Abstract

Calcium/voltage-gated, large conductance potassium (BK) channels control numerous physiological processes, including myogenic tone. BK channel regulation by direct interaction between lipid and channel protein sites has received increasing attention. Leukotrienes (LTA4, LTB4, LTC4, LTD4, and LTE4) are inflammatory lipid mediators. We performed patch clamp studies in Xenopus oocytes that co-expressed BK channel-forming (cbv1) and accessory β1 subunits cloned from rat cerebral artery myocytes. Leukotrienes were applied at 0.1 nm-10 μm to either leaflet of cell-free membranes at a wide range of [Ca(2+)]i and voltages. Only LTB4 reversibly increased BK steady-state activity (EC50 = 1 nm; Emax reached at 10 nm), with physiological [Ca(2+)]i and voltages favoring this activation. Homomeric cbv1 or cbv1-β2 channels were LTB4-resistant. Computational modeling predicted that LTB4 docked onto the cholane steroid-sensing site in the BK β1 transmembrane domain 2 (TM2). Co-application of LTB4 and cholane steroid did not further increase LTB4-induced activation. LTB4 failed to activate β1 subunit-containing channels when β1 carried T169A, A176S, or K179I within the docking site. Co-application of LTB4 with LTA4, LTC4, LTD4, or LTE4 suppressed LTB4-induced activation. Inactive leukotrienes docked onto a portion of the site, probably preventing tight docking of LTB4. In summary, we document the ability of two endogenous lipids from different chemical families to share their site of action on a channel accessory subunit. Thus, cross-talk between leukotrienes and cholane steroids might converge on regulation of smooth muscle contractility via BK β1. Moreover, the identification of LTB4 as a highly potent ligand for BK channels is critical for the future development of β1-specific BK channel activators.

Highlights

  • BK channels regulate smooth muscle contractility and provide docking site for steroids, such as bile acids

  • This expression system has been extensively validated by us and by others to study basic function and lipid modulation of recombinant channels with a subunit composition that matches that of the native smooth muscle BK protein complex [8, 11, 21, 22]: BK channel-forming ␣ (“cbv1”; AY330293) and accessory ␤1 (FJ154955) subunits from freshly isolated rat cerebral artery myocytes

  • LTB4 Activates BK Channels via the Steroid-sensing Site on the BK ␤1 Subunit transmembrane domain 2 (TM2)—In previous work, we demonstrated that ␤1 subunits contain a recognition site for negatively charged cholane steroids that is not shared by ␤2– 4 subunits

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Summary

Introduction

BK channels regulate smooth muscle contractility and provide docking site for steroids, such as bile acids. Conclusion: Physiological lipids from different chemical families share their recognition site in BK proteins. Leukotrienes (LTA4, LTB4, LTC4, LTD4, and LTE4) are inflammatory lipid mediators. Co-application of LTB4 and cholane steroid did not further increase LTB4-induced activation. LTB4 failed to activate ␤1 subunit-containing channels when ␤1 carried T169A, A176S, or K179I within the docking site. Co-application of LTB4 with LTA4, LTC4, LTD4, or LTE4 suppressed LTB4-induced activation. We document the ability of two endogenous lipids from different chemical families to share their site of action on a channel accessory subunit. Cross-talk between leukotrienes and cholane steroids might converge on regulation of smooth muscle contractility via BK ␤1. The identification of LTB4 as a highly potent ligand for BK channels is critical for the future development of ␤1-specific BK channel activators

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