Abstract

Voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channels comprise pore-forming α subunits and a multiplicity of regulatory proteins, including the cardiac-expressed and cardiac arrhythmia-linked transmembrane KCNE subunits. After recently uncovering novel, N-terminally extended (L) KCNE3 and KCNE4 isoforms and detecting their transcripts in human atrium, reported here are their functional effects on human cardiac Kv channel α subunits expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. As previously reported for short isoforms KCNE3S and KCNE4S, KCNE3L inhibited hERG; KCNE4L inhibited Kv1.1; neither form regulated the HCN1 pacemaker channel. Unlike KCNE4S, KCNE4L was a potent inhibitor of Kv4.2 and Kv4.3; co-expression of cytosolic β subunit KChIP2, which regulates Kv4 channels in cardiac myocytes, partially relieved Kv4.3 but not Kv4.2 inhibition. Inhibition of Kv4.2 and Kv4.3 by KCNE3L was weaker, and its inhibition of Kv4.2 abolished by KChIP2. KCNE3L and KCNE4L also exhibited subunit-specific effects on Kv4 channel complex inactivation kinetics, voltage dependence and recovery. Further supporting the potential physiological significance of the robust functional effects of KCNE4L on Kv4 channels, KCNE4L protein was detected in human atrium, where it co-localized with Kv4.3. The findings establish functional effects of novel human cardiac-expressed KCNE isoforms and further contribute to our understanding of the potential mechanisms influencing cardiomyocyte repolarization.

Highlights

  • Voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channels comprise pore-forming α subunits and a multiplicity of regulatory proteins, including the cardiac-expressed and cardiac arrhythmia-linked transmembrane KCNE subunits

  • N-terminally extended (L) KCNE3 and KCNE4 isoforms and detecting their transcripts in human atrium, reported here are their functional effects on human cardiac known Voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channel α subunits expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes

  • Further supporting the potential physiological significance of the robust functional effects of KCNE4L on Kv4 channels, KCNE4L protein was detected in human atrium, where it co-localized with Kv4.3

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Summary

UC Irvine Previously Published Works

Title Regulation of human cardiac potassium channels by full-length KCNE3 and KCNE4. Powered by the California Digital Library University of California www.nature.com/scientificreports. Voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channels comprise pore-forming α subunits and a multiplicity of regulatory proteins, including the cardiac-expressed and cardiac arrhythmia-linked transmembrane KCNE subunits. N-terminally extended (L) KCNE3 and KCNE4 isoforms and detecting their transcripts in human atrium, reported here are their functional effects on human cardiac Kv channel α subunits expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. More recently, sequence variants in the genes encoding subunits or putative subunits of cardiac channel complexes generating the transient outward Kv current (Ito) have been associated with BrS. These include the genes encoding KCNE3 and KCNE5, which can regulate the Kv4.3 αsubunit that generates Ito in human heart, and the KCND3 gene that encodes Kv4.3 itself 34–38. I demonstrate the expression of KCNE4L protein in human heart, and describe the functional effects of KCNE3L and KCNE4L on the major human cardiac Kv channel αsubunits

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