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Physiology in Press

First published online on December 19, 2001.
Copyright © 2001 by The Physiological Society
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2001.013127v1
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Received August 9, 2001
Accepted after revision October 15, 2001

Remodelling inactivation gating of Kv4 channels by KChIP1, a small-molecular-weight calcium-binding protein

Edward J. Beck1, Mark Bowlby2, W. Frank An3, Ken Rhodes2, and M. Covarrubias4*

1 Jefferson Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA
2 Neuroscience Research Division, Wyeth-Ayerst Research, Princeton, NJ 0885, USA
3 JMillennium Pharmaceuticals Inc., Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
4 Department of Pathology, Anatomy and Cell Biology, Jefferson Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University, 1020 Locust Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: manuel.covarrubias{at}mail.tju.edu.

Calcium-binding proteins dubbed KChIPs favour surface expression and modulate inactivation gating of neuronal and cardiac A-type Kv4 channels. To investigate their mechanism of action, Kv4.1 or Kv4.3 were expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes, either alone or together with KChIP1, and the K+ currents were recorded using the whole-oocyte voltage-clamp and patch-clamp methods. KChIP1 similarly remodels gating of both channels. At positive voltages, KChIP1 slows the early phase of the development of macroscopic inactivation. By contrast, the late phase is accelerated, which allows complete inactivation in < 500 ms. Thus, superimposed traces from control and KChIP1-remodelled currents crossover. KChIP1 also accelerates closed-state inactivation and recovery from inactivation (3- to 5-fold change). The latter effect is dominating and, consequently, the prepulse inactivation curves exhibit depolarizing shifts ({Delta}V = 4-12 mV). More favourable closed-state inactivation may also contribute to the overall faster inactivation at positive voltages because Kv4 channels significantly inactivate from the preopen closed state. KChIP1 favours this pathway further by accelerating channel closing. The peak G-V curves are modestly leftward shifted in the presence of KChIP1, but the apparent 'threshold' voltage of current activation remains unaltered. Single Kv4.1 channels exhibited multiple conductance levels that ranged between 1.8 and 5.6 pS in the absence of KChIP and, in the main, between 1.9 and 3.2 pS in its presence. Thus, changes in unitary conductance do not contribute to current upregulation by KChIP1. An allosteric kinetic model explains the kinetic changes by assuming that KChIP1 mainly impairs open-state inactivation, favours channel closing and lowers the energy barrier of closed-state inactivation.







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