Potassium inhibition of sodium‐activated potassium (K Na ) channels in guinea‐pig ventricular myocytes
2000; Wiley; Volume: 526; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1111/j.1469-7793.2000.00081.x
ISSN1469-7793
Autores Tópico(s)Cardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmias
ResumoThe Journal of PhysiologyVolume 526, Issue 1 p. 81-90 Free Access Potassium inhibition of sodium-activated potassium (KNa) channels in guinea-pig ventricular myocytes X. W. Niu, X. W. Niu Department of Physiology, University Walk, Bristol BS8 1TD, UKSearch for more papers by this authorR. W. Meech, Corresponding Author R. W. Meech Department of Physiology, University Walk, Bristol BS8 1TD, UKCorresponding author R. W. Meech: Department of Physiology, University Walk, Bristol BS8 1TD, UK. Email: r.meech@bristol.ac.ukSearch for more papers by this author X. W. Niu, X. W. Niu Department of Physiology, University Walk, Bristol BS8 1TD, UKSearch for more papers by this authorR. W. Meech, Corresponding Author R. W. Meech Department of Physiology, University Walk, Bristol BS8 1TD, UKCorresponding author R. W. Meech: Department of Physiology, University Walk, Bristol BS8 1TD, UK. Email: r.meech@bristol.ac.ukSearch for more papers by this author First published: 01 July 2000 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7793.2000.00081.xCitations: 12 Author's present address: X. W. Niu: Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Miami, PO Box 016430, Miami, FL 33101-6430, USA. AboutSectionsPDF ToolsRequest permissionExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare full text accessShare full-text accessPlease review our Terms and Conditions of Use and check box below to share full-text version of article.I have read and accept the Wiley Online Library Terms and Conditions of UseShareable LinkUse the link below to share a full-text version of this article with your friends and colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL Share a linkShare onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditWechat Abstract 1 Na+-activated potassium channels (KNa channels) were studied in inside-out patches from guinea-pig ventricular myocytes at potentials between -100 and +80 mV. External K+ (K+o) was set to 140 mM. For inwardly directed currents with 105 mM internal K+ (K+i), the unitary current-voltage relationship was fitted by the constant field equation with a potassium permeability coefficient, PK, of 3.72 × 10−13 cm3 s−1. The slope conductance (-100 to -10 mV) was 194 ± 4.5 pS (mean ± s.d., n= 4) with 105 mM K+i (35 mM Na+i) but it decreased to 181 ± 5.6 pS (n= 5) in 70 mM K+i (70 mM Na+i). 2 KNa channels were activated by internal Na+ in a concentration-dependent fashion. With 4 mM K+i, maximal activation was recorded with 100 mM Na+i (open probability, Po, about 0.78); half-maximal activation required about 35 mM Na+i. When K+i was increased to 70 mM, half-maximal activation shifted to about 70 mM Na+i. 3 With Na+i set to 105 mM, channel activity was markedly inhibited when K+i was increased from 35 to 105 mM. Channel openings were abolished with 210 mM K+i. 4 The inhibitory effect of internal K+ was also observed at more physiological conditions of osmolarity, ionic strength and chloride concentration. With 35 mM Na+i and 4 mM K+i, Po was 0.48 ± 0.10 (n= 6); when K+i was increased to 35 mM, Po was reduced to 0.04 ± 0.05 (n= 7, P= 0.001). 5 The relationship between Po and Na+i concentration at different levels of K+i is well described by a modified Michaelis-Menten equation for competitive inhibition; the Hill coefficients were 4 for the Po-Na+i relationship and 1.2 for the Po-K+i relationship. It is suggested that Na+ and K+ compete for a superficial site on the channel's permeation pathway. 