scholarly journals Monovalent Ion Selectivity Sequences of the Rat Connexin43 Gap Junction Channel

1997 ◽  
Vol 109 (4) ◽  
pp. 491-507 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong-Zhan Wang ◽  
Richard D. Veenstra

The relative permeability sequences of the rat connexin 43 (rCx43) gap junction channel to seven cations and chloride were examined by double whole cell patch clamp recording of single gap junction channel currents in rCx43 transfected neuroblastoma 2A (N2A) cell pairs. The measured maximal single channel slope conductances (γj, in pS) of the junctional current-voltage relationships in 115 mM XCl were RbCl (103) ≥ CsCl (102) > KCl (97) > NaCl (79) ≥ LiCl (78) > TMACl (65) > TEACl (53) and for 115 mM KY were KBr (105) > KCl (97) > Kacetate (77) > Kglutamate (61). The single channel conductance-aqueous mobility relationships for the test cations and anions were linear. However, the predicted minimum anionic and cationic conductances of these plots did not accurately predict the rCx43 channel conductance in 115 mM KCl. Instead, the conductance of the rCx43 channel in 115 mM KCl was accurately predicted from cationic and anionic conductance-mobility plots by applying a mobility scaling factor Dx/Do, which depends upon the relative radii of the permeant ions to an estimated pore radius. Relative permeabilities were determined for all of the monovalent cations and anions tested from asymmetric salt reversal potential measurements and the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz voltage equation. These experiments estimate the relative chloride to potassium permeability to be 0.13. The relationship between the relative cation permeability and hydrated radius was modeled using the hydrodynamic equation assuming a pore radius of 6.3 ± 0.4 Å. Our data quantitatively demonstrate that the rCx43 gap junction channel is permeable to monovalent atomic and organic cations and anions and the relative permeability sequences are consistent with an Eisenman sequence II or I, respectively. These predictions about the rCx43 channel pore provide a useful basis for future investigations into the structural determinants of the conductance and permeability properties of the connexin channel pore.

1991 ◽  
Vol 260 (3) ◽  
pp. C513-C527 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. C. Spray ◽  
M. Chanson ◽  
A. P. Moreno ◽  
R. Dermietzel ◽  
P. Meda

Gap junctions, dye coupling, and junctional conductance were studied in a cell line (WB) that is derived from rat liver and displays a phenotype similar to “oval” cells. In freeze-fracture replicas, two distinctive particle sizes were detected in gap junctional plaques. Immunocytochemical studies indicated punctate staining at membrane appositions using antibodies to connexin 43 and to a brain gap junction-associated antigen (34 kDa). No staining was observed using antibodies prepared against rat liver gap junction proteins (connexins 32 and 26). Pairs of WB cells were electrically and dye coupled. Junctional conductance (gj) between cell pairs averaged approximately 10 nS; occasionally, gj was low enough that unitary junctional conductances (gamma j) could be detected. Using a CsCl-containing electrode solution, distinctive gamma j values were recorded: approximately 20-30 pS, approximately 80-90 pS, and the sum of the other sizes. The largest gamma j events were apparently due to random coincident openings or closures of the smaller channels. Several treatments reduced gj. Frequency distributions of gamma j were unaltered by 2 mM halothane or 3.5 heptanol, but the sizes of intermediate and largest events were reduced slightly by 100 nM phorbol ester, and the relative frequency of the largest events was increased by 10 microM glutaraldehyde. We conclude that the distinctive gamma j values represent openings and closures of two distinct types of gap junction channels rather than substates of a single channel type; these unitary conductances may correspond to the dual immunoreactivity and to the two particle sizes seen in freeze fracture.


1997 ◽  
Vol 109 (4) ◽  
pp. 509-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dolores A. Beblo ◽  
Richard D. Veenstra

The unitary conductances and permeability sequences of the rat connexin40 (rCx40) gap junction channels to seven monovalent cations and anions were studied in rCx40-transfected neuroblastoma 2A (N2A) cell pairs using the dual whole cell recording technique. Chloride salt cation substitutions (115 mM principal salt) resulted in the following junctional maximal single channel current-voltage relationship slope conductances (γj in pS): CsCl (153), RbCl (148), KCl (142), NaCl (115), LiCl (86), TMACl (71), TEACl (63). Reversible block of the rCx40 channel was observed with TBA. Potassium anion salt γj are: Kglutamate (160), Kacetate (160), Kaspartate (158), KNO3 (157), KF (148), KCl (142), and KBr (132). Ion selectivity was verified by measuring reversal potentials for current in rCx40 gap junction channels with asymmetric salt solutions in the two electrodes and using the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation to calculate relative permeabilities. The permeabilities relative to Li+ are: Cs+ (1.38), Rb+ (1.32), K+ (1.31), Na+ (1.16), TMA+ (0.53), TEA+ (0.45), TBA+ (0.03), Cl− (0.19), glutamate− (0.04), and NO3− (0.14), assuming that the monovalent anions permeate the channel by forming ion pairs with permeant monovalent cations within the pore thereby causing proportionate decreases in the channel conductance. This hypothesis can account for why the predicted increasing conductances with increasing ion mobilities in an essentially aqueous channel were not observed for anions in the rCx40 channel. The rCx40 effective channel radius is estimated to be 6.6 Å from a theoretical fit of the relationship of relative permeability and cation radius.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1838 (8) ◽  
pp. 2019-2025 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Zou ◽  
Xiao-Yang Yue ◽  
Sheng-Chao Zheng ◽  
Guangwei Zhang ◽  
He Chang ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
pp. 505-515
Author(s):  
F. QIAN ◽  
L. LIU ◽  
Z. LIU ◽  
C. LU

