Abstract

Calcium-activated potassium channels of the KCa1.1 class are known to regulate repolarization of action potential discharge through a molecular association with high voltage-activated calcium channels. The current study examined the potential for low voltage-activated Cav3 (T-type) calcium channels to interact with KCa1.1 when expressed in tsA-201 cells and in rat medial vestibular neurons (MVN) in vitro. Expression of the channel α-subunits alone in tsA-201 cells was sufficient to enable Cav3 activation of KCa1.1 current. Cav3 calcium influx induced a 50 mV negative shift in KCa1.1 voltage for activation, an interaction that was blocked by Cav3 or KCa1.1 channel blockers, or high internal EGTA. Cav3 and KCa1.1 channels coimmunoprecipitated from lysates of either tsA-201 cells or rat brain, with Cav3 channels associating with the transmembrane S0 segment of the KCa1.1 N-terminus. KCa1.1 channel activation was closely aligned with Cav3 calcium conductance in that KCa1.1 current shared the same low voltage dependence of Cav3 activation, and was blocked by voltage-dependent inactivation of Cav3 channels or by coexpressing a non calcium-conducting Cav3 channel pore mutant. The Cav3-KCa1.1 interaction was found to function highly effectively in a subset of MVN neurons by activating near –50 mV to contribute to spike repolarization and gain of firing. Modelling data indicate that multiple neighboring Cav3-KCa1.1 complexes must act cooperatively to raise calcium to sufficiently high levels to permit KCa1.1 activation. Together the results identify a novel Cav3-KCa1.1 signaling complex where Cav3-mediated calcium entry enables KCa1.1 activation over a wide range of membrane potentials according to the unique voltage profile of Cav3 calcium channels, greatly extending the roles for KCa1.1 potassium channels in controlling membrane excitability.

Highlights

  • Calcium-activated potassium channels are expressed in central neurons to control membrane excitability following activation by calcium influx through voltage- or ligand-gated channels [1,2,3,4]

  • We focused on the expression of Cav3.2 calcium channels given that calcium current coupled to generation of an AHP in medial vestibular neurons (MVN) cells is sensitive to 100 mM Ni2+ [23], a concentration relatively selective for the Cav3.2 channel isoform [32]

  • Previous work indicates that specific isoforms of high voltage-activated (HVA) calcium channels can activate KCa1.1 channels to contribute to spike repolarization and generating AHPs [2,6,9,10,55,60,61]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Calcium-activated potassium channels are expressed in central neurons to control membrane excitability following activation by calcium influx through voltage- or ligand-gated channels [1,2,3,4]. Of the known isoforms of calcium-dependent potassium channels, the ‘‘big conductance’’ (BK, KCa1.1) channel plays a key role in controlling action potential repolarization and a fast afterhyperpolarization in numerous cell types [1,5,6,7,8,9]. The calcium influx required to activate KCa1.1 channels can derive from high voltage-activated (HVA) calcium channel conductance by virtue of a molecular association between KCa1.1 and HVA calcium channels [6,10,11,12,13,14]. Much less is known about the potential for KCa1.1 current to be activated by Cav channels that operate in an even lower voltage range to regulate membrane excitability and spike output in neurons

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call