Heme Is a Carbon Monoxide Receptor for Large-Conductance Ca 2+ -Activated K + Channels

Abstract
Carbon monoxide (CO) is an endogenous paracrine and autocrine gaseous messenger that regulates physiological functions in a wide variety of tissues. CO induces vasodilation by activating arterial smooth muscle large-conductance Ca2+-activated potassium (BKCa) channels. However, the mechanism by which CO activates BKCa channels remains unclear. Here, we tested the hypothesis that CO activates BKCa channels by binding to channel-bound heme, a BKCa channel inhibitor, and altering the interaction between heme and the conserved heme-binding domain (HBD) of the channel α subunit C terminus. Data obtained using thin-layer chromatography, spectrophotometry, mass spectrometry (MS), and MS-MS indicate that CO modifies the binding of reduced heme to the α subunit HBD. In contrast, CO does not alter the interaction between the HBD and oxidized heme (hemin), to which CO cannot bind. Consistent with these findings, electrophysiological measurements of native and cloned (cbv) cerebral artery smooth muscle BKCa channels ...