Abstract
Cholesterol is one of the major lipid components of the plasma membrane in mammalian cells and is involved in the regulation of a number of ion channels. The present study investigates how large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channels are regulated by membrane cholesterol in BK-HEK 293 cells expressing both the α-subunit hKCa1.1 and the auxiliary β1-subunit or in hKCa1.1-HEK 293 cells expressing only the α-subunit hKCa1.1 using approaches of electrophysiology, molecular biology, and immunocytochemistry. Membrane cholesterol was depleted in these cells with methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MβCD), and enriched with cholesterol-saturated MβCD (MβCD-cholesterol) or low-density lipoprotein (LDL). We found that BK current density was decreased by cholesterol enrichment in BK-HEK 293 cells, with a reduced expression of KCa1.1 protein, but not the β1-subunit protein. This effect was fully countered by the proteasome inhibitor lactacystin or the lysosome function inhibitor bafilomycin A1. Interestingly, in hKCa1.1-HEK 293 cells, the current density was not affected by cholesterol enrichment, but directly decreased by MβCD, suggesting that the down-regulation of BK channels by cholesterol depends on the auxiliary β1-subunit. The reduced KCa1.1 channel protein expression was also observed in cultured human coronary artery smooth muscle cells with cholesterol enrichment using MβCD-cholesterol or LDL. These results demonstrate the novel information that cholesterol down-regulates BK channels by reducing KCa1.1 protein expression via increasing the channel protein degradation, and the effect is dependent on the auxiliary β1-subunit.
Highlights
Large conductance Ca2+-activated and voltage-dependent K+ (BK, called Maxi K) channels encoded by KCa1.1 (KCNMA1 or Slo1) gene are widely distributed in smooth muscle, brain, pancreatic islets, etc., and are essential for the regulation of several key physiological processes including smooth muscle tone and neuronal excitability [1,2]
Cholesterol and BK channel current The effect of MbCD, MbCD-cholesterol complex or low density lipoprotein (LDL) on membrane cholesterol content was determined in BK-HEK 293 cells
The present study has demonstrated that the cholesterol enrichment reduces the current density, single channel open probability and KCa1.1 protein expression level in BK-HEK 293 cells
Summary
Large conductance Ca2+-activated and voltage-dependent K+ (BK, called Maxi K) channels encoded by KCa1.1 (KCNMA1 or Slo1) gene are widely distributed in smooth muscle, brain, pancreatic islets, etc., and are essential for the regulation of several key physiological processes including smooth muscle tone and neuronal excitability [1,2]. B1 is the predominant BK channel beta-subunit expressed in smooth muscle cells [7,8] and regulates the channel sensitivity to Ca2+ ions [6,9]. The expression of b1 subunit was found to be decreased in vascular smooth muscle cells in a rat hypertension model [10] and in patients with hypertension [11]. Reports on the regulation of BK current by membrane cholesterol are controversial in different tissues/cells [19,20,21,22,23]
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