6 KNa channels would be most likely to be activated in vivo when an increase in Na+i is accompanied by a decrease of K+i. Increases in potassium conductance activated by high levels of intracellular sodium (Na+i) have been reported in many different preparations. These include guinea-pig ventricular myocytes (Kameyama et al. 1984) as well as neurones from crayfish (Hartung, 1985), quail trigeminal ganglia (Bader et al. 1985), chick brainstem (Dryer et al. 1989), cat neocortex (Schwindt et al. 1989), rat olfactory bulb (Egan et al. 1992b), rat motoneurones (Safronov & Vogel, 1996), rat dorsal root ganglia (Bischoff et al. 1998) and frog spinal chord (Dale, 1993). In addition, sodium-gated potassium channels (KNa channels) are present in Xenopus oocytes (Egan et al. 1992a), insect neurosecretory cells (Grolleau & Lapied, 1994) and frog taste cells (Miyamoto et al. 1996). In some preparations there is a sufficiently high density of voltage-gated sodium channels that the Na+ accumulated during trains of action potentials may contribute to KNa channel activation. The correlation between the numbers of voltage- and sodium-gated channels in individual membrane patches in Xenopus myelinated axons (Koh et al. 1994) supports this idea. In neurones there is enough KNa channel activation at physiological levels of Na+i to suggest that the sodium-activated potassium current may contribute to the resting membrane conductance (Haimann et al. 1990; Bischoff et al. 1998). In cardiac preparations KNa channels appear to require 20 mM Na+i for activation, the response showing no saturation below 100 mM Na+i (Kameyama et al. 1984). Guinea-pig myocytes have an intracellular sodium activity of about 7 mM (Rodrigo & Chapman, 1990), which may increase by over 30 % during increased heart rate (Cohen et al. 1982). Nevertheless the relative insensitivity of the channels to Na+i suggests that activation occurs (if at all) only during pathological conditions. The KNa channel binding site requires the co-operative action of at least two Na+ to bring about activation (Kameyama et al. 1984; Haimann et al. 1990) but otherwise little is known about the characteristics of the site of action. We therefore undertook a study of the effect of Na+ in the presence of different concentrations of intracellular potassium (K+i). We report here that K+ at the internal membrane surface competitively inhibits activation of KNa channels in inside-out patches from guinea-pig ventricular myocytes. This may have some physiological significance, as an increase in Na+iin vivo is likely to coincide with a decrease in K+i. METHODS Preparation Adult guinea-pigs were killed by cervical dislocation. The heart was removed and perfused retrogradely via the aorta using a Langendorff apparatus. Single ventricular myocytes were prepared by enzymatic dissociation as described previously (Mitra & Morad, 1985; Rodrigo & Chapman, 1990) except that 40 mM taurine was included in the Tyrode solution used for the final perfusion. Myocytes were kept at room temperature (18-23°C) and used within 12 h of isolation. Recording conditions and analysis Currents through KNa channels were recorded using the inside-out configuration of the patch clamp technique (Hamill et al. 1981). Pipettes were made from borosilicate glass capillaries (Clark Electromedical Ltd) and had tip resistances of 3-10 MΩ when filled with pipette solution. We used a modified technique to excise inside-out patches; after seal formation, instead of removing a patch of membrane from the myocyte by withdrawing the pipette, the cell was dislodged and washed away by rapid superfusion of standard internal solution through the perfusion system (see Niu & Meech, 1998). One advantage of this approach was that although the cell was maintained in normal bathing medium, after patch isolation the inside surface of the plasma membrane was immediately exposed to a solution with an appropriate internal composition. By preparing detached patches in this way, KNa channel activity was stable for periods of up to 30 min. Membrane potentials were corrected for the calculated loss of junction potential between the patch pipette and bathing solution upon seal formation (Barry & Lynch, 1991). KNa channel currents were recorded using an Axopatch-1D patch clamp amplifier and digitised via a TL-1 interface. For multi-channel analysis, currents were filtered at 0.5-1 kHz and digitised at 2-10 kHz. For single channel analysis the currents were filtered at 2 kHz and sampled at 20 kHz. All experiments were conducted at room temperature (18-23°C). Channel open probability (Po) was calculated as: (1) where N is the number of channels in the membrane patch and tj is the time spent at each current level (j= 1, 2,…N). The total duration of the recording, T, was at least 15 s. The 50 % open/closed