A simple kinetic model is presented to explain the gating of a HERG-like voltage-gated K+ conductance described in the accompanying paper (Zhou, W., F.S. Cayabyab, P.S. Pennefather, L.C. Schlichter, and T.E. DeCoursey. 1998. J. Gen. Physiol. 111:781–794). The model proposes two kinetically distinct closing pathways, a rapid one favored by depolarization (deactivation) and a slow one favored by hyperpolarization (inactivation). The overlap of these two processes leads to a window current between −50 and +20 mV with a peak at −36 mV of ∼12% maximal conductance. The near absence of depolarization-activated outward current in microglia, compared with HERG channels expressed in oocytes or cardiac myocytes, can be explained if activation is shifted negatively in microglia. As seen with experimental data, availability predicted by the model was more steeply voltage dependent, and the midpoint more positive when determined by making the holding potential progressively more positive at intervals of 20 s (starting at −120 mV), rather than progressively more negative (starting at 40 mV). In the model, this hysteresis was generated by postulating slow and ultra-slow components of inactivation. The ultra-slow component takes minutes to equilibrate at −40 mV but is steeply voltage dependent, leading to protocol-dependent modulation of the HERG-like current. The data suggest that “deactivation” and “inactivation” are coupled through the open state. This is particularly evident in isotonic Cs+, where a delayed and transient outward current develops on depolarization with a decay time constant more voltage dependent and slower than the deactivation process observed at the same potential after a brief hyperpolarization.
Idiosyncratic Gating of HERG-like K+ Channels in Microglia
Address correspondence to Peter S. Pennefather, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto, 19 Russell St., Toronto, Ontario M5S 2S2, Canada. E-mail: [email protected]
Notes Added in Proof. Two recent papers have shown that fast and slow closing (what we have called deactivation and inactivation) can be modified apparently independently of one another. Zhou et al. (Zhou, A., Q.P. Xu, and M. Sanguinetti. 1998. A mutation in the pore region of HERG K+ channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes reduces rectification by shifting the voltage dependence of inactivation. J. Physiol. (Camb.). 509:129–137) showed how a point mutation in the pore region of the channel (S631A) shifts the voltage range over which deactivation occurs without affecting inactivation. Ho et al. (Ho, W.-K., I. Kim, C.O. Lee, and Y.E. Earm. 1998. Voltage-dependent blockade of HERG channels expessed in Xenopus oocytes by external Ca2+ and Mg2+. J. Physiol. (Camb.). 507:631–638) showed that reducing divalent cation levels could slow inactivation without affecting deactivation. Nevertheless, we find that both effects can be well described by modified versions of Scheme I, the coupled model (results not shown). As pointed out above, both independent and coupled models can predict similar findings, but only a coupled model can account for the results shown in Fig. 3 A. Additional evidence that the structure of HERG differs radically from Kv channels is its coassembly with minK, which may in fact line the conduction pathway (Tai, K.-K., and S.A.N. Goldstein. 1998. The conduction pore of a cardiac potassium channel. Nature. 391:605–608).
Peter S. Pennefather, Wei Zhou, Thomas E. DeCoursey; Idiosyncratic Gating of HERG-like K+ Channels in Microglia . J Gen Physiol 1 June 1998; 111 (6): 795–805. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.111.6.795
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