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1.
Beta gamma dimers of G proteins inhibit atrial muscarinic K+ channels   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
It has been proposed that beta gamma dimers of signal-transducing G proteins mediate muscarinic activation of atrial K+ channels. We examined this hypothesis by testing the effects of beta gamma dimers from four sources (human erythrocytes, human placenta, bovine brain, and bovine retina) on single channel muscarinic K+ (K+[acetylcholine (ACh)]) currents in inside-out membrane patches of adult guinea pig atria. None of the four beta gamma dimer preparations stimulated K+[ACh] currents; on the contrary, each inhibited the currents whether the currents were activated with GTP alone (agonist-independent activity) or with GTP plus a muscarinic agonist (agonist-dependent activity). Detergents at concentrations used to suspend erythrocyte, brain, and placental beta gamma dimers had no effect by themselves, and detergents were not used with the retinal beta gamma dimers. We conclude that beta gamma dimers do not mediate stimulatory effects of the endogenous G protein that regulates the K+ channels. In fact beta gamma dimers appear to inhibit activation by the endogenous G alpha subunits. Further insight into the role of beta gamma dimers came from the observation that agonist-independent GTP-activated K+[ACh] currents were inhibited by beta gamma dimers at about one-tenth the concentration required to inhibit agonist-dependent activation. One possibility is that dimeric beta gamma may have a higher affinity for free alpha subunits than for alpha subunits associated with agonist-occupied receptors. Thus, in addition to the known requirement of beta gamma dimers for the interaction of alpha subunits with receptors, beta gamma dimers may also improve the signal-to-noise ratio for agonists by reducing agonist-independent background activities.  相似文献   

2.
Aluminum fluoride (AlF4-) activates the heterotrimeric G protein Gs (stimulatory G protein of adenylylcyclase) (Sternweis, P. C., and Gilman, A. G. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 79, 4888-4891) and GT (transducin), and for GT, Bigay et al. (Bigay, J., Deterre, P., Pfister, C., and Chabre, M. (1985) FEBS Lett. 191, 181-185) have made the intriguing proposal that AlF4- acts by mimicking the gamma-phosphate of GTP. The endogenous G protein (probably G alpha i-2 or G alpha i-3 (Yatani, A., Mattera, R., Codina, J., Graf, R., Okabe, K., Padrell, E., Iyengar, R., Brown, A. M., and Birnbaumer, L. (1988) Nature 336, 680-682) that stimulates the muscarinic atrial K+ (K+[ACh]) channel is also thought to be activated by AlF4- (Kurachi, Y., Nakajima, T., and Ito, H. (1987) Circulation 76, 105P). To investigate the AlF4- mechanism, we applied potassium fluoride (KF) to the cytoplasmic face of inside-out membrane patches excised from guinea pig atria. We found that KF activated single K+[ACh] channel currents in both a concentration- and a Mg(2+)-dependent manner. Activation persisted following removal of KF, but unlike activation by guanosine 5'-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S), was fully reversed by removal of Mg2+. Evidence for Al3+ involvement was that the Al3+ chelator deferoxamine (500 microM) inhibited KF activation and that at low concentrations of KF (less than 1 mM), micromolar AlCl3 concentrations potentiated KF stimulation. The rate of activation produced by KF was far slower than the rate produced by GTP or GTP gamma S, and unlike these guanine nucleotides, the rate was unchanged in the presence of agonist. To test the gamma-phosphate-mimicking hypothesis, we evaluated the requirement for GDP; and to accomplish this, it was necessary to establish a condition that ensured exchange of guanine nucleotides. This condition was satisfied by using the muscarinic agonist carbachol because both the rate and the extent of activation of the K+[ACh] channels produced by GTP were much faster in carbachol, and both were greatly slowed when GDP was added along with GTP. By contrast, the effects of KF were unchanged by carbachol in the presence or absence of GDP. Further evidence that GDP is not essential for activation by AlF4- was provided by the observation that during carbachol activation and following extensive washing with GMP, guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) at blocking concentrations had no effect on activation produced by KF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR)-stimulated, inwardly rectifying K+ current (IK [ACh]) was examined in single bullfrog atrial cells using the whole-cell patch clamp technique. IK[ACh] was activated either by bath addition of 1 microM ACh or via activation of the G protein, Gk, with guanosine-gamma-thiotriphosphate (GTP gamma S). Arachidonic acid (AA) modulated IK[ACh] under both conditions. AA decreased mAChR-stimulated IK[ACh] and increased the rate of decay from the peak current (desensitization). In addition, AA affected GTP gamma S-activated IK[ACh] by modulation of Gk. The