The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) chloride channel contains 12 transmembrane (TM) regions that are presumed to form the channel pore. However, there is no direct evidence clearly illustrating the involvement of these transmembrane regions in the actual CFTR pore structure. To obtain insight into the architecture of the CFTR channel pore, we used patch clamp recording techniques and a strategy of co-mutagenesis of two potential pore-forming transmembrane regions (TM1 and TM6) to investigate the collaboration of these two TM regions. We performed a range of specific functional assays comparing the single channel conductance, anion binding, and anion selectivity properties of the co-mutated CFTR variants, and the results indicated that TM1 and TM6 play vital roles in forming the channel pore and, thus, determine the functional properties of the channel. Furthermore, we provided functional evidence that the amino acid threonine (T338) in TM6 has synergic effects with lysine (K95) in TM1. Therefore, we propose that these two residues have functional collaboration in the CFTR channel pore and may collectively form a selective filter.


2012 ◽  
Vol 302 (10) ◽  
pp. C1548-C1556 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qin Xu ◽  
Richard F. Kopp ◽  
Yanyi Chen ◽  
Jenny J. Yang ◽  
Michael W. Roe ◽  
...  

Calmodulin (CaM) binding sites were recently identified on the cytoplasmic loop (CL) of at least three α-subfamily connexins (Cx43, Cx44, Cx50), while Cx40 does not have this putative CaM binding domain. The purpose of this study was to examine the functional relevance of the putative Cx43 CaM binding site on the Ca2+-dependent regulation of gap junction proteins formed by Cx43 and Cx40. Dual whole cell patch-clamp experiments were performed on stable murine Neuro-2a cells expressing Cx43 or Cx40. Addition of ionomycin to increase external Ca2+ influx reduced Cx43 gap junction conductance (Gj) by 95%, while increasing cytosolic Ca2+ concentration threefold. By contrast, Cx40 Gj declined by <20%. The Ca2+-induced decline in Cx43 Gj was prevented by pretreatment with calmidazolium or reversed by the addition of 10 mM EGTA to Ca2+-free extracellular solution, if Ca2+ chelation was commenced before complete uncoupling, after which gj was only 60% recoverable. The Cx43 CL136–158 mimetic peptide, but not the scrambled control peptide, or Ca2+/CaM-dependent kinase II 290–309 inhibitory peptide also prevented the Ca2+/CaM-dependent decline of Cx43 Gj. Cx43 gap junction channel open probability decreased to zero without reductions in the current amplitudes during external Ca2+/ionomycin perfusion. We conclude that Cx43 gap junctions are gated closed by a Ca2+/CaM-dependent mechanism involving the carboxyl-terminal quarter of the connexin CL domain. This study provides the first evidence of intrinsic differences in the Ca2+ regulatory properties of Cx43 and Cx40.


1994 ◽  
Vol 104 (3) ◽  
pp. 425-447 ◽  
Author(s):  
A R Lindsay ◽  
A Tinker ◽  
A J Williams

Under appropriate conditions, the interaction of the plant alkaloid ryanodine with a single cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-release channel results in a profound modification of both channel gating and conduction. On modification, the channel undergoes a dramatic increase in open probability and a change in single-channel conductance. In this paper we aim to provide a mechanistic framework for the interpretation of the altered conductance seen after ryanodine binding to the channel protein. To do this we have characterized single-channel conductance with representative members of three classes of permeant cation; group 1a monovalent cations, alkaline earth divalent cations, and organic monovalent cations. We have quantified the change in single-channel conductance induced by ryanodine and have expressed this as a fraction of conductance in the absence of ryanodine. Fractional conductance seen in symmetrical 210 mM solutions is not fixed but varies with the nature of the permeant cation. The group 1a monovalent cations (K+, Na+, Cs+, Li+) have values of fractional conductance in a narrow range (0.60-0.66). With divalent cations fractional conductance is considerably lower (Ba2+, 0.22 and Sr2+, 0.28), whereas values of fractional conductance vary considerably with the organic monovalent cations (ammonia 0.66, ethylamine 0.76, propanolamine 0.65, diethanolamine 0.92, diethylamine 1.2). To establish the mechanisms governing these differences, we have monitored the affinity of the conduction pathway for, and the relative permeability of, representative cations in the ryanodine-modified channel. These parameters have been compared with those obtained in previous studies from this laboratory using the channel in the absence of ryanodine and have been modeled by modifying our existing single-ion, four-barrier three-well rate theory model of conduction in the unmodified channel. Our findings indicate that the high affinity, essentially irreversible, interaction of ryanodine with the cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-release channel produces a conformational alteration of the protein which results in modified ion handling. We suggest that, on modification, the affinity of the channel for the group 1a monovalent cations is increased while the relative permeability of this class of cations remains essentially unaltered. The affinity of the conduction pathway for the alkaline earth divalent cations is also increased, however the relative permeability of this class of cations is reduced compared to the unmodified channel. The influence of modification on the handling by the channel of the organic monovalent cations is determined by both the size and the nature of the cation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


