Abstract

Large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels (BK channels) are activated by cytosolic calcium and depolarized membrane potential under physiological conditions. Thus, these channels control electrical excitability in neurons and smooth muscle by gating K+ efflux and hyperpolarizing the membrane in response to Ca2+ signaling. Altered BK channel function has been linked to epilepsy, dyskinesia, and other neurological deficits in humans, making these channels a key target for drug therapies. To gain insight into mechanisms underlying pharmacological modulation of BK channel gating, here we studied mechanisms underlying activation of BK channels by the biarylthiourea derivative, NS11021, which acts as a smooth muscle relaxant. We observe that increasing NS11021 shifts the half-maximal activation voltage for BK channels toward more hyperpolarized voltages, in both the presence and nominal absence of Ca2+, suggesting that NS11021 facilitates BK channel activation primarily by a mechanism that is distinct from Ca2+ activation. 30 µM NS11021 slows the time course of BK channel deactivation at -200 mV by ∼10-fold compared with 0 µM NS11021, while having little effect on the time course of activation. This action is most pronounced at negative voltages, at which the BK channel voltage sensors are at rest. Single-channel kinetic analysis further shows that 30 µM NS11021 increases open probability by 62-fold and increases mean open time from 0.15 to 0.52 ms in the nominal absence of Ca2+ at voltages less than -60 mV, conditions in which BK voltage sensors are largely in the resting state. We could therefore account for the major activating effects of NS11021 by a scheme in which the drug primarily shifts the pore-gate equilibrium toward the open state.

Highlights

  • Large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels (BK channels) are expressed in a wide variety of tissues, including neurons, vascular smooth muscle, and secretory epithelium, where they have been implicated in both control of neuronal firing rates and ac-Rothberg, 2017)

  • Based on our current understanding of BK channel gating, the leftward shifts in V1/2 observed with 10 μM Ca2+ could arise through the drug acting at the voltage-sensing domain (VSD), Ca2+-sensing domain (CSD), or pore/gate domain (PGD) or at positions that effect energetic coupling between domains, mechanisms that will be explored below

  • NS11021 acts by stabilizing the PGD in the open state To gain further insight toward the molecular mechanism of NS11021 action, we developed a quantitative description of gating in the presence and absence of drug, based on the wellestablished dual allosteric model for BK channel gating Scheme 1

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Summary

Introduction

Large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels (BK channels) are expressed in a wide variety of tissues, including neurons, vascular smooth muscle, and secretory epithelium, where they have been implicated in both control of neuronal firing rates and ac-Rothberg, 2017). BK activators may mallotoxin and dehydroxysoyasaponin, and synthetic compounds be useful as therapeutics in disease where decreased BK channel such as the aryloxindole derivative BMS-204352 and the biarfunction is an underlying factor, and these activators may ylthiourea derivative NS11021. Compounds comprising such a serve as research tools to understand and probe molecular mechanisms of channel gating (Bentzen et al, 2014; Kshatri et al, 2018; Koval et al, 2007; Hoshi and Heinemann, 2016)

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