effects of AA and its metabolites on Gk were assessed by examining their effects on both the basal rate of Gk activation by GTP gamma S, and the mAChR-mediated increase in activation rate produced by nanomolar ACh. AA increased the basal rate of GTP gamma S-mediated IK[ACh] activation, but reduced the ACh-induced augmentation of this rate. All of the effects of AA on GTP gamma S-mediated IK[ACh] activation were produced by metabolites. A lipoxygenase inhibitor, nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA), decreased the basal and ACh-enhanced rate of IK[ACh] activation in both the presence and absence of exogenous AA. In contrast, indomethacin (INDO), a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, increased the basal rate of IK[ACh] activation by GTP gamma S in both the presence and absence of exogenous AA, and reversed the effects of AA on the ACh-augmented basal rate. AA metabolites produced via lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase pathways thus have opposing effects on the signal transduction pathway from mAChR to IK[ACh]. We directly tested a lipoxygenase pathway metabolite, LTC4, on GTP gamma S-mediated IK[ACh] activation and found that it not only overcame the inhibitory effects of NDGA, but also increased both the basal and ACh-augmented rate of IK[ACh] activation. From these data, we propose that AA metabolites modulate the function of Gk by altering its kinetic properties.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Guanine nucleotide binding (G) proteins are heterotrimers that couple a wide range of receptors to ionic channels. The coupling may be indirect, via cytoplasmic agents, or direct, as has been shown for two K+ channels and two Ca2+ channels. One example of direct G protein gating is the atrial muscarinic K+ channel K+[ACh], an inwardly rectifying K+ channel with a slope conductance of 40 pS in symmetrical isotonic K+ solutions and a mean open lifetime of 1.4 ms at potentials between -40 and -100 mV. Another is the clonal GH3 muscarinic or somatostatin K+ channel, also inwardly rectifying but with a slope conductance of 55 pS. A G protein, Gk, purified from human red blood cells (hRBC) activates K+ [ACh] channels at subpicomolar concentrations; its alpha subunit is equipotent. Except for being irreversible, their effects on gating precisely mimic physiological gating produced by muscarinic agonists. The alpha k effects are general and are similar in atria from adult guinea pig, neonatal rat, and chick embryo. The hydrophilic beta gamma from transducin has no effect while hydrophobic beta gamma from brain, hRBCs, or retina has effects at nanomolar concentrations which in our hands cannot be dissociated from detergent effects. An anti-alpha k monoclonal antibody blocks muscarinic activation, supporting the concept that the physiological mediator is the alpha subunit not the beta gamma dimer. The techniques of molecular biology are now being used to specify G protein gating. A "bacterial" alpha i-3 expressed in Escherichia coli using a pT7 expression system mimics the gating produced by hRBC alpha k.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of leukotriene C4 (LTC4) on activation of muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR)-stimulated, inwardly rectifying K+ current (IK[ACh]) were examined in single bullfrog atrial myocytes using the whole-cell patch clamp technique. LTC4 produced a reversible, concentration-dependent increase in steady-state, guanosine-gamma- thiotriphosphate (GTP gamma S)-activated IK[ACh], with a K0.5 of 3.1 microM. LTC4 also increased the rate of GTP gamma S-mediated IK[ACh] activation, both in the absence and presence of 1 nM ACh, with comparable K0.5 values of 4.7 microM under basal conditions and 4.9 microM in the presence of 1 nM ACh. LTC4 did not alter the relative affinities of the G protein, Gk, for GTP gamma S and GTP. We hypothesize that all of the effects of LTC4 on the kinetics of Gk- mediated IK[ACh] activation are produced at a common site with a K0.5 of 3-5 microM. The effects of LTC4 on IK[ACh] activation are fully reversible in the presence of GTP gamma S. Under physiological conditions (i.e., intracellular GTP), 10 microM LTC4 increased the ACh- activated peak IK[ACh]. Inhibitors of cellular LTC4 production, including 5,8,11,14-eicosatetraynoic acid, baicalein, cinnamyl-3,4- dihydroxy-alpha-cyanocinnamate, and alpha-pentyl-4-(2- quinolinylmethoxy)-benzene methanol, greatly attenuated ACh-dependent IK[ACh] activation, preventing activation of peak, and producing a lower steady-state IK[ACh] (when compared with the control response in the same cell). Addition of exogenous LTC4 was able to overcome the effects of LTC4 synthesis inhibitors, restoring both the peak and steady-state IK[ACh] responses. Although the mechanism of LTC4-mediated modulation of IK[ACh] activation is not known, our results suggest that endogenously produced lipoxygenase metabolites of arachidonic acid, specifically LTC4, are involved in the physiological process of IK[ACh] activation.  相似文献   

7.
