KATP channels were reconstituted in COSm6 cells by coexpression of the sulfonylurea receptor SUR1 and the inward rectifier potassium channel Kir6.2. The role of the two nucleotide binding folds of SUR1 in regulation of KATP channel activity by nucleotides and diazoxide was investigated. Mutations in the linker region and the Walker B motif (Walker, J.E., M.J. Saraste, M.J. Runswick, and N.J. Gay. 1982. EMBO [Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.] J. 1:945–951) of the second nucleotide binding fold, including G1479D, G1479R, G1485D, G1485R, Q1486H, and D1506A, all abolished stimulation by MgADP and diazoxide, with the exception of G1479R, which showed a small stimulatory response to diazoxide. Analogous mutations in the first nucleotide binding fold, including G827D, G827R, and Q834H, were still stimulated by diazoxide and MgADP, but with altered kinetics compared with the wild-type channel. None of the mutations altered the sensitivity of the channel to inhibition by ATP4−. We propose a model in which SUR1 sensitizes the KATP channel to ATP inhibition, and nucleotide hydrolysis at the nucleotide binding folds blocks this effect. MgADP and diazoxide are proposed to stabilize this desensitized state of the channel, and mutations at the nucleotide binding folds alter the response of channels to MgADP and diazoxide by altering nucleotide hydrolysis rates or the coupling of hydrolysis to channel activation.
Regulation of KATP Channel Activity by Diazoxide and MgADP : Distinct Functions of the Two Nucleotide Binding Folds of the Sulfonylurea Receptor
Address correspondence to C.G. Nichols, Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 South Euclid Avenue, St. Louis, MO 63110. Fax: 314-362-7463; E-mail: [email protected]
Abbreviations used in this paper: ABC, ATP-binding cassette; CFTR, cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator; NBF, nucleotide binding fold; SUR, sulfonylurea receptor.
It is apparent in Figs. 2 and 4 that mutations that reduce diazoxide activation also have a reduced activity in 100 μM ATP. As discussed below (see also Fig. 7), this does not result from a change in intrinsic sensitivity to inhibition by free ATP4−. More likely, it results from a degree of stimulation of channel activity resulting from ATP hydrolysis, even in the absence of diazoxide.
S.-L. Shyng, T. Ferrigni, C.G. Nichols; Regulation of KATP Channel Activity by Diazoxide and MgADP : Distinct Functions of the Two Nucleotide Binding Folds of the Sulfonylurea Receptor. J Gen Physiol 1 December 1997; 110 (6): 643–654. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.110.6.643
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