Transfer of rapid inactivation and sensitivity to the class III antiarrhythmic drug E-4031 from HERG to M-eag channels
The gating behaviour and pharmacological sensitivity of HERG are remarkably different from the corresponding properties of M-eag, a structurally similar member of the Eag family of potassium channels. In contrast to HERG, M-eag exhibits no apparent inactivation and little rectification, and is insen...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1998-08, Vol.511 (1), p.3-14 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The gating behaviour and pharmacological sensitivity of HERG are remarkably different from the corresponding properties of
M-eag, a structurally similar member of the Eag family of potassium channels. In contrast to HERG, M-eag exhibits no apparent
inactivation and little rectification, and is insensitive to the class III antiarrhythmic drug E-4031.
We generated chimeric channels of HERG and M-eag sequences and made point mutations to identify the region necessary for rapid
inactivation in HERG. This region includes the P region and half of the S6 putative transmembrane domain, including sites
not previously associated with inactivation and rectification in HERG.
Transfer of a small segment of the HERG polypeptide to M-eag, consisting largely of the P region and part of the S6 transmembrane
domain, is sufficient to confer rapid inactivation and E-4031 sensitivity to M-eag. This region differs from the corresponding
region in M-eag by only fifteen residues.
Previous hypotheses that rapid inactivation of HERG channels occurs by a C-type inactivation mechanism are supported by the
parallel effects on rates of HERG inactivation and Shaker C-type inactivation by a series of mutations at two equivalent sites
in the polypeptide sequences.
In addition to sites homologous to those previously described for C-type inactivation in Shaker, inactivation in HERG involves
a residue in the upstream P region not previously associated with C-type inactivation. Although this site is equivalent to
one implicated in P-type inactivation in Kv2.1 channels, our data are most consistent with a single, C-type inactivation mechanism. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1469-7793.1998.003bi.x |