Using the patch clamp technique, we examined the agonist-free, basal interaction between the muscarinic acetylcholine (m-ACh) receptor and the G protein (GK)-gated muscarinic K+ channel (IK.ACh), and the modification of this interaction by ACh binding to the receptor in single atrial myocytes of guinea pig heart. In the whole cell clamp mode, guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP-gamma S) gradually increased the IK.ACh current in the absence of agonists (e.g., acetylcholine). This increase was inhibited in cells that were pretreated with islet-activating protein (IAP, pertussis toxin) or N-ethylmaleimide (NEM). In inside-out patches, even in the absence of agonists, intracellular GTP caused openings of IK.ACh in a concentration-dependent manner in approximately 80% of the patches. Channel activation by GTP in the absence of agonist was much less than that caused by GTP-gamma S. The agonist-independent, GTP-induced activation of IK.ACh was inhibited by the A promoter of IAP (with nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) or NEM. As the ACh concentration was increased, the GTP-induced maximal open probability of IK.ACh was increased and the GTP concentration for the half-maximal activation of IK.ACh was decreased. Intracellular GDP inhibited the GTP-induced openings of IK.ACh in a concentration-dependent fashion. The half-inhibition of IK.ACh openings occurred at a much lower concentration of GDP in the absence of agonists than in the presence of ACh. From these results, we concluded (a) that the interaction between the m-ACh receptor and GK is essential for basal stimulation of IK.ACh, and (b) that ACh binding to the receptor accelerates the turnover of GK and increases GK's affinity to GTP analogues over GDP.  相似文献   

8.
This study reports the identification of an endogenous inhibitor of the G protein-gated (K(ACh)) channel and its effect on the K(ACh) channel kinetics. In the presence of acetylcholine in the pipette, K(ACh) channels in inside-out atrial patches were activated by applying GTP to the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. In these patches, addition of physiological concentration of intracellular ATP (4 mM) upregulated K(ACh) channel activity approximately fivefold and induced long-lived openings. However, such ATP-dependent gating is normally not observed in cell-attached patches, indicating that an endogenous substance that inhibits the ATP effect is present in the cell. We searched for such an inhibitor in the cell. ATP-dependent gating of the K(ACh) channel was inhibited by the addition of the cytosolic fraction of rat atrial or brain tissues. The lipid component of the cytosolic fraction was found to contain the inhibitory activity. To identify the lipid inhibitor, we tested the effect of approximately 40 different lipid molecules. Among the lipids tested, only unsaturated free fatty acids such as oleic, linoleic, and arachidonic acids (0.2-2 microM) reversibly inhibited the ATP-dependent gating of native K(ACh) channels in atrial cells and hippocampal neurons, and of recombinant K(ACh) channels (GIRK1/4 and GIRK1/2) expressed in oocytes. Unsaturated free fatty acids also inhibited phosphatidylinositol-4, 5-bisphosphate (PIP(2))-induced changes in K(ACh) channel kinetics but were ineffective against ATP-activated background K(1) channels and PIP(2)-activated K(ATP) channels. These results show that during agonist-induced activation, unsaturated free fatty acids in the cytoplasm help to keep the cardiac and neuronal K(ACh) channels downregulated by antagonizing their ATP-dependent gating. The opposing effects of ATP and free fatty acids represent a novel regulatory mechanism for the G protein-gated K(+) channel.  相似文献   

9.
