Control of inward rectifier K channel activity by lipid tethering of cytoplasmic domains

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Abstract

Interactions between nontransmembrane domains and the lipid membrane are proposed to modulate activity of many ion channels. In Kir channels, the so-called "slide-helix" is proposed to interact with the lipid headgroups and control channel gating. We examined this possibility directly in a cell-free system consisting of KirBac1.1 reconstituted into pure lipid vesicles. Cysteine substitution of positively charged slide-helix residues (R49C and K57C) leads to loss of channel activity that is rescued by in situ restoration of charge following modification by MTSET+ or MTSEA +, but not MTSES- or neutral MMTS. Strikingly, activity is also rescued by modification with long-chain alkyl-MTS reagents. Such reagents are expected to partition into, and hence tether the side chain to, the membrane. Systematic scanning reveals additional slide-helix residues that are activated or inhibited following alkyl-MTS modification. A pattern emerges whereby lipid tethering of the N terminus, or C terminus, of the slide-helix, respectively inhibits, or activates, channel activity. This study establishes a critical role of the slide-helix in Kir channel gating, and directly demonstrates that physical interaction of soluble domains with the membrane can control ion channel activity. © The Rockefeller University Press.

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Enkvetchakul, D., Jeliazkova, I., Bhattacharyya, J., & Nichols, C. G. (2007). Control of inward rectifier K channel activity by lipid tethering of cytoplasmic domains. Journal of General Physiology, 130(3), 329–334. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.200709764

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