level was used to mark the beginning and end of each transition. Subconductance states, which were observed close to the full open and closed levels, were both rare and brief (i.e. less than 1 % of open time); they were ignored in this analysis. Solutions Myocytes were maintained in normal saline (mM): NaCl, 140; KCl, 5.4; MgCl2, 1; CaCl2, 2; and Hepes, 5, at pH 7.25. Seals were obtained with patch pipettes that contained (mM): KCl, 140; CaCl2, 1; and Hepes, 5, at pH 7.25 (adjusted with KOH). Once detached, the internal surface of the membrane patch was perfused with a standard internal solution composed of (mM): KCl + NaCl, 140; EGTA, 5; ATP, 2-5; and Hepes, 10, at pH 7.25 (adjusted with KOH). Test solutions are specified in the text; in some cases they were hyperosmotic to the standard solution; in other cases the osmolarity was made the same as the standard solution using either glucose or N-methyl-D-glucamine-HCl (NMDG-HCl). All chemicals were obtained from Sigma Chemical Co. Ltd. RESULTS During single channel recordings of KNa channel activity from guinea-pig ventricular myocytes, we observed two other classes of potassium channel: the ATP-sensitive potassium channel (KATP) and the inwardly rectifying potassium channel (KIR). KATP channel activity was inhibited by including ATP (at least 2 mM) in the perfusion solution (see Niu & Meech, 1998) but interference from KIR was almost inevitable. However, KIR channels had a smaller unitary conductance than KNa channels, and their kinetics were significantly different. This meant that their activity could be excluded easily and had little impact on the analysis of KNa channel properties. Furthermore, KIR channels were generally less stable than KNa channels and appeared to undergo rundown within 2-5 min after excision of the inside-out patch. KNa channels were present in about 10 % of inside-out patches, and in most cases one to two channels were observed. Consistent with previously published work, the channels often had multiple subconductance states and their activity was significantly affected by changes in Na+ concentration at the internal membrane surface. Figure 1A shows sections of a continuous recording from an inside-out patch containing two KNa channels. Channel currents were recorded at different holding potentials in the presence of 140 mM K+o; the internal concentrations were 70 mM K+ and 70 mM Na+ (left column), or 105 mM K+ and 35 mM Na+ (right column). KNa channel activity was markedly reduced when the patch was perfused with the 105 mM K+i, 35 mM Na+i solution. The unitary current-voltage relationship (Fig. 1B) showed a significant inward rectification, which became even more marked as Na+i was increased from 35 to 70 mM. The lines drawn through the data were calculated from the constant field equation (Goldman, 1943; Hodgkin & Katz, 1949) and are equivalent to a conductance of 199 pS in 140 mM external and internal K+. The potassium permeability coefficient, PK, was taken as 3.72 × 10−13 cm3 s−1 and the PNa/PK ratio was set at 0.02 (see Kameyama et al. 1984; Wang et al. 1991). The mean slope conductance of the fully opened channel was 194 ± 4.5 pS (n= 4) when measured with 140 mM K+o and 105 mM K+i (35 mM Na+i) for inward currents in the range -100 to -10 mV. The slope conductance of the inward current decreased slightly to 181 ± 5.6 pS (n= 5) in 70 mM K+i (70 mM Na+i). The values shown are means ±s.d. throughout. Figure 1Open in figure viewerPowerPoint Effect of membrane voltage on KNa channel currents A, current traces from an inside-out patch containing two active KNa channels recorded at potentials between +60 and -100 mV in the presence of 140 mM K+i. Internal solutions were 70 mM K+i, 70 mM Na+i (left) and 105 mM K+i, 35 mM Na+i (right). The dotted lines indicate the current level recorded with both channels closed. B, the unitary current-voltage relationship in 70 mM K+i, 70 mM Na+i (▪) and 105 mM K+i, 35 mM Na+i (•). The lines drawn through the data were calculated from the constant field equation (Goldman, 1943; Hodgkin & Katz, 1949). The permeability coefficient, PK, was taken as 3.72 × 10−13 cm3 s−1 and the PNa/PK ratio was 0.02 (see Kameyama et al. 1984; Wang et al. 1991). Deviation from the expected relationship at membrane potentials more positive than +30 mV