Recombinant alpha i-3 subunit of G protein activates Gk-gated K+ channels   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
G proteins, particularly those sensitive to pertussis toxin, are difficult to separate biochemically, creating uncertainty in functional assignments. For this reason the cDNAs encoding G alpha i-3 and two of the G alpha s splice variants were expressed as fusion proteins in Escherichia coli using a T7 promoter-based expression system. These proteins were denoted r alpha i-3 and r alpha s (short and long) and accumulated in bacteria to as much as 5-10% of total cellular protein, of which 5-10% was soluble in lysates. Soluble r alpha subunits were tested for stimulation of K+ channel activity in inside-out atrial membrane patches and for reconstitution of cyc- adenylyl cyclase activity. r alpha i-3, activated either by guanosine 5'-(3-thio)triphosphate (GTP gamma S) or AlF-4, stimulated in a concentration-dependent manner single channel K+ currents in isolated atrial membrane patches of three species: guinea pigs, neonatal rats, and embryonic chick. In contrast, GTP gamma S-activated r alpha s did not. In agreement with a similar study by Graziano et al. (Graziano, M. P., Casey, P. J. and Gilman, A. G. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 11375-11381), both r alpha s forms reconstituted GTP gamma S-stimulated cyc- adenylyl cyclase activity, albeit at concentrations 50-100 times higher than those needed with native Gs. The concentrations of r alpha i-3 needed to stimulate the K+ channels were also higher than needed with native human erythrocyte Gk, in this case 30-50 times. Single K+ channel currents stimulated by r alpha i-3 were indistinguishable from those stimulated by the natural effector acetylcholine. Thus, bacterial expression of G alpha subunits provided the means to demonstrate unequivocally that Gi-3 has intrinsic Gk activity.  相似文献   

10.
GTP-binding (G) proteins have been shown to mediate activation of inwardly rectifying potassium (K+) channels in cardiac, neuronal and neuroendocrine cells. Here, we report functional expression of a recombinant inwardly rectifying channel which we call KGP (or hpKir3.4), to signify that it is K+ selective, G-protein-gated and isolated from human pancreas. KGP expression in Xenopus oocytes resulted in sizeable basal (or agonist-independent) currents while coexpression with a G-protein-linked receptor, yielded additional agonist-induced currents. Coexpression of KGP and hGIRK1 (a human brain homolog of GIRK1/Kir3.1) produced much larger basal currents than those observed with KGP or hGIRK1 alone, and upon coexpression with receptor, similarly large agonist-induced currents could be obtained. Pertussis toxin treatment significantly diminished agonist-dependent currents due to either KGP or KGP/hGIRK1 expression. Interestingly, PTX also significantly reduced basal KGP or KGP/hGIRK1 currents, suggesting that basal activity is largely the result of G-protein gating as well. When the two channels were coexpressed with receptor, the relative increase in current elicited by agonist was similar whether KGP and hGIRK1 were expressed alone or together. When in vitro translated or when expressed in Xenopus oocytes or CHO mammalian cells, KGP gave rise to a nonglycosylated 45-kD protein. Antibodies directed against either KGP or hGIRK1 coprecipitated both proteins coexpressed in oocytes, providing evidence for the heteromeric assembly of the two channels and suggesting that the current potentiation seen with coexpression of the two channel subunits is due to specific interactions between them. An endogenous oocyte protein similar in size to KGP was also coprecipitated with hGIRK1.  相似文献   

11.
