β1-Subunit of MaxiK Channel in Smooth Muscle: a Key Molecule Which Tunes Muscle Mechanical Activity
The MaxiK channel is the large-conductance, voltage-dependent, and Ca2+-activated K+ channel. This channel is almost ubiquitously distributed among mammalian tissues including smooth muscles. The ability of MaxiK to work as a rheostat fine tuning membrane potential and intracellular Ca2+ enables it...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Pharmacological Sciences 2004, Vol.94(4), pp.339-347 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The MaxiK channel is the large-conductance, voltage-dependent, and Ca2+-activated K+ channel. This channel is almost ubiquitously distributed among mammalian tissues including smooth muscles. The ability of MaxiK to work as a rheostat fine tuning membrane potential and intracellular Ca2+ enables it to mediate opposite functions: it facilitates contraction, but also acts as a negative feedback mechanism to restore tone after a contraction cycle. MaxiK activation mediates relaxations to a variety of physiological substances, whereas its inhibition plays a significant role in contractile responses. At the molecular level, MaxiK is a protein complex formed by at least two integral dissimilar membrane subunits, the pore-forming α-subunit and a regulatory β-subunit. In smooth muscles, β1 is the predominant subunit and most MaxiK seem to be assembled of α- and β1-subunits. The presence of the β1-subunit confers MaxiK with higher Ca2+/voltage sensitivity, which makes this channel an efficient tuner of smooth muscle functions in physiological conditions. The enhanced smooth muscle mechanical activities in mice lacking the β1-subunit gene support the principal role of this channel molecular component in tissue and whole animal functions. In this review, we discuss MaxiK channel roles as a tuner of smooth muscle contractility, especially focusing attention on the modulatory β1-subunit. |
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ISSN: | 1347-8613 1347-8648 |
DOI: | 10.1254/jphs.94.339 |