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Gating of the shaker potassium channel is modulated differentially by N-glycosylation and sialic acids
Authors:Daniel Johnson  Eric S. Bennett
Affiliation:(1) Department of Molecular Pharmacology and Physiology and Programs in Neuroscience and Cardiovascular Sciences, University of South Florida College of Medicine, Tampa, FL 33612, USA;(2) Present address: Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Manchester, 2nd Floor, Core Technology Facility, 46 Grafton St., Manchester, M13 9NT, UK;(3) Department of Molecular Pharmacology & Physiology, University of South Florida, College of Medicine, MDC 8, Tampa, FL 33612, USA
Abstract:
N-linked glycans, including sialic acids, are integral components of ion channel complexes. To determine if N-linked sugars can modulate a rapidly inactivating K+ channel, the glycosylated Drosophila melanogaster Shaker K+ channel (ShB) and the N-glycosylation-deficient mutant (ShNQ), were studied under conditions of full and reduced sialylation. Through an apparent electrostatic mechanism, full sialylation induced uniform and significant hyperpolarizing shifts in all measured voltage-dependent ShB gating parameters compared to those measured under conditions of reduced sialylation. Steady-state gating of ShNQ was unaffected by changes in sialylation and was nearly identical to that observed for ShB under conditions of reduced sialylation, indicating that N-linked sialic acids were wholly responsible for the observed effects of sialic acid on ShB gating. Interestingly, the rates of transition among channel states and the voltage-independent rates of activation and inactivation were significantly slower for ShNQ compared to ShB. Both effects were independent of sialylation, indicating that N-linked sugars other than sialic acids alter ShB gating kinetics but have little to no effect on the steady-state distribution of channels among states. The effect of sialic acids on channel gating, particularly inactivation gating, and the impact of other N-linked sugars on channel gating kinetics are unique to the ShB isoform. Thus, ShB gating is modulated by two complementary but distinct sugar-dependent mechanisms, (1) an N-linked sialic acid-dependent surface charge effect and (2) a sialic acid-independent effect that is consistent with N-linked sugars affecting the stability of ShB among its functional states.
Keywords:Potassium channel  Ion channels  Channel gating  Voltage-gated  channels  Ion channel modulation
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