Abstract

The ability of membrane voltage to activate high conductance, calcium-activated (BK-type) K(+) channels is enhanced by cytosolic calcium (Ca(2+)). Activation is sensitive to a range of [Ca(2+)] that spans over four orders of magnitude. Here, we examine the activation of BK channels resulting from expression of cloned mouse Slo1 alpha subunits at [Ca(2+)] and [Mg(2+)] up to 100 mM. The half-activation voltage (V(0.5)) is steeply dependent on [Ca(2+)] in the micromolar range, but shows a tendency towards saturation over the range of 60-300 microM Ca(2+). As [Ca(2+)] is increased to millimolar levels, the V(0.5) is strongly shifted again to more negative potentials. When channels are activated by 300 microM Ca(2+), further addition of either mM Ca(2+) or mM Mg(2+) produces similar negative shifts in steady-state activation. Millimolar Mg(2+) also produces shifts of similar magnitude in the complete absence of Ca(2+). The ability of millimolar concentrations of divalent cations to shift activation is primarily correlated with a slowing of BK current deactivation. At voltages where millimolar elevations in [Ca(2+)] increase activation rates, addition of 10 mM Mg(2+) to 0 Ca(2+) produces little effect on activation time course, while markedly slowing deactivation. This suggests that Mg(2+) does not participate in Ca(2+)-dependent steps that influence current activation rate. We conclude that millimolar Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) concentrations interact with low affinity, relatively nonselective divalent cation binding sites that are distinct from higher affinity, Ca(2+)-selective binding sites that increase current activation rates. A symmetrical model with four independent higher affinity Ca(2+) binding steps, four voltage sensors, and four independent lower affinity Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) binding steps describes well the behavior of G-V curves over a range of Ca(2+) and Mg(2+). The ability of a broad range of [Ca(2+)] to produce shifts in activation of Slo1 conductance can, therefore, be accounted for by multiple types of divalent cation binding sites.

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