is due to channel block by Na+i (Wang et al. 1991). Inhibitory effect of intracellular K+ With Na+i set to 105 mM there was a high level of KNa channel activity in inside-out membrane patches exposed to 35 mM K+i (Fig. 2, top trace) but the open probability was markedly reduced upon switching to a solution with 105 mM K+i. Channel activity was abolished completely in the presence of 210 mM K+i but it returned to control levels once the bathing solution was returned to 35 mM K+i (Fig. 2, bottom trace). Similar, fully reversible, effects were observed in three additional patches. Because Na+i was set to 105 mM, the different test solutions were hyperosmotic. Thus the reduction in open probability could be the result of the greater osmolarity of the internal solutions, or their greater ionic strength and higher chloride concentration. Figure 3 shows that none of these factors are involved because in 35 mM K+i the high open probability was retained even when 350 mM glucose (top trace), 175 mM lithium chloride (n= 2; middle trace), or 175 mM NMDG-HCl (n= 4; bottom trace) was added to the test solution. Thus, increased concentrations of K+i appear to inhibit KNa channel activity in a fully reversible fashion. Figure 2Open in figure viewerPowerPoint Effect of K+i on KNa channel activity Single KNa channel inward currents recorded from an inside-out membrane patch with 105 mM Na+i. The high open probability seen with 35 mM K+i (top trace) was markedly reduced upon increasing K+i to 105 mM and the channel was fully inhibited with K+i at 210 mM (middle traces). The channel activity recovered to the control level after K+i was returned to 35 mM (bottom trace). Note that because Na+i was set to 105 mM the test solutions were hyperosmotic. The membrane potential was held at -60 mV. Figure 3Open in figure viewerPowerPoint Effect of osmotic strength, internal Li+ and NMDG-HCl on KNa channel activity Single KNa channel inward currents recorded from an inside-out membrane patch with 105 mM Na+i and 35 mM K+i. Top trace, high open probability with hyperosmotic solution (containing 350 mM glucose) at the internal surface. Middle trace, open probability was unaffected by the addition of 175 mM LiCl in place of glucose. Bottom trace, open probability was unaffected by the addition of 175 mM NMDG-HCl in place of glucose. The membrane potential was held at -60 mV. Internal K+ was also inhibitory at lower concentrations and at a more physiological osmolarity (maintained using NMDG-HCl). Figure 4 shows KNa channel activity with Na+i set to 35 mM. Upon raising K+i from 4 mM (upper trace) to 35 mM (lower trace) there was a clear reduction in the number of channel openings. The bar chart in Fig. 4 shows the open probability in the two solutions; the open probability was 0.48 ± 0.10 (n= 6) with 4 mM K+i but became significantly smaller (0.04 ± 0.05; n= 7; P= 0.001, unpaired t test) upon raising K+i to 35 mM. Figure 4Open in figure viewerPowerPoint The effect of K+i on KNa channel activity at physiological osmolarity A, examples of inward currents recorded from single KNa channels in inside-out membrane patches with 35 mM Na+i. The high channel activity recorded with 4 mM K+i (upper trace) was in contrast to the low number of openings seen with 35 mM K+i (lower trace; different patch). Changes in osmolarity were corrected with NMDG-HCl and the membrane potential was held at -60 mV. B, bar graph to show that the open probability (Po) was reduced from 0.48 ± 0.10 (n= 6) to 0.04 ± 0.05 (n= 7, P= 0.001) upon raising the internal potassium concentration from 4 to 35 mM in the presence of 35 mM Na+i. Values are means ±s.d.; P value is from Student's unpaired t test. From the data presented thus far, it is possible that internal Na+ relieved the KNa channel from inhibition by internal K+. To determine whether internal Na+ was essential for KNa channel activation, we exposed the channel to a K+-Na+-free internal solution containing 105 mM NMDG-HCl (see Fig. 5). Although there was an almost immediate reduction in open probability upon switching to the K+-Na+-free solution, there was a delay of 12 s before channel opening was completely abolished. Upon returning to 105 mM Na+i, the increase in open probability followed an exponential time course with a time constant of about 1.2 