Abstract

The magnitudes and distributions of subconductance states were studied in chloride channels formed by the wild-type cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) and in CFTRs bearing amino acid substitutions in transmembrane segment 6. Within an open burst, it was possible to distinguish three distinct conductance states referred to as the full conductance, subconductance 1, and subconductance 2 states. Amino acid substitutions in transmembrane segment 6 altered the duration and probability of occurrence of these subconductance states but did not greatly alter their relative amplitudes. Results from real time measurements indicated that covalent modification of single R334C-CFTR channels by [2-(trimethylammonium)ethyl]methanethiosulfonate resulted in the simultaneous modification of all three conductance levels in what appeared to be a single step, without changing the proportion of time spent in each state. This behavior suggests that at least a portion of the conduction path is common to all three conducting states. The time course for the modification of R334C-CFTR, measured in outside-out macropatches using a rapid perfusion system, was also consistent with a single modification step as if each pore contained only a single copy of the cysteine at position 334. These results are consistent with a model for the CFTR conduction pathway in which a single anion-conducting pore is formed by a single CFTR polypeptide.

Highlights

  • The magnitudes and distributions of subconductance states were studied in chloride channels formed by the wild-type cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) and in CFTRs bearing amino acid substitutions in transmembrane segment 6

  • Results from real time measurements indicated that covalent modification of single R334C-CFTR channels by [2-(trimethylammonium)ethyl]methanethiosulfonate resulted in the simultaneous modification of all three conductance levels in what appeared to be a single step, without changing the proportion of time spent in each state

  • For the purposes of this study, we defined a subconductance state as a conductance level that was visited during open-channel bursts and that was sufficiently stable to be recognized in an all-points histogram [16, 17]

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Summary

ONE POLYPEPTIDE FORMS ONE PORE*

Results from real time measurements indicated that covalent modification of single R334C-CFTR channels by [2-(trimethylammonium)ethyl]methanethiosulfonate resulted in the simultaneous modification of all three conductance levels in what appeared to be a single step, without changing the proportion of time spent in each state. The channel spends the majority of its time shuttling between the main (full) conductance level and the closed level, careful inspection of the fine structure of open-channel bursts led to the observation of one or two other levels of intermediate conductance (4, 6 –13) These subconductance levels could represent permeation through completely separate pores (which, when summed, comprise the full conductance level) or permeation through a single pathway that may reside in multiple configurations differing in conductance. The results of this study are consistent with a model for the CFTR protein in which a single pore is formed from a single CFTR polypeptide

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
Po ϭ
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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