G protein-activated K(+) channels (GIRKs or Kir3.x) are targets for the volatile anesthetic, halothane. When coexpressed with the m(2) acetylcholine (ACh) receptor in Xenopus oocytes, agonist-activated GIRK1(F137S)- and GIRK2-mediated currents are inhibited by halothane, whereas in the absence of ACh, high concentrations of halothane induce GIRK1(F137S)-mediated currents. To elucidate the molecular mechanism of halothane action on GIRK currents of different subunit compositions, we constructed deletion mutants of GIRK1(F137S) (GIRK1(Delta363*)) and GIRK2 (GIRK2(Delta356)) lacking the C-terminal ends, as well as chimeric GIRK channels. Mutated GIRK channels showed normal currents when activated by ACh but exhibited different pharmacological properties toward halothane. GIRK2(Delta356) showed no sensitivity against the inhibitory action of halothane but was activated by halothane in the absence of an agonist. GIRK1(Delta363*) was activated by halothane more efficiently. Currents mediated by chimeric channels were inhibited by anesthetic concentrations that were at least 30-fold lower than those necessary to decrease GIRK2 wild type currents. Glutathione S-transferase pulldown experiments did not show displacement of bound Gbetagamma by halothane, indicating that halothane does not interfere with Gbetagamma binding. Single channel experiments revealed an influence of halothane on the gating of the channels: The agonist-induced currents of GIRK1 and GIRK2, carried mainly by brief openings, were inhibited, whereas higher concentrations of the anesthetic promoted long openings of GIRK1 channels. Because the C terminus is crucial for these effects, an interaction of halothane with the channel seems to be involved in the mechanism of current modulation.  相似文献   

12.
The cardiac M2 muscarinic receptor/G protein/K+ channel system was studied in neonatal rat atrial cells cultured with and without 10 microM carbachol (CCh) for 24 h. Channel activity in CCh-pretreated cells was substantially reduced as a result of long-term desensitization regardless of whether the channel was activated by ACh in cell-attached patches or GTP in inside-out patches. Channel activity in CCh-pretreated cells was also low when the receptor was bypassed and the G protein and channel were directly activated by [gamma-S]GTP or both the receptor and G protein were bypassed and the channel was directly activated by trypsin. Finally, in CCh-pretreated cells, the whole cell K+ current was low when the channel was activated via the independent adenosine receptor. This suggests that the channel is involved in long-term desensitization. However, in CCh-pretreated cells, although the receptor was internalized, there was no internalization of the channel. We suggest that the function of the muscarinic K+ channel declines in long-term desensitization of the cardiac M2 muscarinic receptor/G protein/K+ channel system.  相似文献   

13.
G(i) protein-coupled receptors such as the M(2) muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) and A(1) adenosine receptor have been shown to activate G protein-activated inwardly rectifying K(+) channels (GIRKs) via pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins in atrial myocytes and in many neuronal cells. Here we show that muscarinic M(2) receptors not only activate but also reversibly inhibit these K(+) currents when stimulated with agonist for up to 2 min. The M(2) mAChR-mediated inhibition of the channel was also observed when the channels were first activated by inclusion of guanosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) in the pipette. Under these conditions the M(2) mAChR-induced inhibition was quasi-irreversible, suggesting a role for G proteins in the inhibitory process. In contrast, when GIRK currents were maximally activated by co-expressing exogenous Gbetagamma, the extent of acetylcholine (ACh)-induced inhibition was significantly reduced, suggesting competition between the receptor-mediated inhibition and the large pool of available Gbetagamma subunits. The signaling pathway that led to the ACh-induced inhibition of GIRK channels was unaffected by pertussis toxin pretreatment. Furthermore, the internalization and agonist-induced phosphorylation of M(2) mAChR was not required because a phosphorylation- and internalization-deficient mutant of the M(2) mAChR was as potent as the wild-type counterpart. Pharmacological agents