s. The same result was observed for the two other patches tested. Figure 5Open in figure viewerPowerPoint Effect of Na+-K+-free internal solution on KNa channel activity A, KNa channel inward currents recorded from an inside-out membrane patch with 105 mM Na+i, 0 mM K+i. Three levels of unitary current are evident. Upon switching abruptly to a Na+-K+-free solution containing 105 mM NMDG-HCl, channel activity declined over a period of 12 s and was finally abolished. Activity quickly recovered when the patch was returned to the control solution. The membrane potential was held at -60 mV. B, change in Po with time. The fitted line has a time constant of 1.2 s. While internal Na+ was obviously necessary for KNa activation, it is clear that there was also an interaction with internal K+. To examine the inhibitory effect of K+ on the sodium dependency in more detail, we first set K+i at 4 mM and measured the channel open probability in different concentrations of Na+i (see Fig. 6A, filled circles). For Na+i concentrations below 140 mM, NaCl was replaced by equimolar concentrations of NMDG-HCl. When we compared the effect of Na+i in the presence of 70 mM K+i (Fig. 6A, open circles) the maximum open probability appeared to be as great but the data were displaced towards the right, i.e. the half-maximal open probability was observed at higher values of Na+i. In Fig. 6B the effect of different concentrations of K+i on channel open probability is compared in the presence of 105 mM (open circles) and 35 mM (filled circles) Na+i. In Fig. 6 lines through the data points were drawn according to the following modified Michaelis-Menten equation, which can be derived assuming that there is a competitive interaction between Na+i and K+i: (2) where ka and kb are dissociation constants, [Na+]i and [K+]i are the sodium and potassium ion concentrations at the intracellular surface of the membrane, and g and h represent Hill coefficients. The data were fitted by eye with the ka:kb ratio set to 1.75 × 105; the Hill coefficients g and h were 1.2 and 4.0; the maximum open probability (Po,max) was 0.78. Figure 6Open in figure viewerPowerPoint Effect of Na+i and K+i on KNa channel open probability Data are from 12 inside-out membrane patches. The membrane potential was held at -60 mV. A, KNa channel open probability in different concentrations of Na+i with K+i kept constant at 4 mM (•) and 70 mM (○). For Na+i concentrations below 140 mM, NaCl was replaced by equimolar concentrations of NMDG-HCl. B, the effect of different concentrations of K+i on channel open probability in the presence of 105 mM (○) and 35 mM (•) Na+i. In each case the line through the data points was drawn according to the equation:where ka and kb are dissociation constants, [Na+]i and [K+]i are the sodium and potassium ion concentrations at the intracellular surface of the membrane, and g and h represent Hill coefficients. The data were fitted by eye with the ka:kb ratio set to 1.75 × 105; the Hill coefficients g and h were 1.2 and 4.0; the maximum open probability (Po,max) was 0.78. Single channel kinetics Patches with a single active KNa channel were studied at -60 mV with 105 mM Na+i. Figure 7 shows the distributions of open and closed times in 4 mM K+i (left) and 105 mM K+i (right). Although obtained under slightly different conditions, the data confirm the findings of Mistry et al. (1997) and demonstrate the presence of two open and at least four closed states. The time constants obtained in the two studies are in broad agreement. In Fig. 7 the increase in K+i from 4 to 105 mM had little effect on the open time constants or on the two shorter closed time constants but the longer closed time constants increased by factors of about 4 and 3. This matches the finding by Mistry et al. (1997) who showed that the time constants of these same closed states increased as the Na+i concentration was decreased (with NaCl being replaced by Tris-HCl). Figure 7Open in figure viewerPowerPoint The effect of K+i on open and closed times Open and closed dwell time histograms for a single KNa channel in a patch held at -60 mV and exposed to 4 mM (left) and 105 mM (right) K+i; Na+i was kept constant at 105 mM. Open time distributions (upper graphs) are fitted by a curve that is the sum of two exponential terms. Closed