C-type inactivation of Shaker potassium channels involves entry into a state (or states) in which the inactivated channels appear nonconducting in physiological solutions. However, when Shaker channels, from which fast N-type inactivation has been removed by NH2-terminal deletions, are expressed in Xenopus oocytes and evaluated in inside-out patches, complete removal of K+ ions from the internal solution exposes conduction of Na+ and Li+ in C-type inactivated conformational states. The present paper uses this observation to investigate the properties of ion conduction through C-type inactivated channel states, and demonstrates that both activation and deactivation can occur in C-type states, although with slower than normal kinetics. Channels in the C-type states appear “inactivated” (i.e., nonconducting) in physiological solutions due to the summation of two separate effects: first, internal K+ ions prevent Na+ ions from permeating through the channel; second, C-type inactivation greatly reduces the permeability of K+ relative to the permeability of Na+, thus altering the ion selectivity of the channel.
Ion Conduction through C-Type Inactivated Shaker Channels
Address correspondence to Stefan H. Heinemann, Research Unit Molecular and Cellular Biophysics, Max Planck Society, Drackendorfer Str. 1, D-07747 Jena, Germany. Fax: 49 3641 304 542; E-mail: [email protected]
S.H. Heinemann was partially supported by a Human Frontier Science Program grant. J.G. Starkus was supported in part by National Institutes of Health grant RO1-NS21151, by a grant from the American Heart Association (Hawaii Affiliate), by Pacific Biomedical Research Center Bridging Funds, and by the Max Planck Society. M.D. Rayner was supported by grants from the American Heart Association (Hawaii Affiliate) and from the Queen Emma Foundation.
Preliminary results of this work have been presented in abstract form (Heinemann, S.H., J.G. Starkus, and M.D. Rayner. 1997. Biophys. J. 72:A29; Starkus, J.G., M.D. Rayner, and S.H. Heinemann. 1997. Biophys. J. 72:A232).
Abbreviations used in this paper: I-V, current–voltage; NFR, Normal Frog Ringer.
John G. Starkus, Lioba Kuschel, Martin D. Rayner, Stefan H. Heinemann; Ion Conduction through C-Type Inactivated Shaker Channels . J Gen Physiol 1 November 1997; 110 (5): 539–550. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.110.5.539
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