Tetraethylammonium blockade distinguishes two inactivation mechanisms in voltage-activated K+ channels.
Open Access
- 15 June 1991
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 88 (12), 5092-5095
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.88.12.5092
Abstract
Voltage-activated K+ channels are a family of closely related membrane proteins that differ in their gating behavior, conductance, and pharmacology. A prominent and physiologically important difference among K+ channels is their rate of inactivation. Inactivation rates range from milliseconds to seconds, and K+ channels with different inactivation properties have very different effects on signal integration and repetitive firing properties of neurons. The cloned Shaker B (H4) potassium channel is an example of a K+ channel that inactivates in a few milliseconds. Recent experiments have shown that removal of an N-terminal region of the Shaker protein by site-directed deletion practically abolishes this fast inactivation, but the modified channel does still inactivate during a prolonged depolarization lasting many seconds. Here we report that this remnant inactivation must occur by a distinct mechanism from the rapid inactivation of the wild-type Shaker channel. Like the inactivation of another K+ channel [Grissmer, S. & Calahan, M. (1989) Biophys. J. 55, 203-206], this slow inactivation is retarded by the application of a channel blocker, tetraethylammonium, to the extracellular side of the channel. By contrast, the fast inactivation of the wild-type Shaker channel is sensitive only to intracellular application of tetraethylammonium. Intracellular tetraethylammonium slows down the fast inactivation process, as though it competes with the binding of the inactivation particle.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mutations Affecting Internal TEA Blockade Identify the Probable Pore-Forming Region of a K + ChannelScience, 1991
- K+ channels close more slowly in the presence of external K+ and Rb+Nature, 1981
- Block of sodium conductance and gating current in squid giant axons poisoned with quaternary strychnineBiophysical Journal, 1979
- Local anesthetic block of sodium channels in normal and pronase-treated squid giant axonsBiophysical Journal, 1978
- Local anaesthetics transiently block currents through single acetylcholine‐receptor channels.The Journal of Physiology, 1978
- Inactivation of the sodium channel. I. Sodium current experiments.The Journal of general physiology, 1977
- Inactivation of the sodium channel. II. Gating current experiments.The Journal of general physiology, 1977
- Effects of strychnine on the sodium conductance of the frog node of Ranvier.The Journal of general physiology, 1977
- Effects of strychnine on the potassium conductance of the frog node of Ranvier.The Journal of general physiology, 1977
- Destruction of the sodium conductance inactivation by a specific protease in perfused nerve fibres from Loligo.The Journal of Physiology, 1976