modulating various protein kinases or phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase did not affect the inhibition of GIRK currents. Furthermore, the signaling pathway that mediates GIRK current inhibition was found to be membrane-delimited because bath application of ACh did not inhibit GIRK channel activity in cell-attached patches. Other G protein-coupled receptors including M(4) mAChR and alpha(1A) adrenergic receptors also caused the inhibition, whereas other G protein-coupled receptors including A(1) and A(3) adenosine receptors and alpha(2A) and alpha(2C) adrenergic receptors could not induce the inhibition. The presented results suggest the existence of a novel signaling pathway that can be activated selectively by M(2) and M(4) mAChR but not by adenosine receptors and that involves non-pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins leading to an inhibition of Gbetagamma-activated GIRK currents in a membrane-delimited fashion.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), a sulphydryl alkylating agent, on the acetylcholine-activated K+ current, IK(ACh), has been studied in single cells from bullfrog atrium using a tight-seal, whole-cell voltage clamp technique. Addition of NEM (5 x 10(-5) M) produced a time-dependent complete block of IK(ACh). Dialysis of guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S, 5-10 x 10(-4) M), a nonhydrolyzable GTP analogue, into the myoplasm from the recording pipette gradually activated IK(ACh) even in the absence of acetylcholine. This effect is thought to be due to a GTP gamma S-induced dissociation of GTP-binding proteins (Gi and/or Go) into subunits that can directly activate these K+ channels. When NEM (5 x 10(-5) M) was applied after the GTP gamma S effect had fully developed, it failed to inhibit the GTP gamma S-induced K+ current, indicating that the NEM effect is unlikely to be on the dissociated subunits of the GTP-binding protein(s) or on the K+ channels. In contrast, pretreatment with NEM before GTP gamma S application markedly reduced the muscarinic K+ current, suggesting that NEM can block this K+ current by inhibition of the dissociation of the GTP-binding proteins into functional subunits. In NEM-treated cells the stimulatory effect of isoproterenol on ICa was present, but the inhibitory action of ACh on ICa was completely abolished. These results demonstrated that NEM can preferentially inhibit muscarinic receptor-effector interactions, probably by alkylating the GTP-binding proteins that are essential for these responses.  相似文献   

15.
To elucidate the functional interaction between the active G protein subunit (GK*) and the cardiac muscarinic K+ (KACh) channel, the effect of intracellular GTP on the channel current fluctuation in the presence of 0.5 microM extracellular acetylcholine was examined in inside-out patches from guinea pig atrial myocytes using spectral analysis technique. The power density spectra of current fluctuations induced at various concentrations of GTP ([GTP]) were well fitted by the sum of two Lorentzian functions. Because the channel has one open state, the open-close transitions of the channel gate represented by the spectra could be described as C2<-->C1<-->O. As [GTP] was raised, the channel activity increased in a positive cooperative manner. The powers of the two Lorentzian components concomitantly increased, while the corner frequencies and the ratio of the powers at 0 Hz remained almost constant. This indicates that G protein activation did not affect the gating of each channel but mainly increased the number of functionally active channels in the patch to enhance the channel activity. Regulation of the number of functionally active channels could be described by a slow transition of the channel states, U (unavailable)<-- >A (available), which is independent of the gating. The equilibrium of this slow transition was shifted by GTP from U to A. Monod-Wyman- Changeux's allosteric model for the channel state transition(U<-->A) could well describe the positive cooperative increase in the channel availability by GTP, assuming that, in the presence of saturating concentrations of ACh, [GK*] linearly increased as [GTP] was raised in our experimental range. The model indicates that the cardiac KACh channel could be described as a multimer composed of four or more functionally identical subunits, to each of which one GK* binds.  相似文献   

16.
