Literature DB >> 15691840

Subunit stoichiometry of the Kir1.1 channel in proton-dependent gating.

Runping Wang1, Junda Su, Xueren Wang, Hailan Piao, Xiaoli Zhang, Carmen Y Adams, Ningren Cui, Chun Jiang.   

Abstract

Kir1.1 channel regulates membrane potential and K+ secretion in renal tubular cells. This channel is gated by intracellular protons, in which a lysine residue (Lys80) plays a critical role. Mutation of the Lys80 to a methionine (K80M) disrupts pH-dependent channel gating. To understand how an individual subunit in a tetrameric channel is involved in pH-dependent channel gating, we performed these studies by introducing K80M-disrupted subunits to tandem tetrameric channels. The pH sensitivity was studied in whole-cell voltage clamp and inside-out patches. Homomeric tetramers of the wild-type (wt) and K80M-disrupted channels showed a pH sensitivity almost identical to that of their monomeric counterparts. In heteromeric tetramers and dimers, pH sensitivity was a function of the number of wt subunits. Recruitment of the first single wt subunit shifts the pK(a) greatly, whereas additions of any extra wt subunit had smaller effects. Single-channel analysis revealed that the tetrameric channel with two or more wt subunits showed one substate conductance at approximately 40% of the full conductance, suggesting that four subunits act as two pairs. However, three and four substates of conductance were seen in the tetrameric wt-3K80M and 4K80M channels. Acidic pH increased long-time closures when there were two or more wt subunits. Disruption of more than two subunits led to flicking activity with appearance of a new opening event and loss of the long period of closures. Interestingly, the channel with two wt subunits at diagonal and adjacent configurations showed the same pH sensitivity, substate conductance, and long-time closure. These results thus suggest that one functional subunit is sufficient to act in the pH-dependent gating of the Kir1.1 channel, the channel sensitivity to pH increases with additional subunits, the full pH sensitivity requires contributions of all four subunits, and two subunits may be coordinated in functional dimers of either trans or cis configuration.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15691840     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M411895200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  3 in total

1.  Inwardly Rectifying K+ Currents in Cultured Oligodendrocytes from Rat Optic Nerve are Insensitive to pH.

Authors:  Alberto Pérez-Samartín; Edith Garay; Juan Pablo H Moctezuma; Abraham Cisneros-Mejorado; María Victoria Sánchez-Gómez; Guadalupe Martel-Gallegos; Leticia Robles-Martínez; Manuel Canedo-Antelo; Carlos Matute; Rogelio O Arellano
Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  2017-03-27       Impact factor: 3.996

2.  Kir6.2 channel gating by intracellular protons: subunit stoichiometry for ligand binding and channel gating.

Authors:  Runping Wang; Junda Su; Xiaoli Zhang; Yun Shi; Ningren Cui; Vivian A Onyebuchi; Chun Jiang
Journal:  J Membr Biol       Date:  2007-04-28       Impact factor: 1.843

3.  Functional characterization of homo- and heteromeric channel kinases TRPM6 and TRPM7.

Authors:  Mingjiang Li; Jianmin Jiang; Lixia Yue
Journal:  J Gen Physiol       Date:  2006-05       Impact factor: 4.086

  3 in total

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