Functional expression of Shaker K+ channels in cultured Drosophila "giant" neurons derived from Sh cDNA transformants: Distinct properties, distribution, and turnover

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Abstract

Expression of transgenic Shaker (Sh) channels has not previously been examined in Drosophila neurons. We studied K+ current by whole-cell recording in cultured "giant" neurons derived from germline transformants. Independent lines were generated by using a P-element vector, in which transcription of the 29-4 cDNA, one of the Sh splicing variants (Iverson and Rudy, 1990), was under the control of a heat shock (HS)-inducible promoter. Transformants in wild-type and two different Sh mutant backgrounds all exhibited an HS-inducible, A-type K+ current that was characterized by a much slower recovery from inactivation and a higher sensitivity to 4-aminopyridine than native K+ currents or Sh 29-4 currents expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Despite similarities in the kinetic and pharmacological properties of the HS-induced current in all backgrounds examined, host-dependent differences in the peak current amplitude have been consistently observed between multiple lines of 29-4 ShM and 29-4 Sh120 that might reflect differential channel subunit assembly in different hosts. Isolation of the novel 29-4 currents allowed determination of the channel turnover rate in cultured neurons. These currents persisted for up to 3 d or more, comparable with the durations previously reported for Na+ and Ca2+ channels. Surprisingly, the percentage of cells expressing inactivating K+ currents remained approximately the same with or without HS induction, suggesting that some mechanisms exist to restrict functional expression of inactivating K+ channels, including transgenic Sh channels and those not encoded by the Sh locus, to certain types of neurons.

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Zhao, M. L., Sable, E. O., Iverson, L. E., & Wu, C. F. (1995). Functional expression of Shaker K+ channels in cultured Drosophila “giant” neurons derived from Sh cDNA transformants: Distinct properties, distribution, and turnover. Journal of Neuroscience, 15(2), 1406–1418. https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.15-02-01406.1995

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