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A Conducting State with Properties of a Slow Inactivated State in a Shaker K(+) Channel Mutant

In Shaker K(+) channel, the amino terminus deletion Δ6-46 removes fast inactivation (N-type) unmasking a slow inactivation process. In Shaker Δ6-46 (Sh-IR) background, two additional mutations (T449V-I470C) remove slow inactivation, producing a noninactivating channel. However, despite the fact that...

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Autores principales: Olcese, Riccardo, Sigg, Daniel, Latorre, Ramon, Bezanilla, Francisco, Stefani, Enrico
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2217242/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11158167
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author Olcese, Riccardo
Sigg, Daniel
Latorre, Ramon
Bezanilla, Francisco
Stefani, Enrico
author_facet Olcese, Riccardo
Sigg, Daniel
Latorre, Ramon
Bezanilla, Francisco
Stefani, Enrico
author_sort Olcese, Riccardo
collection PubMed
description In Shaker K(+) channel, the amino terminus deletion Δ6-46 removes fast inactivation (N-type) unmasking a slow inactivation process. In Shaker Δ6-46 (Sh-IR) background, two additional mutations (T449V-I470C) remove slow inactivation, producing a noninactivating channel. However, despite the fact that Sh-IR-T449V-I470C mutant channels remain conductive, prolonged depolarizations (1 min, 0 mV) produce a shift of the QV curve by about −30 mV, suggesting that the channels still undergo the conformational changes typical of slow inactivation. For depolarizations longer than 50 ms, the tail currents measured during repolarization to −90 mV display a slow component that increases in amplitude as the duration of the depolarizing pulse increases. We found that the slow development of the QV shift had a counterpart in the amplitude of the slow component of the ionic tail current that is not present in Sh-IR. During long depolarizations, the time course of both the increase in the slow component of the tail current and the change in voltage dependence of the charge movement could be well fitted by exponential functions with identical time constant of 459 ms. Single channel recordings revealed that after prolonged depolarizations, the channels remain conductive for long periods after membrane repolarization. Nonstationary autocovariance analysis performed on macroscopic current in the T449V-I470C mutant confirmed that a novel open state appears with increasing prepulse depolarization time. These observations suggest that in the mutant studied, a new open state becomes progressively populated during long depolarizations (>50 ms). An appealing interpretation of these results is that the new open state of the mutant channel corresponds to a slow inactivated state of Sh-IR that became conductive.
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spelling pubmed-22172422008-04-22 A Conducting State with Properties of a Slow Inactivated State in a Shaker K(+) Channel Mutant Olcese, Riccardo Sigg, Daniel Latorre, Ramon Bezanilla, Francisco Stefani, Enrico J Gen Physiol Original Article In Shaker K(+) channel, the amino terminus deletion Δ6-46 removes fast inactivation (N-type) unmasking a slow inactivation process. In Shaker Δ6-46 (Sh-IR) background, two additional mutations (T449V-I470C) remove slow inactivation, producing a noninactivating channel. However, despite the fact that Sh-IR-T449V-I470C mutant channels remain conductive, prolonged depolarizations (1 min, 0 mV) produce a shift of the QV curve by about −30 mV, suggesting that the channels still undergo the conformational changes typical of slow inactivation. For depolarizations longer than 50 ms, the tail currents measured during repolarization to −90 mV display a slow component that increases in amplitude as the duration of the depolarizing pulse increases. We found that the slow development of the QV shift had a counterpart in the amplitude of the slow component of the ionic tail current that is not present in Sh-IR. During long depolarizations, the time course of both the increase in the slow component of the tail current and the change in voltage dependence of the charge movement could be well fitted by exponential functions with identical time constant of 459 ms. Single channel recordings revealed that after prolonged depolarizations, the channels remain conductive for long periods after membrane repolarization. Nonstationary autocovariance analysis performed on macroscopic current in the T449V-I470C mutant confirmed that a novel open state appears with increasing prepulse depolarization time. These observations suggest that in the mutant studied, a new open state becomes progressively populated during long depolarizations (>50 ms). An appealing interpretation of these results is that the new open state of the mutant channel corresponds to a slow inactivated state of Sh-IR that became conductive. The Rockefeller University Press 2001-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2217242/ /pubmed/11158167 Text en © 2001 The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Olcese, Riccardo
Sigg, Daniel
Latorre, Ramon
Bezanilla, Francisco
Stefani, Enrico
A Conducting State with Properties of a Slow Inactivated State in a Shaker K(+) Channel Mutant
title A Conducting State with Properties of a Slow Inactivated State in a Shaker K(+) Channel Mutant
title_full A Conducting State with Properties of a Slow Inactivated State in a Shaker K(+) Channel Mutant
title_fullStr A Conducting State with Properties of a Slow Inactivated State in a Shaker K(+) Channel Mutant
title_full_unstemmed A Conducting State with Properties of a Slow Inactivated State in a Shaker K(+) Channel Mutant
title_short A Conducting State with Properties of a Slow Inactivated State in a Shaker K(+) Channel Mutant
title_sort conducting state with properties of a slow inactivated state in a shaker k(+) channel mutant
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2217242/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11158167
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