Abstract
Patch clamp studies of the potassium-transport proteins TRK1,2 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae have revealed large chloride efflux currents: at clamp voltages negative to -100 mV, and intracellular chloride concentrations >10 mM (J. Membr. Biol. 198:177, 2004). Stationary-state current-voltage analysis led to an in-series two-barrier model for chloride activation: the lower barrier (α) being 10-13 kcal/mol located ∼30% into the membrane from the cytoplasmic surface; and the higher one (β) being 12-16 kcal/mol located at the outer surface. Measurements carried out with lyotrophic anions and osmoprotective solutes have now demonstrated the following new properties: (1) selectivity for highly permeant anions changes with extracellular pH; at pH o=5.5: I -≈Br ->Cl ->SCN ->NO 3-, and at pH o 7.5: I -≈Br ->SCN ->NO 3- >Cl -. (2) NO 2- acts like "superchoride", possibly enhancing the channel's intrinsic permeability to Cl -. (3) SCN - and NO 3- block chloride permeability. (4) The order of selectivity for several slightly permeant anions (at pH o=5.5 only) is formate>gluconate>acetate>>phosphate -1. (5) All anion conductances are modulated (choked) by osmoprotective solutes. (6) The data and descriptive two-barrier model evoke a hypothetical structure (Biophys. J. 77:789, 1999) consisting of an intramembrane homotetramer of fungal TRK molecules, arrayed radially around a central cluster of four single helices (TM7) from each monomer. (7) That tetrameric cluster would resemble the hydrophobic core of (pentameric) ligand-gated ion channels, and would suggest voltage-modulated hydrophobic gating to underlie anion permeation. © 2011 Springer-Verlag.
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Rivetta, A., Kuroda, T., & Slayman, C. (2011). Anion currents in yeast K + transporters (TRK) characterize a structural homologue of ligand-gated ion channels. Pflugers Archiv European Journal of Physiology, 462(2), 315–330. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00424-011-0959-9
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