Abstract

Although the tandem pore potassium channel TASK-3 is thought to open and shut at its selectivity filter in response to changes of extracellular pH, it is currently unknown whether the channel also shows gating at its inner, cytoplasmic mouth through movements of membrane helices M2 and M4. We used two electrode voltage clamp and single channel recording to show that TASK-3 responds to voltage in a way that reveals such gating. In wild-type channels, Popen was very low at negative voltages, but increased with depolarisation. The effect of voltage was relatively weak and the gating charge small, ∼0.17. Mutants A237T (in M4) and N133A (in M2) increased Popen at a given voltage, increasing mean open time and the number of openings per burst. In addition, the relationship between Popen and voltage was shifted to less positive voltages. Mutation of putative hinge glycines (G117A, G231A), residues that are conserved throughout the tandem pore channel family, reduced Popen at a given voltage, shifting the relationship with voltage to a more positive potential range. None of these mutants substantially affected the response of the channel to extracellular acidification. We have used the results from single channel recording to develop a simple kinetic model to show how gating occurs through two classes of conformation change, with two routes out of the open state, as expected if gating occurs both at the selectivity filter and at its cytoplasmic mouth.

Highlights

  • Tandem pore potassium channels help set the resting membrane potential of a wide variety of cells (Goldstein et al 2001; Patel & Honore, 2001; Kim, 2005)

  • The human TASK-3 cDNA was cloned by PCR using as template first strand cDNA reverse transcribed from total RNA purified from CAPAN-1 cells

  • Our results (Fig. 6) are in agreement with the expectation that gating in response to acidification does not involve gating at the cytoplasmic mouth of the channel. We have used both two electrode voltage clamp and single channel recording to investigate the response of TASK-3 channels to voltage

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Summary

Introduction

Tandem pore potassium channels help set the resting membrane potential of a wide variety of cells (Goldstein et al 2001; Patel & Honore, 2001; Kim, 2005). Among such channels, the acid sensitive TASK-3 (K2P9.1) is widely expressed in the central nervous system, regulating the excitability of a number of neuronal populations (e.g. Han et al 2002, 2003; Washburn et al 2002; Brickley et al 2007). This gating process, occurring at the selectivity filter, is likely to be similar to that described for C-type inactivation in Kv channels (Yellen, 1998; Bichet et al 2003; see Zilberberg et al 2001)

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