Abstract

ATP-sensitive potassium (K(ATP)) channels are expressed in many excitable, as well as epithelial, cells and couple metabolic changes to modulation of cell activity. ATP regulation of K(ATP) channel activity may involve direct binding of this nucleotide to the pore-forming inward rectifier (Kir) subunit despite the lack of known nucleotide-binding motifs. To examine this possibility, we assessed the binding of the fluorescent ATP analogue, 2',3'-O-(2,4,6-trinitrophenylcyclo-hexadienylidene)adenosine 5'-triphosphate (TNP-ATP) to maltose-binding fusion proteins of the NH(2)- and COOH-terminal cytosolic regions of the three known K(ATP) channels (Kir1.1, Kir6.1, and Kir6.2) as well as to the COOH-terminal region of an ATP-insensitive inward rectifier K(+) channel (Kir2.1). We show direct binding of TNP-ATP to the COOH termini of all three known K(ATP) channels but not to the COOH terminus of the ATP-insensitive channel, Kir2.1. TNP-ATP binding was specific for the COOH termini of K(ATP) channels because this nucleotide did not bind to the NH(2) termini of Kir1.1 or Kir6.1. The affinities for TNP-ATP binding to K(ATP) COOH termini of Kir1.1, Kir6.1, and Kir6.2 were similar. Binding was abolished by denaturing with 4 m urea or SDS and enhanced by reduction in pH. TNP-ATP to protein stoichiometries were similar for all K(ATP) COOH-terminal proteins with 1 mol of TNP-ATP binding/mole of protein. Competition of TNP-ATP binding to the Kir1.1 COOH terminus by MgATP was complex with both Mg(2+) and MgATP effects. Glutaraldehyde cross-linking demonstrated the multimerization potential of these COOH termini, suggesting that these cytosolic segments may directly interact in intact tetrameric channels. Thus, the COOH termini of K(ATP) tetrameric channels contain the nucleotide-binding pockets of these metabolically regulated channels with four potential nucleotide-binding sites/channel tetramer.

Highlights

  • ATP-sensitive or ATP-regulated potassium (KATP)1 channels couple metabolism to either cell excitability (Kir6.x) [1,2,3,4,5,6] or potassium secretion (Kir1.1 in kidney) [7, 8] and provide therapeutic targets for diseases including tissue ischemia, diabetes, hypertension, and disorders of potassium homeostasis

  • The SUR/fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator subunits contain nucleotide-binding folds [11, 12], this subunit is not required for ATP-mediated inhibition of Kϩ channel activity

  • Because ATP-mediated inhibition of channel activity must be a complex process involving residues that form an ATP-binding pocket and others that may be required for linking ATP binding to channel closure, those mutational studies of channel gating by nucleotides do not provide unequivocal evidence for direct involvement of those residues in ATP binding

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Summary

Introduction

ATP-sensitive or ATP-regulated potassium (KATP) channels couple metabolism to either cell excitability (Kir6.x) [1,2,3,4,5,6] or potassium secretion (Kir1.1 in kidney) [7, 8] and provide therapeutic targets for diseases including tissue ischemia, diabetes, hypertension, and disorders of potassium homeostasis. The SUR/fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator subunits contain nucleotide-binding folds [11, 12], this subunit is not required for ATP-mediated inhibition of Kϩ channel activity. Because ATP-mediated inhibition of channel activity must be a complex process involving residues that form an ATP-binding pocket and others that may be required for linking ATP binding to channel closure, those mutational studies of channel gating by nucleotides do not provide unequivocal evidence for direct involvement of those residues in ATP binding. We provide what we believe to be the first evidence of direct binding of ATP to cytosolic domains of the pore-forming subunits of KATP channels and show that the COOH termini, but not the NH2 termini, of Kir subunits of KATP channels bind TNP-ATP. Based on glutaraldehyde cross-linking studies, the COOH termini of these three ATP-sensitive channels exhibit multimerization potential so that they may interact in these intact tetrameric channels

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