time distributions (lower graphs) have logarithmic time axes and square root ordinates and were fitted to the equation:where t is the measured dwell time, m is the number of components, αj is the area of component j and τj is its time constant. Open time constants (and relative areas): 105 mM Na+i, 4 mM K+i: 0.4 ms (0.24), 8.9 ms (0.75); 105 mM Na+i, 105 mM K+i: 0.69 ms (0.2), 8.6 ms (0.8). Closed time constants (and relative areas): 105 mM Na+i, 4 mM K+i: 0.16 ms (0.56), 0.66 ms (0.38), 6.28 ms (0.05), 73.62 ms (0.003); 105 mM Na+i, 105 mM K+i: 0.17 ms (0.52), 0.96 ms (0.28), 24 ms (0.19), 206 ms (0.01). DISCUSSION KNa channel ‘rundown’ KNa channels recorded from detached inside-out membrane patches are particularly susceptible to a gradual loss of activity (or ‘rundown’) that is not seen in cell-attached patches (Egan et al. 1992B; Dryer, 1993). Egan et al. (1992b) suggest that the loss of some diffusible intracellular substance might reduce the sensitivity of the channel to sodium. Using techniques of myocyte preparation similar to those used here, Rodrigo (1993) found that in newly excised patches Po was about 0.3 with 150 mM Na+i and that it declined to 0.1 after 30 min. In cell-attached patches, activity remained constant for up to 140 min with Po about 0.7 (Na+i concentration was calculated to be 150 mM). In our hands high open probabilities could be obtained within seconds of patch isolation; most channels showed little rundown of activity in recordings lasting up to 30 min. The technique of patch isolation used (see Methods) has already proved effective in reducing KATP channel rundown (Niu & Meech, 1998) and it seems to be equally valuable here. In other respects the KNa channels appeared to have properties identical to those reported previously. For example, for inward currents the unitary current-membrane potential relationship was well fitted by the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation with PK equal to 3.72 × 10−13 cm3 s−1 (see Fig. 1 and Kameyama et al. 1984; Wang et al. 1991). A similar, though slightly lower value for PK (3.17 × 10−13 cm3 s)−1 has been reported for KNa channels in quail trigeminal neurones (Haimann et al. 1990). Inhibition of KNa channel activity by internal K+ The main conclusion to be drawn from this work is that internal potassium ions have an inhibitory effect on the activity of KNa channels in guinea-pig ventricular myocytes. Increasing K+i from 4 to 70 mM increased the concentration of Na+i needed for half-activation from about 35 mM to nearer 70 mM (see relationship between Po and Na+i in Fig. 6A). The latter value is close to that obtained in the same preparation by Kameyama et al. (1984) with K+i equal to 40 mM or more. In quail trigeminal neurones, half-activation occurred in the range 25-30 mM Na+i in the presence of either 75 mM (Haimann et al. 1990) or 50 mM K+i (Haimann et al. 1992). With physiological concentrations of K+i a lower sensitivity to Na+i was reported so that here too Na+ and K+ may interact competitively (Haimann et al. 1992). In a model to account for the channel kinetics in guinea-pig ventricular myocytes, Mistry et al. (1997) suggested that the presence of four closed states (see also Fig. 7) was consistent with the binding of 2 or 3 sodium ions before KNa channels entered one of two open states. All the available data are consistent with the duration of the two longest closed states being dependent on the Na+i:K+i ratio. We considered the possibility that the role of Na+ was simply to displace K+ from an inhibitory site. If so, 0 mM K+i might permit activation even in the absence of Na+i. As Fig. 5 shows, the channel remained active for up to 12 s in Na+-K+-free solution, the change in Po with time suggesting that the decline in activation had both fast and slow phases. Perhaps Na+ is firmly bound at the activation site so that there is no requirement for Na+i when the channel makes transitions between its shorter open and closed states. However, reopening after prolonged closure is evident even after some seconds in Na+-free solution so the possibility remains that incoming K+ had access to an inhibitory site. Hill coefficient One explanation for the steep relationship between Po and Na+i concentration is that the binding of more than one sodium ion