Sapecin B, a novel fly toxin, blocks macroscopic K+ currents in the GH3 rat pituitary cell line.

Abstract
Sapecin B is structurally homologous to charybdotoxin (CTX), which is found in scorpion venom. This study investigated the effects of sapecin B on the Ca(2+)-activated K+ currents [IK(Ca)] and the rapidly inactivating K+ currents in clonal rat GH3 pituitary cells with whole cell voltage-clamp methods. Sapecin B (20 nM) reversibly blocked the CTX-sensitive Ix(Ca) (the BK current) in a dose-dependent manner, with a half-maximal inhibitory concentration of approximately 0.9 nM, comparable to that of 0.08-0.4 nM for CTX. The Ca2+ currents in GH3 cells, however, were not affected by sapecin B (40 nM), indicating that the blockade of IK(Ca) by sapecin B is not a secondary effect of Ca2+ current inhibition. The effect of sapecin B on IK(Ca) resembled that of CTX, as expected from the structural similarities shared by CTX and sapecin B. We also found that sapecin B largely inhibited the 4-aminopyridine-sensitive, rapidly inactivating K+ currents in a dose-dependent manner, with a half-maximal inhibitory concentration of approximately 40 nM, whereas CTX had little effect on this current in GH3 cells. Sapecin B may thus provide a useful tool, complementary to CTX, for probing the functional role of molecular domains in the BK channels and the structural similarities common to the BK and the rapidly inactivating A-type K+ channels.