1983 ◽  
Vol 81 (5) ◽  
pp. 687-703 ◽  
Author(s):  
H M Hoffmann ◽  
V E Dionne

The dependence of acetylcholine receptor mean single-channel conductance on temperature was studied at garter snake twitch-muscle endplates using fluctuation analysis. In normal saline under conditions where most of the endplate current was carried by Na+, the channel conductance increased continuously from near 0 degrees C to approximately 23 degrees C with a Q10 of 1.97 +/- 0.14 (mean +/- SD). When 50% of the bath Na+ was replaced by either Li+, Rb+, or Cs+, the Q10 did not change significantly; however, at any temperature the channel conductance was greatest in Cs-saline and decreased with the ion sequence Cs greater than Rb greater than Na greater than Li. The results were fit by an Eyring-type model consisting of one free-energy well on the extracellular side of a single energy barrier. Ion selectivity appeared to result from ion-specific differences in the well and not in the barrier of this model. With a constant barrier enthalpy for different ions, well free-energy depth was greatest for Cs+ and graded identical to the permeability sequence. The correlation between increased well depth (i.e., ion binding) and increased channel conductance can be accounted for by the Boltzmann distribution of thermal energy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (23) ◽  
pp. 13055
Author(s):  
Camillo Peracchia ◽  
Lillian Mae Leverone Peracchia

In the past four decades numerous findings have indicated that gap junction channel gating is mediated by intracellular calcium concentrations ([Ca2+i]) in the high nanomolar range via calmodulin (CaM). We have proposed a CaM-based gating model based on evidence for a direct CaM role in gating. This model is based on the following: CaM inhibitors and the inhibition of CaM expression to prevent chemical gating. A CaM mutant with higher Ca2+ sensitivity greatly increases gating sensitivity. CaM co-localizes with connexins. Connexins have high-affinity CaM-binding sites. Connexin mutants paired to wild type connexins have a higher gating sensitivity, which is eliminated by the inhibition of CaM expression. Repeated trans-junctional voltage (Vj) pulses progressively close channels by the chemical/slow gate (CaM’s N-lobe). At the single channel level, the gate closes and opens slowly with on-off fluctuations. Internally perfused crayfish axons lose gating competency but recover it by the addition of Ca-CaM to the internal perfusion solution. X-ray diffraction data demonstrate that isolated gap junctions are gated at the cytoplasmic end by a particle of the size of a CaM lobe. We have proposed two types of CaM-driven gating: “Ca-CaM-Cork” and “CaM-Cork”. In the first, the gating involves Ca2+-induced CaM activation. In the second, the gating occurs without a [Ca2+]i rise.


1995 ◽  
Vol 6 (12) ◽  
pp. 1707-1719 ◽  
Author(s):  
B R Kwak ◽  
M M Hermans ◽  
H R De Jonge ◽  
S M Lohmann ◽  
H J Jongsma ◽  
...  

Studies on physiological modulation of intercellular communication mediated by protein kinases are often complicated by the fact that cells express multiple gap junction proteins (connexins; Cx). Changes in cell coupling can be masked by simultaneous opposite regulation of the gap junction channel types expressed. We have examined the effects of activators and inhibitors of protein kinase A (PKA), PKC, and PKG on permeability and single channel conductance of gap junction channels composed of Cx45, Cx43, or Cx26 subunits. To allow direct comparison between these Cx, SKHep1 cells, which endogenously express Cx45, were stably transfected with cDNAs coding for Cx43 or Cx26. Under control conditions, the distinct types of gap junction channels could be distinguished on the basis of their permeability and single channel properties. Under various phosphorylating conditions, these channels behaved differently. Whereas agonists/antagonist of PKA did not affect permeability and conductance of all gap junction channels, variable changes were observed under PKC stimulation. Cx45 channels exhibited an additional conductance state, the detection of the smaller conductance states of Cx43 channels was favored, and Cx26 channels were less often observed. In contrast to the other kinases, agonists/antagonist of PKG affected permeability and conductance of Cx43 gap junction channels only. Taken together, these results show that distinct types of gap junction channels are differentially regulated by similar phosphorylating conditions. This differential regulation may be of physiological importance during modulation of cell-to-cell communication of more complex cell systems.


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