Abstract
The multifunctional calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, CaMKII, has been shown to regulate chloride movement and cellular function in both excitable and non-excitable cells. We show that the plasma membrane expression of a member of the ClC family of Cl- channels, human CLC-3 (hCLC-3), a 90-kDa protein, is regulated by CaMKII. We cloned the full-length hCLC-3 gene from the human colonic tumor cell line T84, previously shown to express a CaMKII-activated Cl- conductance (ICl,CaMKII), and transfected this gene into the mammalian epithelial cell line tsA, which lacks endogenous expression of ICl,CaMKII. Biotinylation experiments demonstrated plasma membrane expression of hCLC-3 in the stably transfected cells. In whole cell patch clamp experiments, autonomously active CaMKII was introduced into tsA cells stably transfected with hCLC-3 via the patch pipette. Cells transfected with the hCLC-3 gene showed a 22-fold increase in current density over cells expressing the vector alone. Kinase-dependent current expression was abolished in the presence of the autocamtide-2-related inhibitory peptide, a specific inhibitor of CaMKII. A mutation of glycine 280 to glutamic acid in the conserved motif in the putative pore region of the channel changed anion selectivity from I- > Cl- to Cl- > I-. These results indicate that hCLC-3 encodes a Cl- channel that is regulated by CaMKII-dependent phosphorylation.
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CITATION STYLE
Huang, P., Liu, J., Di, A., Robinson, N. C., Musch, M. W., Kaetzel, M. A., & Nelson, D. J. (2001). Regulation of Human CLC-3 Channels by Multifunctional Ca 2+/Calmodulin-dependent Protein Kinase. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 276(23), 20093–20100. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M009376200
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