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Inactivation of Bk Channels Mediated by the Nh(2) Terminus of the β3b Auxiliary Subunit Involves a Two-Step Mechanism: Possible Separation of Binding and Blockade

A family of auxiliary β subunits coassemble with Slo α subunit to form Ca(2)+-regulated, voltage-activated BK-type K(+) channels. The β subunits play an important role in regulating the functional properties of the resulting channel protein, including apparent Ca(2)+ dependence and inactivation. The...

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Autores principales: Lingle, Christopher J., Zeng, Xu-Hui, Ding, J.-P., Xia, Xiao-Ming
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2232400/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11382808
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author Lingle, Christopher J.
Zeng, Xu-Hui
Ding, J.-P.
Xia, Xiao-Ming
author_facet Lingle, Christopher J.
Zeng, Xu-Hui
Ding, J.-P.
Xia, Xiao-Ming
author_sort Lingle, Christopher J.
collection PubMed
description A family of auxiliary β subunits coassemble with Slo α subunit to form Ca(2)+-regulated, voltage-activated BK-type K(+) channels. The β subunits play an important role in regulating the functional properties of the resulting channel protein, including apparent Ca(2)+ dependence and inactivation. The β3b auxiliary subunit, when coexpressed with the Slo α subunit, results in a particularly rapid (∼1 ms), but incomplete inactivation, mediated by the cytosolic NH(2) terminus of the β3b subunit (Xia et al. 2000). Here, we evaluate whether a simple block of the open channel by the NH(2)-terminal domain accounts for the inactivation mechanism. Analysis of the onset of block, recovery from block, time-dependent changes in the shape of instantaneous current-voltage curves, and properties of deactivation tails suggest that a simple, one step blocking reaction is insufficient to explain the observed currents. Rather, blockade can be largely accounted for by a two-step blocking mechanism ( [Figure: see text] ) in which preblocked open states (O*(n)) precede blocked states (I(n)). The transitions between O* and I are exceedingly rapid accounting for an almost instantaneous block or unblock of open channels observed with changes in potential. However, the macroscopic current relaxations are determined primarily by slower transitions between O and O*. We propose that the O to O* transition corresponds to binding of the NH(2)-terminal inactivation domain to a receptor site. Blockade of current subsequently reflects either additional movement of the NH(2)-terminal domain into a position that hinders ion permeation or a gating transition to a closed state induced by binding of the NH(2) terminus.
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spelling pubmed-22324002008-04-22 Inactivation of Bk Channels Mediated by the Nh(2) Terminus of the β3b Auxiliary Subunit Involves a Two-Step Mechanism: Possible Separation of Binding and Blockade Lingle, Christopher J. Zeng, Xu-Hui Ding, J.-P. Xia, Xiao-Ming J Gen Physiol Original Article A family of auxiliary β subunits coassemble with Slo α subunit to form Ca(2)+-regulated, voltage-activated BK-type K(+) channels. The β subunits play an important role in regulating the functional properties of the resulting channel protein, including apparent Ca(2)+ dependence and inactivation. The β3b auxiliary subunit, when coexpressed with the Slo α subunit, results in a particularly rapid (∼1 ms), but incomplete inactivation, mediated by the cytosolic NH(2) terminus of the β3b subunit (Xia et al. 2000). Here, we evaluate whether a simple block of the open channel by the NH(2)-terminal domain accounts for the inactivation mechanism. Analysis of the onset of block, recovery from block, time-dependent changes in the shape of instantaneous current-voltage curves, and properties of deactivation tails suggest that a simple, one step blocking reaction is insufficient to explain the observed currents. Rather, blockade can be largely accounted for by a two-step blocking mechanism ( [Figure: see text] ) in which preblocked open states (O*(n)) precede blocked states (I(n)). The transitions between O* and I are exceedingly rapid accounting for an almost instantaneous block or unblock of open channels observed with changes in potential. However, the macroscopic current relaxations are determined primarily by slower transitions between O and O*. We propose that the O to O* transition corresponds to binding of the NH(2)-terminal inactivation domain to a receptor site. Blockade of current subsequently reflects either additional movement of the NH(2)-terminal domain into a position that hinders ion permeation or a gating transition to a closed state induced by binding of the NH(2) terminus. The Rockefeller University Press 2001-06-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2232400/ /pubmed/11382808 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
Lingle, Christopher J.
Zeng, Xu-Hui
Ding, J.-P.
Xia, Xiao-Ming
Inactivation of Bk Channels Mediated by the Nh(2) Terminus of the β3b Auxiliary Subunit Involves a Two-Step Mechanism: Possible Separation of Binding and Blockade
title Inactivation of Bk Channels Mediated by the Nh(2) Terminus of the β3b Auxiliary Subunit Involves a Two-Step Mechanism: Possible Separation of Binding and Blockade
title_full Inactivation of Bk Channels Mediated by the Nh(2) Terminus of the β3b Auxiliary Subunit Involves a Two-Step Mechanism: Possible Separation of Binding and Blockade
title_fullStr Inactivation of Bk Channels Mediated by the Nh(2) Terminus of the β3b Auxiliary Subunit Involves a Two-Step Mechanism: Possible Separation of Binding and Blockade
title_full_unstemmed Inactivation of Bk Channels Mediated by the Nh(2) Terminus of the β3b Auxiliary Subunit Involves a Two-Step Mechanism: Possible Separation of Binding and Blockade
title_short Inactivation of Bk Channels Mediated by the Nh(2) Terminus of the β3b Auxiliary Subunit Involves a Two-Step Mechanism: Possible Separation of Binding and Blockade
title_sort inactivation of bk channels mediated by the nh(2) terminus of the β3b auxiliary subunit involves a two-step mechanism: possible separation of binding and blockade
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2232400/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11382808
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