Large-conductance, Ca2+- and voltage-activated K+ (BK) channels are broadly expressed proteins that respond to both cellular depolarization and elevations in cytosolic Ca2+. The characteristic functional properties of BK channels among different cells are determined, in part, by tissue-specific expression of auxiliary β subunits. One important functional property conferred on BK channels by β subunits is inactivation. Yet, the physiological role of BK channel inactivation remains poorly understood. Here we report that as a consequence of a specific mechanism of inactivation, BK channels containing the β3a auxiliary subunit exhibit an anomalous slowing of channel closing. This produces a net repolarizing current flux that markedly exceeds that expected if all open channels had simply closed. Because of the time dependence of inactivation, this behavior results in a Ca2+-independent but time-dependent increase in a slow tail current, providing an unexpected mechanism by which use-dependent changes in slow after hyperpolarizations might regulate electrical firing. The physiological significance of inactivation in BK channels mediated by different β subunits may therefore arise not from inactivation itself, but from the differences in the amplitude and duration of repolarizing currents arising from the β-subunit-specific energetics of recovery from inactivation. Copyright © 2007 Society for Neuroscience.
CITATION STYLE
Zeng, X. H., Benzinger, G. R., Xia, X. M., & Lingle, C. J. (2007). BK channels with β3a subunits generate use-dependent slow afterhyperpolarizing currents by an inactivation-coupled mechanism. Journal of Neuroscience, 27(17), 4707–4715. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0758-07.2007
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