Properties of voltage-gated K+ currents expressed inXenopus oocytes by mKv1.1, mKv1.2 and their heteromultimers as revealed by mutagenesis of the dendrotoxin-binding site in mKv1.1
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Pflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 428 (3-4) , 382-390
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00724522
Abstract
Two similar mouseShaker-like K+ channel genes, mKv1.1 and mKv1.2, have been shown to form heteromultimers in vivo. The predicted amino acid sequence of each channel is nearly identical in mice, rats and humans, suggesting that each has been highly conserved evolutionarily. Here we report the biophysical and pharmacological properties of each channel when expressed alone or when coexpressed inXenopus oocytes. The voltage sensitivities of activation were similar for both, but the voltages at which the K+ conductances were half-maximal (V 1/2) were −37 mV and −27 mV for mKv1.1 and mKv1.2 respectively. Both displayed voltage-dependent, but incomplete, inactivation following a prepulse with mKv1.2 showing the greater degree of inactivation. For mKv1.1, the onset and recovery from inactivation could be described by single, slow time constants (2–4 s), whereas for mKv1.2 the onset and recovery from inactivation displayed a second, faster time constant (< 400 ms). Using a mutant mKv1.1 that is 100-fold less sensitive to dendrotoxin-I than mKv1.1, we demonstrate that this mutant mKv1.1 and wild-type mKv1.2 subunits can form heteromultimeric channels. With some exceptions, of unknown significance, the biophysical properties of the heteromultimeric channels formed by wild-type mKv1.1 and mKv1.2 subunits were intermediate between those of mKv1.1 and mKv1.2 homomultimers, but quantitatively more similar to the more abundant subunit.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Current inactivation involves a histidine residue in the pore of the rat lymphocyte potassium channel RGK5Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1991
- Determination of the subunit stoichiometry of a voltage-activated potassium channelNature, 1991
- Human potassium channel genes: Molecular cloning and functional expressionMolecular and Cellular Neuroscience, 1990
- K + Current Diversity Is Produced by an Extended Gene Family Conserved in Drosophila and MouseScience, 1990
- Heteropolymeric potassium channels expressed in xenopus oocytes from cloned subunitsNeuron, 1990
- A Family of Three Mouse Potassium Channel Genes with Intronless Coding RegionsScience, 1990
- Structural parts involved in activation and inactivation of the sodium channelNature, 1989
- Four cDNA clones from the Shaker locus of Drosophila induce kinetically distinct A-type potassium currents in Xenopus oocytesNeuron, 1988
- Cloning of Genomic and Complementary DNA from Shaker , a Putative Potassium Channel Gene from DrosophilaScience, 1987
- Charge Movement Associated with the Opening and Closing of the Activation Gates of the Na ChannelsThe Journal of general physiology, 1974