Abstract

ClC-K channels belong to the CLC family of chloride channels and chloride/proton antiporters. They contribute to sodium chloride reabsorption in Henle's loop of the kidney and to potassium secretion into the endolymph by the stria vascularis of the inner ear. Their accessory subunit barttin stabilizes the ClC-K/barttin complex, promotes its insertion into the surface membrane, and turns the pore-forming subunits into a conductive state. Barttin mutations cause Bartter syndrome type IV, a salt-wasting nephropathy with sensorineural deafness. Here, studying ClC-K/barttin channels heterologously expressed in MDCK-II and HEK293T cells with confocal imaging and patch-clamp recordings, we demonstrate that the eight-amino-acids-long barttin N terminus is required for channel trafficking and activation. Deletion of the complete N terminus (Δ2-8 barttin) retained barttin and human hClC-Ka channels in intracellular compartments. Partial N-terminal deletions did not compromise subcellular hClC-Ka trafficking but drastically reduced current amplitudes. Sequence deletions encompassing Thr-6, Phe-7, or Arg-8 in barttin completely failed to activate hClC-Ka. Analyses of protein expression and whole-cell current noise revealed that inactive channels reside in the plasma membrane. Substituting the deleted N terminus with a polyalanine sequence was insufficient for recovering chloride currents, and single amino acid substitutions highlighted that the correct sequence is required for proper function. Fast and slow gate activation curves obtained from rat V166E rClC-K1/barttin channels indicated that mutant barttin fails to constitutively open the slow gate. Increasing expression of barttin over that of ClC-K partially recovered this insufficiency, indicating that N-terminal modifications of barttin alter both binding affinities and gating properties.

Highlights

  • ClC-K channels belong to the CLC family of chloride channels and chloride/proton antiporters

  • We C-terminally fused monomeric cyan fluorescent protein to barttin to investigate its subcellular localization with confocal microscopy when transiently expressed in Madin–Darby canine kidney II (MDCK-II) cells (Fig. 1A)

  • Barttin was retained in intracellular compartments, whereas WT barttin was well transported to the surface membrane

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Summary

Results

N-terminal truncation of barttin impairs intracellular trafficking of hClC-Ka/barttin. Four, or six alanine residues filled the gap between Met-1 and Arg-8 These mutants allowed sufficient membrane insertion, as confirmed by confocal images, but current amplitudes of hClC-Ka/barttin channels remained extremely low (Fig. 4, A and B). F and G, representative current recordings and slow gate activation curves for the same mutants as in D and E but using a low expression pSVL vector for V166E rClC-K1 channel proteins, resulting in extensive excess of barttin over ClC-K subunits. H, comparison of relative slow gate open probabilities at ϩ105 mV for standard (black) and low expression (gray) of V166E rClC-K1 channels in the presence of WT or mutant barttin. S.E. (in B, C, E, and G); S.D. (in H)

Discussion
Mutagenesis and heterologous expression
Biochemical analysis of protein expression
Confocal microscopy
Electrophysiology and data analysis
Full Text
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