Abstract
Potassium (K+) homeostasis is controlled by the secretion of K+ ions across the apical membrane of renal collecting duct cells through a low-conductance inwardly rectifying K+ channel. The sensitivity of this channel to intracellular pH is particularly high and assumed to play a key role in K+ homeostasis. Recently, the apical K+ channel has been cloned (ROMK1, 2, 3 = K(ir)1.1a, K(ir)1.1b and K(ir)1.1c) and the pH dependence of ROMK1 was shown to resemble closely that of the native apical K+ channel. It is reported here that the steep pH dependence of ROMK channels is determined by a single amino acid residue located in the N-terminus close to the first hydrophobic segment M1. Changing lysine (K) at position 80 to methionine (M) removed the sensitivity of ROMK1 channels to intracellular pH. In pH-insensitive IRK1 channels, the reverse mutation (M84K) introduced dependence on intracellular pH similar to that of ROMK1 wild-type. A detailed mutation analysis suggests that a shift in the apparent pK(a) of K80 underlies the pH regulation of ROMK1 channels in the physiological pH range.
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Fakler, B., Schultz, J. H., Yang, J., Schulte, U., Brändle, U., Zenner, H. P., … Ruppersberg, J. P. (1996). Identification of a titratable lysine residue that determines sensitivity of kidney potassium channels (ROMK) to intracellular pH. EMBO Journal, 15(16), 4093–4099. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1460-2075.1996.tb00784.x
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