Determination of the subunit stoichiometry of an inwardly rectifying potassium channel

J Yang, YN Jan, LY Jan - Neuron, 1995 - cell.com
J Yang, YN Jan, LY Jan
Neuron, 1995cell.com
Inwardly rectifying K+ channels are distantly related to their voltage-gated counterparts and
possess a structural motif of only two putative transmembrane segments in each subunit.
They areformed by the assembly of an unknown number of subunits. We have examined the
subunit stoichiometry of a strongly rectifying K+ channel, IRKl, by linking together the coding
sequence of three or four subunlts and distinguishing channels with different numbers of
subunits carrying a double mutation that alters inward rectification and single-channel …
Summary
Inwardly rectifying K+ channels are distantly related to their voltage-gated counterparts and possess a structural motif of only two putative transmembrane segments in each subunit. They areformed by the assembly of an unknown number of subunits. We have examined the subunit stoichiometry of a strongly rectifying K+ channel, IRKl, by linking together the coding sequence of three or four subunlts and distinguishing channels with different numbers of subunits carrying a double mutation that alters inward rectification and single-channel properties. We find that IRK1 channels, like voltage-gated K+ channels, are tetrameric channels. Interestingly, the high sensitivity to Mg2+ and polyamines, cations that produce inward rectification by blocking the channel pore from the cytoplasmic side, is largely retained in a channel containing only one wild-type subunit and three subunits bearing mutations that abolish high affinity Mg2+ and polyamine block.
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