K(+) channels composed of G-protein-coupled inwardly rectifying K(+) channel (GIRK) (Kir3.0) subunits are expressed in cardiac, neuronal, and various endocrine tissues. They are involved in inhibiting excitability and contribute to regulating important physiological functions such as cardiac frequency and secretion of hormones. The functional cardiac (K((ACh))) channel activated by G(i)/G(o)-coupled receptors such as muscarinic M(2) or purinergic A(1) receptors is supposed to be composed of the subunits GIRK1 and GIRK4 in a heterotetrameric (2:2) fashion. In the present study, we have manipulated the subunit composition of the K((ACh)) channels in cultured atrial myocytes from hearts of adult rats by transient transfection of vectors encoding for GIRK1 or GIRK4 subunits or GIRK4 concatemeric constructs and investigated the effects on properties of macroscopic I(K(ACh)). Transfection with a GIRK1 vector did not cause any measurable effect on properties of I(K(ACh)), whereas transfection with a GIRK4 vector resulted in a complete loss in desensitization, a reduction of inward rectification, and a slowing of activation. Transfection of myocytes with a construct encoding for a concatemeric GIRK4(2) subunit had similar effects on desensitization and inward rectification. Following transfection of a tetrameric construct (GIRK4(4)), these changes in properties of I(K(ACh)) were still observed but were less pronounced. Heterologous expression in Chinese hamster ovary cells and human embryonic kidney 293 cells of monomeric, dimeric, and tetrameric GIRK4 resulted in robust currents activated by co-expressed A(1) and M(2) receptors, respectively. These data provide strong evidence that homomeric GIRK4 complexes form functional G(beta)gamma gated ion channels and that kinetic properties of GIRK channels, such as activation rate, desensitization, and inward rectification, depend on subunit composition.  相似文献   

17.
We demonstrated recently that purified preparations of Gs, the stimulatory G protein of adenylyl cyclase, can stabilize Ca2+ channels in inside-out cardiac ventricle membrane patches stimulated prior to excision by the beta-adrenergic agonist isoprenaline or by the dihydropyridine agonist Bay K 8644 and that such preparations of Gs can restore activity to spontaneously inactivated cardiac Ca2+ channels incorporated into planar lipid bilayers (Yatani, A., Codina, J., Reeves, J.P., Birnbaumer, L., and Brown, A.M. (1987) Science 238, 1288-1292). To test whether these effects represented true stimulation and to further identify the G protein responsible, we incorporated skeletal muscle T-tubule membranes into lipid bilayers and studied the response of their Ca2+ channels to G proteins, specifically Gs, and manipulations known to be specific for Gs. In contrast to cardiac channels, incorporated T-tubule Ca2+ channels exhibit stable average activities over prolonged periods of time (up to 20 min at room temperature), allowing assessment of possible effects of G proteins under steady-state assay conditions. We report that exogenously added human erythrocyte GTP gamma S (guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate]-activated Gs (Gs) or its resolved GTP gamma S-activated alpha subunit (alpha s) stimulate T-tubule Ca2+ channels by factors of 2-3 in the presence of Bay K 8644, and of 10-20 in the absence of Bay K 8644 and that they do so in a manner that is independent of concurrent or previous phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Activation of purified Gs by cholera toxin increases both its adenylyl cyclase stimulatory and its Ca2+ channel stimulatory effects. Ca2+ channels previously stimulated by the combined actions of Bay K 8644 and cAMP-dependent protein kinase still respond to Gs. We conclude that the responses seen are due to Gs rather than a contaminant, that the effect on Ca2+ channel activity is that of a true stimulation, akin to that on adenylyl cyclase, and show that a given G protein may regulate more than one effector system.  相似文献   

18.
《Cellular signalling》2014,26(6):1182-1192
Opening of G-protein-activated inward-rectifying K+ (GIRK, Kir3) channels is regulated by interaction with βγ-subunits of Pertussis-toxin-sensitive G proteins upon activation of appropriate GPCRs. In atrial and neuronal cells agonist-independent activity (Ibasal) contributes to the background K+ conductance, important for stabilizing resting potential. Data obtained from the Kir3 signaling pathway reconstituted in Xenopus oocytes suggest that Ibasal requires free Gβγ. In cells with intrinsic expression of Kir3 channels this issue has been scarcely addressed experimentally. Two Gβγ-binding proteins (myristoylated phosducin — mPhos — and Gαi1) were expressed in atrial myocytes using adenoviral gene transfer, to interrupt Gβγ-signaling. Agonist-induced and basal currents were recorded using whole cell voltage-clamp. Expression of mPhos and Gαi1 reduced activation of Kir3 current via muscarinic M2 receptors (IK(ACh)). Inhibition of IK(ACh) by mPhos consisted of an irreversible component and an agonist-dependent reversible component. Reduction in density of IK(ACh) by overexpressed Gαi1, in contrast to mPhos, was paralleled by substantial slowing of activation, suggesting a reduction in density of functional M2 receptors, rather than Gβγ-scavenging as underlying mechanism. In line with this notion, current density and activation kinetics were rescued by fusing the αi1-subunit to an Adenosine A1 receptor. Neither mPhos nor Gαi1 had a significant effect on Ibasal, defined by the inhibitory peptide tertiapin-Q. These data demonstrate that basal Kir3 current in a native environment is unrelated to G-protein signaling or agonist-independent free Gβγ. Moreover, our results illustrate the importance of physiological expression levels of the signaling components in shaping key parameters of the response to an agonist.  相似文献   

19.
