Abstract

Expression of Kv1.2 within Kv1.x potassium channel complexes is critical in maintaining appropriate neuronal excitability and determining the threshold for action potential firing. This is attributed to the interaction of Kv1.2 with a hitherto unidentified protein that confers bimodal channel activation gating, allowing neurons to adapt to repetitive trains of stimulation and protecting against hyperexcitability. One potential protein candidate is the sigma‐1 receptor (Sig‐1R), which regulates other members of the Kv1.x channel family; however, the biophysical nature of the interaction between Sig‐1R and Kv1.2 has not been elucidated. We hypothesized that Sig‐1R may regulate Kv1.2 and may further act as the unidentified modulator of Kv1.2 activation. In transiently transfected HEK293 cells, we found that ligand activation of the Sig‐1R modulates Kv1.2 current amplitude. More importantly, Sig‐1R interacts with Kv1.2 in baseline conditions to influence bimodal activation gating. These effects are abolished in the presence of the auxiliary subunit Kvβ2 and when the Sig‐1R mutation underlying ALS16 (Sig‐1R‐E102Q), is expressed. These data suggest that Kvβ2 occludes the interaction of Sig‐1R with Kv1.2, and that E102 may be a residue critical for Sig‐1R modulation of Kv1.2. The results of this investigation describe an important new role for Sig‐1R in the regulation of neuronal excitability and introduce a novel mechanism of pathophysiology in Sig‐1R dysfunction.

Highlights

  • Delayed rectifier voltage-gated potassium channels play an essential role in determining the threshold for action potential firing and subsequent neuronal repolarization (Sutherland et al 1999)

  • Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society

  • We found that application of sigma-1 receptor (Sig-1R) agonist decreases Kv1.2 current amplitude, likely due to a ligand-dependent change in Sig-1R activity or conformation rather than increased association of Sig1R with Kv1.2, as the effect of Sig-1R agonist application is abolished in the presence of Kvb2

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Summary

Introduction

Delayed rectifier voltage-gated potassium channels play an essential role in determining the threshold for action potential firing and subsequent neuronal repolarization (Sutherland et al 1999). Sig-1R Modulation of Kv1.2 regulatory mechanism termed “use-dependent activation” (Baronas et al 2015, 2016) or “prepulse potentiation” (Grissmer et al 1994). Kv1.2 channels are unique in their ability to generate use-dependent activation, they will confer this property to Kv1.2-containing Kv1.x channel heteromers (Baronas et al 2015). The presence of Kv1.2 subunits increases the threshold for neuronal firing (Brew et al 2007) and terminates bursts of action potentials (Palani et al 2010), thereby protecting cells from hyperexcitability

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