A conserved pre-block interaction motif regulates potassium channel activation and N-type inactivation.

N-type inactivation occurs when the N-terminus of a potassium channel binds into the open pore of the channel. This study examined the relationship between activation and steady state inactivation for mutations affecting the N-type inactivation properties of the Aplysia potassium channel AKv1 expres...

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Main Author: Paul J Pfaffinger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3827413?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-2b446c37e1614056b9a1d64d4aa90e9c2020-11-25T02:33:38ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01811e7989110.1371/journal.pone.0079891A conserved pre-block interaction motif regulates potassium channel activation and N-type inactivation.Paul J PfaffingerN-type inactivation occurs when the N-terminus of a potassium channel binds into the open pore of the channel. This study examined the relationship between activation and steady state inactivation for mutations affecting the N-type inactivation properties of the Aplysia potassium channel AKv1 expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The results show that the traditional single-step model for N-type inactivation fails to properly account for the observed relationship between steady state channel activation and inactivation curves. We find that the midpoint of the steady state inactivation curve depends in part on a secondary interaction between the channel core and a region of the N-terminus just proximal to the pore blocking peptide that we call the Inactivation Proximal (IP) region. The IP interaction with the channel core produces a negative shift in the activation and inactivation curves, without blocking the pore. A tripeptide motif in the IP region was identified in a large number of different N-type inactivation domains most likely reflecting convergent evolution in addition to direct descent. Point mutating a conserved hydrophobic residue in this motif eliminates the gating voltage shift, accelerates recovery from inactivation and decreases the amount of pore block produced during inactivation. The IP interaction we have identified likely stabilizes the open state and positions the pore blocking region of the N-terminus at the internal opening to the transmembrane pore by forming a Pre-Block (P state) interaction with residues lining the side window vestibule of the channel.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3827413?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul J Pfaffinger
spellingShingle Paul J Pfaffinger
A conserved pre-block interaction motif regulates potassium channel activation and N-type inactivation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Paul J Pfaffinger
author_sort Paul J Pfaffinger
title A conserved pre-block interaction motif regulates potassium channel activation and N-type inactivation.
title_short A conserved pre-block interaction motif regulates potassium channel activation and N-type inactivation.
title_full A conserved pre-block interaction motif regulates potassium channel activation and N-type inactivation.
title_fullStr A conserved pre-block interaction motif regulates potassium channel activation and N-type inactivation.
title_full_unstemmed A conserved pre-block interaction motif regulates potassium channel activation and N-type inactivation.
title_sort conserved pre-block interaction motif regulates potassium channel activation and n-type inactivation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description N-type inactivation occurs when the N-terminus of a potassium channel binds into the open pore of the channel. This study examined the relationship between activation and steady state inactivation for mutations affecting the N-type inactivation properties of the Aplysia potassium channel AKv1 expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The results show that the traditional single-step model for N-type inactivation fails to properly account for the observed relationship between steady state channel activation and inactivation curves. We find that the midpoint of the steady state inactivation curve depends in part on a secondary interaction between the channel core and a region of the N-terminus just proximal to the pore blocking peptide that we call the Inactivation Proximal (IP) region. The IP interaction with the channel core produces a negative shift in the activation and inactivation curves, without blocking the pore. A tripeptide motif in the IP region was identified in a large number of different N-type inactivation domains most likely reflecting convergent evolution in addition to direct descent. Point mutating a conserved hydrophobic residue in this motif eliminates the gating voltage shift, accelerates recovery from inactivation and decreases the amount of pore block produced during inactivation. The IP interaction we have identified likely stabilizes the open state and positions the pore blocking region of the N-terminus at the internal opening to the transmembrane pore by forming a Pre-Block (P state) interaction with residues lining the side window vestibule of the channel.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3827413?pdf=render
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