Hypercholesterolemia is a well-known risk factor for cardiovascular disease. In the heart, activation of K(ACh) mediates the vagal (parasympathetic) negative chronotropic effect on heart rate. Yet, the effect of cholesterol on K(ACh) is unknown. Here we show that cholesterol plays a critical role in modulating K(ACh) currents (I(K,ACh)) in atrial cardiomyocytes. Specifically, cholesterol enrichment of rabbit atrial cardiomyocytes led to enhanced channel activity while cholesterol depletion suppressed I(K,ACh). Moreover, a high-cholesterol diet resulted in up to 3-fold increase in I(K,ACh) in rodents. In accordance, elevated currents were observed in Xenopus oocytes expressing the Kir3.1/Kir3.4 heteromer that underlies I(K,ACh). Furthermore, our data suggest that cholesterol affects I(K,ACh) via a mechanism which is independent of both PI(4,5)P(2) and Gβγ. Interestingly, the effect of cholesterol on I(K,ACh) is opposite to its effect on I(K1) in atrial myocytes. The latter are suppressed by cholesterol enrichment and by high-cholesterol diet, and facilitated following cholesterol depletion. These findings establish that cholesterol plays a critical role in modulating I(K,ACh) in atrial cardiomyocytes via a mechanism independent of the channel's major modulators.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of various intracellular anions on the G protein (GK)-mediated activation of the muscarinic K+ (KACh) channel were examined in single atrial myocytes isolated from guinea pig hearts. The patch clamp technique was used in the inside-out patch configuration. With acetylcholine (ACh, 0.5 microM) in the pipette, 1 microM GTP caused different magnitudes of KACh channel activation in internal solutions containing different anions. The order of potency of anions to induce the KACh channel activity at 0.5 microM ACh and 1 microM GTP was Cl- greater than or equal to Br- greater than 1-. In the SO4(2-) or aspartic acid internal solution, no channel openings were induced by 1 microM GTP with 0.5 microM ACh. In both the Cl- and SO4(2-) internal solutions (with 0.5 microM ACh) the relationship between the concentration of GTP and the channel activity was fit by the Hill equation with a Hill coefficient of approximately 3-4. However, the concentration of GTP at the half-maximal activation (Kd) was 0.2 microM in the Cl- and 10 microM in the SO4(2-) solution. On the other hand, the quasi-steady-state relationship between the concentration of guanosine-5'-o-(3-thiotriphosphate) and the channel activity did not differ significantly between the Cl- and SO4(2-) solutions; i.e., the Hill coefficient was approximately 3-4 and the Kd was approximately 0.06-0.08 microM in both solutions. The decay of channel activity after washout of GTP in the Cl- solution was much slower than that in the SO4(2-) solution. These results suggest that intracellular Cl- does not affect the turn-on reaction but slows the turn-off reaction of GK, resulting in higher sensitivity of the KACh channel for GTP. In the Cl- solution, even in the absence of agonists, GTP (greater than 1 microM) or ATP (greater than 1 mM) alone caused activation of the KACh channel, while neither occurred in the SO4(2-) solution. These observations suggest that the activation of the KACh channel by the basal turn-on reaction of GK or by phosphate transfer to GK by nucleoside diphosphate-kinase may depend at least partly on the intracellular concentration of Cl-.  相似文献   

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