is necessary to open the channel. For Fig. 6A, K+i was kept constant at either 4 or 70 mM, the ionic strength and osmolarity of the different solutions being maintained by replacing NaCl with equimolar NMDG-HCl. The Po data were fitted by a modified Michaelis-Menten equation for competitive inhibition (eqn (2)). The Hill coefficients required to provide a satisfactory fit suggest that, while only 1-2 potassium ions are necessary for inhibition, at least 4 sodium ions are needed for activation of the channel. A similar high value, 4.8, has been reported for the effect of internal Na+ on KNa channels in the spinal neurones of the frog embryo (Dale, 1993), but values in the region of 2-3 are more generally reported (see Haimann et al. 1990; Rodrigo & Chapman, 1990). The Hill coefficient of 2.8 reported by Kameyama et al. (1984) was obtained in experiments where NaCl was replaced by equimolar KCl and it is likely that the inhibitory effect of increased K+i concentration contributed to this low value. A similar explanation can account for the results of Veldkamp et al. (1994), who reported Po values of 0.73 in 135 mM Na+i and 0.62 in 100 mM Na+i. Mechanism of KNa channel activation Permeant ions determine channel selectivity. In many K+ channels the presence of potassium ions at binding sites within the pore seems to be essential for maintenance of selectivity. Under K+-free conditions such channels permit a substantial Na+ current (Zhu & Ikeda, 1993; Callahan & Korn, 1994; Korn & Ikeda, 1995; Starkus et al. 1997). K+ channels that undergo C-type inactivation also appear to pass through an intermediate state with an increased Na+ permeability before entering the non-conducting inactivated state (Kiss et al. 1999). Changing a single amino acid residue in the S6 segment of the channel decreases the ability of K+ to block the Na+ current (Ogielska & Aldrich, 1998). In the present study on KNa channels the 13 pS decrease in the mean inward slope conductance when K+i was reduced from 105 to 70 mM (see Results) might also indicate some form of K+-modulated permeation. Intracellular ions and gating. In small conductance calcium-activated potassium channels (KCa) an increase in Po follows Ca2+ binding to a calmodulin-like receptor site (Xia et al. 1998). Functional studies show that activation by different divalent ions depends on their crystalline radius, as expected for a calcium-binding protein (Meech, 1980; Meech & Thomas, 1980). The receptor site responsible for sodium activation of the KNa channel has been more difficult to pin down. Activation of the KNa channel could follow the binding of Na+ to a receptor site on or within the channel itself, or binding might occur some distance away and produce a more widespread change in the channel environment. KNa channels show up to 12 subconductance states (Sanguinetti, 1990; Mistry et al. 1996) and Sanguinetti (1990) has suggested that the channel is actually a complex of 12 identical pores each of which gates independently of an over-riding main gate. One could imagine the cell membrane as a matrix of fixed charges with which Na+ interacts to cause the conformation change necessary to open the 12-pore complex. The binding site itself need not be selective; the specificity of activation might lie in the conformation change that the cation brings about. To envision a more discrete receptor we might compare its selectivity to that of other Na+-binding sites. For example, H+ and Li+ can substitute for both Na+ and K+ during Na+-K+ active transport (Dunham & Hoffman, 1978) whereas the mammalian KNa channel is insensitive to Li+ and blocked by H+ (Veldkamp et al. 1994). The enzyme dialkylglycine decarboxylase, which is activated by K+ and inhibited by Na+ (Aaslestad et al. 1968), contains an example of a more selective receptor. An increase in Na+i from 75 to 130 mM (while reducing K+i from 15 to 0 mM) substitutes Na+ for K+ at a site located near the reaction centre of the enzyme (site 1; Toney et al. 1993). The protein is too rigid to accept Na+ without an additional water molecule that appears to cause a slight expansion of the structure around the metal ion. This in turn reorientates two amino acid residues within the reaction centre and produces the switch from the active to inactive for
Referência(s)