid equilibrium with the nonconducting, inactivated conformation. This state has been termed "pre-inactivated," or O*. beta2-mediated inactivation, in contrast, occurs more slowly but is virtually complete at steady state. Here we demonstrate, using both macroscopic and single channel current recordings, that a preinactivated state is also a property of mSlo1+beta2 channels. Detection of this state is enhanced by a mutation (W4E) within the initial beta2 NH2-terminal segment critical for inactivation. This mutation increases the rate of recovery to the preinactivated open state, yielding macroscopic inactivation properties qualitatively more similar to those of beta3b. Furthermore, short-lived openings corresponding to entry into the preinactivated state can be observed directly with single-channel recording. By examining the initial openings after depolarization of a channel containing beta2-W4E, we show that channels can arrive directly at the preinactivated state without passing through the usual long-lived open conformation. This final result suggests that channel opening and inactivation are at least partly separable in this channel. Mechanistically, the preinactivated and inactivated conformations may correspond to binding of the beta subunit NH2 terminus in the vicinity of the cytoplasmic pore mouth, followed by definitive movement of the NH2 terminus into a position of occlusion within the ion-conducting pathway.  相似文献   

20.
The large-conductance, Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channels are regulators of voltage-dependent Ca2+ entry in many cell types. The BK channel accessory beta1-subunit promotes channel activation in smooth muscle and is required for proper tone in the vasculature and bladder. However, although BK channels have also been implicated in airway smooth muscle function, their regulation by the beta1-subunit has not been investigated. Utilizing the gene-targeted mice for the beta1-subunit gene, we have investigated the role of the beta1-subunit in tracheal smooth muscle. In mice with the beta1-subunit-knockout allele, BK channel activity was significantly reduced in excised tracheal smooth muscle patches and spontaneous BK currents were reduced in whole tracheal smooth muscle cells. Knockout of the beta1-subunit resulted in an increase in resting Ca2+ levels and an increase in the sustained component of Ca2+ influx after cholinergic signaling. Tracheal constriction studies demonstrate that the level of constriction is the same with knockout of the beta1-subunit and BK channel block with paxillin, indicating that BK channels contribute little to airway relaxation in the absence of the beta1-subunit. Utilizing nifedipine, we found that the increased constriction caused by knockout of the beta1-subunit could be accounted for by an increased recruitment of L-type voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels. These results indicate that the beta1-subunit is required in airway smooth muscle for control of voltage-dependent Ca2+ influx during rest and after cholinergic signaling in BK channels.  相似文献   

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