Literature DB >> 14981137

Inhibition of the collapse of the Shaker K+ conductance by specific scorpion toxins.

Froylan Gómez-Lagunas1, Cesar V F Batista, Timoteo Olamendi-Portugal, Martha E Ramírez-Domínguez, Lourival D Possani.   

Abstract

The Shaker B K(+) conductance (G(K)) collapses when the channels are closed (deactivated) in Na(+) solutions that lack K(+) ions. Also, it is known that external TEA (TEA(o)) impedes the collapse of G(K), and that channel block by TEA(o) and scorpion toxins are two mutually exclusive events. Therefore, we tested the ability of scorpion toxins to inhibit the collapse of G(K) in 0 K(+). We have found that these toxins are not uniform regarding the capacity to protect G(K). Those toxins, whose binding to the channels is destabilized by external K(+), are also effective inhibitors of the collapse of G(K). In addition to K(+), other externally added cations also destabilize toxin block, with an effectiveness that does not match the selectivity sequence of K(+) channels. The inhibition of the drop of G(K) follows a saturation relationship with [toxin], which is fitted well by the Michaelis-Menten equation, with an apparent Kd bigger than that of block of the K(+) current. However, another plausible model is also presented and compared with the Michaelis-Menten model. The observations suggest that those toxins that protect G(K) in 0 K(+) do so by interacting either with the most external K(+) binding site of the selectivity filter (suggesting that the K(+) occupancy of only that site of the pore may be enough to preserve G(K)) or with sites capable of binding K(+) located in the outer vestibule of the pore, above the selectivity filter.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 14981137      PMCID: PMC2217447          DOI: 10.1085/jgp.200308871

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gen Physiol        ISSN: 0022-1295            Impact factor:   4.086


  39 in total

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5.  Two novel toxins from the Amazonian scorpion Tityus cambridgei that block Kv1.3 and Shaker B K(+)-channels with distinctly different affinities.

Authors:  Cesar V F Batista; Froylan Gómez-Lagunas; Ricardo C Rodríguez de la Vega; Péter Hajdu; György Panyi; Rezsõ Gáspár; Lourival D Possani
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2002-12-16

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2.  K+-dependent stability and ion conduction of Shab K+ channels: a comparison with Shaker channels.

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