TY - JOUR
T1 - Inactivation gating of Kv7.1 channels does not involve concerted cooperative subunit interactions
AU - Meisel, Eshcar
AU - Tobelaim, William
AU - Dvir, Meidan
AU - Haitin, Yoni
AU - Peretz, Asher
AU - Attali, Bernard
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 The Author(s).
PY - 2018/1/1
Y1 - 2018/1/1
N2 - Inactivation is an intrinsic property of numerous voltage-gated K + (Kv) channels and can occur by Ntype or/and C-type mechanisms. N-type inactivation is a fast, voltage independent process, coupled to activation, with each inactivation particle of a tetrameric channel acting independently. In N-type inactivation, a single inactivation particle is necessary and sufficient to occlude the pore. C-type inactivation is a slower process, involving the outermost region of the pore and is mediated by a concerted, highly cooperative interaction between all four subunits. Inactivation of Kv7.1 channels does not exhibit the hallmarks of N- and C-type inactivation. Inactivation of WT Kv7.1 channels can be revealed by hooked tail currents that reflects the recovery from a fast and voltage-independent inactivation process. However, several Kv7.1 mutants such as the pore mutant L273F generate an additional voltage-dependent slow inactivation. The subunit interactions during this slow inactivation gating remain unexplored. The goal of the present study was to study the nature of subunit interactions along Kv7.1 inactivation gating, using concatenated tetrameric Kv7.1 channel and introducing sequentially into each of the four subunits the slow inactivating pore mutation L273F. Incorporating an incremental number of inactivating mutant subunits did not affect the inactivation kinetics but slowed down the recovery kinetics from inactivation. Results indicate that Kv7.1 inactivation gating is not compatible with a concerted cooperative process. Instead, adding an inactivating subunit L273F into the Kv7.1 tetramer incrementally stabilizes the inactivated state, which suggests that like for activation gating, Kv7.1 slow inactivation gating is not a concerted process.
AB - Inactivation is an intrinsic property of numerous voltage-gated K + (Kv) channels and can occur by Ntype or/and C-type mechanisms. N-type inactivation is a fast, voltage independent process, coupled to activation, with each inactivation particle of a tetrameric channel acting independently. In N-type inactivation, a single inactivation particle is necessary and sufficient to occlude the pore. C-type inactivation is a slower process, involving the outermost region of the pore and is mediated by a concerted, highly cooperative interaction between all four subunits. Inactivation of Kv7.1 channels does not exhibit the hallmarks of N- and C-type inactivation. Inactivation of WT Kv7.1 channels can be revealed by hooked tail currents that reflects the recovery from a fast and voltage-independent inactivation process. However, several Kv7.1 mutants such as the pore mutant L273F generate an additional voltage-dependent slow inactivation. The subunit interactions during this slow inactivation gating remain unexplored. The goal of the present study was to study the nature of subunit interactions along Kv7.1 inactivation gating, using concatenated tetrameric Kv7.1 channel and introducing sequentially into each of the four subunits the slow inactivating pore mutation L273F. Incorporating an incremental number of inactivating mutant subunits did not affect the inactivation kinetics but slowed down the recovery kinetics from inactivation. Results indicate that Kv7.1 inactivation gating is not compatible with a concerted cooperative process. Instead, adding an inactivating subunit L273F into the Kv7.1 tetramer incrementally stabilizes the inactivated state, which suggests that like for activation gating, Kv7.1 slow inactivation gating is not a concerted process.
KW - Cooperativity
KW - Inactivation
KW - KCNQ
KW - Kv7
KW - Potassium channel
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85049269493&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/19336950.2018.1441649
DO - 10.1080/19336950.2018.1441649
M3 - ???researchoutput.researchoutputtypes.contributiontojournal.article???
AN - SCOPUS:85049269493
SN - 1933-6950
VL - 12
SP - 89
EP - 99
JO - Channels
JF - Channels
IS - 1
ER -