A survey of the currently available genomes shows that K+ channels are found in most free-living bacteria, archaea, and protists, indicating early evolution before the divergences of the three major domains of life. Though vertically descended from the primordial K+ channels, more recent lateral transfers of K+ channel genes must also have occurred. Variations in the motifs of transmembrane or cytoplasmic domains, S4 features, gating mechanism, and even the putative K+ filter sequence are observed. Limited experimentation and sequence survey of free-ling versus parasitic bacteria show that K+ channels are not essential for survival in ordinary circumstances. The lone K+ channel in Escherichia coli is probably not for K+ uptake but for resting-potential regulation in vivo. Protists (eukaryotic unicells) vary greatly; the fission yeast has no recognizable K+ channel gene while paramecium has 298, some three times...

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