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The Binding of κ-Conotoxin PVIIA and Fast C-Type Inactivation of Shaker K+ Channels are Mutually Exclusive
Authors:E. Dietlind Koch   Baldomero M. Olivera   Heinrich Terlau     Franco Conti
Affiliation:* Max-Planck-Institute for Experimental Medicine, Molecular and Cellular Neuropharmacology Group, Göttingen, Germany
Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah
Istituto di Biofisica, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Genova, Italy
Abstract:κ-Conotoxin PVIIA (κ-PVIIA), a 27-amino acid peptide identified from the venom of Conus purpurascens, inhibits the Shaker K+ channel by blocking its outer pore. The toxin appears as a gating modifier because its binding affinity decreases with relatively fast kinetics upon channel opening, but there is no indication that it interferes with the gating transitions of the wild-type channels (WT), including the structural changes of the outer pore that underlie its slow C-type inactivation. In this report we demonstrate that in two outer pore mutants of Shaker-IR (M448K and T449S), that have high toxin sensitivity and fast C-type inactivation, the latter process is instead antagonized by and incompatible with κ-PVIIA binding. Inactivation is slowed by the necessary preliminary unbinding of κ-PVIIA, whereas toxin rebinding must await recovery from inactivation causing a double-exponential relaxation of the second response to double-pulse stimulations. Compared with the lack of similar effects in WT, these results demonstrate the ability of peptide toxins like κ-PVIIA to reveal possibly subtle differences in structural changes of the outer pore of K+ channels; however, they also warn against a naive use of fast inactivating mutants as models for C-type inactivation. Unfolded from the antagonistic effect of inactivation, toxin binding to mutant noninactivated channels shows state- and voltage-dependencies similar to WT: slow and high affinity for closed channels; relatively fast dissociation from open channels at rate increasing with voltage. This supports the idea that these properties depend mainly on interactions with pore-permeation processes that are not affected by the mutations. In mutant channels the state-dependence also greatly enhances the protection of toxin binding against steady-state inactivation at low depolarizations while still allowing large responses to depolarizing pulses that relieve toxin block. Although not obviously applicable to any known combination of natural channel and outer-pore blocker, our biophysical characterization of such highly efficient mechanism of protection from steady-state outer-pore inactivation may be of general interest.
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