| Literature DB >> 14699091 |
Ana Crane1, Lydia Aguilar-Bryan.
Abstract
ATP-sensitive K(+), or K(ATP), channels are comprised of K(IR)6.x and sulfonylurea receptor (SUR) subunits that assemble as octamers, (K(IR)/SUR)(4). The assembly pathway is unknown. Pulse-labeling studies show that when K(IR)6.2 is expressed individually, its turnover is biphasic; approximately 60% is lost with t((1/2)) approximately 36 min. The remainder converts to a long-lived species (t((1/2)) approximately 26 h) with an estimated half-time of 1.2 h. Expressed alone, SUR1 has a long half-life, approximately 25.5 h. When K(IR)6.2 and SUR1 are co-expressed, they associate rapidly and the fast degradation of K(IR)6.2 is eliminated. Based on changes in the glycosylation state of SUR1, the half-time for the maturation of K(ATP) channels, including completion of assembly, transit to the Golgi, and glycosylation, is approximately 2.2 h. Estimation of the turnover rates of mature, fully glycosylated SUR1 associated with K(IR)6.2 and of K(IR)6.2 associated with Myc-tagged SUR1 gave similar values for the half-life of K(ATP) channels, a mean value of approximately 7.3 h. K(ATP) channel subunits in INS-1 beta-cells displayed qualitatively similar kinetics. The results imply the octameric channels are stable. Two mutations, K(IR)6.2 W91R and SUR1 DeltaF1388, identified in patients with the severe form of familial hyperinsulinism, profoundly alter the rate of K(IR)6.2 and SUR1 turnover, respectively. Both mutant subunits associate with their respective partners but dissociate freely and degrade rapidly. The data support models of channel formation in which K(IR)6.2-SUR1 heteromers assemble functional channels and are inconsistent with models where SUR1 can only assemble with K(IR)6.2 tetramers.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 14699091 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M311079200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157