Stability of N-type inactivation and the coupling between N-type and C-type inactivation in the Aplysia Kv1 channel.

Pflugers Arch

Laboratory of Neurobiology, Graduate School of Integrated Sciences of Life, Hiroshima University, Kagamiyama 1-7-1, 739-8521, Higashi-Hiroshima, Japan.

Published: October 2024

The voltage-dependent potassium channels (Kv channels) show several different types of inactivation. N-type inactivation is a fast inactivating mechanism, which is essentially an open pore blockade by the amino-terminal structure of the channel itself or the auxiliary subunit. There are several functionally discriminatable slow inactivation (C-type, P-type, U-type), the mechanism of which is supposed to include rearrangement of the pore region. In some Kv1 channels, the actual inactivation is brought about by coupling of N-type and C-type inactivation (N-C coupling). In the present study, we focused on the N-C coupling of the Aplysia Kv1 channel (AKv1). AKv1 shows a robust N-type inactivation, but its recovery is almost thoroughly from C-type inactivated state owing to the efficient N-C coupling. In the I8Q mutant of AKv1, we found that the inactivation as well as its recovery showed two kinetic components apparently correspond to N-type and C-type inactivation. Also, the cumulative inactivation which depends on N-type mechanism in AKv1 was hindered in I8Q, suggesting that N-type inactivation of I8Q is less stable. We also found that Zn specifically accelerates C-type inactivation of AKv1 and that H382 in the pore turret is involved in the Zn binding. Because the region around Ile (I8) in AKv1 has been suggested to be involved in the pre-block binding of the amino-terminal structure, our results strengthen a hypothesis that the stability of the pre-block state is important for stable N-type inactivation as well as the N-C coupling in the Kv1 channel inactivation.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11639194PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00424-024-02982-5DOI Listing

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