12 research outputs found

    Direct Regulation of BK Channels by Phosphatidylinositol 4,5-Bisphosphate as a Novel Signaling Pathway

    Get PDF
    Large conductance, calcium- and voltage-gated potassium (BK) channels are ubiquitous and critical for neuronal function, immunity, and smooth muscle contractility. BK channels are thought to be regulated by phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) only through phospholipase C (PLC)–generated PIP2 metabolites that target Ca2+ stores and protein kinase C and, eventually, the BK channel. Here, we report that PIP2 activates BK channels independently of PIP2 metabolites. PIP2 enhances Ca2+-driven gating and alters both open and closed channel distributions without affecting voltage gating and unitary conductance. Recovery from activation was strongly dependent on PIP2 acyl chain length, with channels exposed to water-soluble diC4 and diC8 showing much faster recovery than those exposed to PIP2 (diC16). The PIP2–channel interaction requires negative charge and the inositol moiety in the phospholipid headgroup, and the sequence RKK in the S6–S7 cytosolic linker of the BK channel-forming (cbv1) subunit. PIP2-induced activation is drastically potentiated by accessory β1 (but not β4) channel subunits. Moreover, PIP2 robustly activates BK channels in vascular myocytes, where β1 subunits are abundantly expressed, but not in skeletal myocytes, where these subunits are barely detectable. These data demonstrate that the final PIP2 effect is determined by channel accessory subunits, and such mechanism is subunit specific. In HEK293 cells, cotransfection of cbv1+β1 and PI4-kinaseIIα robustly activates BK channels, suggesting a role for endogenous PIP2 in modulating channel activity. Indeed, in membrane patches excised from vascular myocytes, BK channel activity runs down and Mg-ATP recovers it, this recovery being abolished by PIP2 antibodies applied to the cytosolic membrane surface. Moreover, in intact arterial myocytes under physiological conditions, PLC inhibition on top of blockade of downstream signaling leads to drastic BK channel activation. Finally, pharmacological treatment that raises PIP2 levels and activates BK channels dilates de-endothelized arteries that regulate cerebral blood flow. These data indicate that endogenous PIP2 directly activates vascular myocyte BK channels to control vascular tone

    Ethanol Modulates BKCa Channels by Acting as an Adjuvant of Calcium

    No full text
    Ethanol modulation of calcium- and voltage-gated potassium (slo1) channels alters neuronal excitability, cerebrovascular tone, brain function, and behavior, yet the mechanism of this modulation remains unknown. Using patch-clamp electrophysiology on recombinant BKCa channels cloned from mouse brain and expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes, we demonstrate that ethanol, even at concentrations maximally effective to modulate BKCa channel function (100 mM), fails to gate the channel in absence of activating calcium. Moreover, ethanol does not modify intrinsic, voltage- or physiological magnesium-driven gating. The alcohol works as an adjuvant of calcium by selectively facilitating calcium-driven gating. This facilitation, however, renders differential ethanol effects on channel activity: potentiation at low (\u3c10 μM) and inhibition at high (\u3e10 μM) calcium, this dual pattern remaining largely unmodified by coexpression of brain slo1 channels with the neuronally abundant BKCa channel β4 subunit. Calcium recognition by either of the slo1 high-affinity sensors (calcium bowl and RCK1 Asp362/Asp367) is required for ethanol to amplify channel activation by calcium. The Asp362/Asp367 site, however, is necessary and sufficient to sustain ethanol inhibition. This inhibition also results from ethanol facilitation of calcium action; in this case, ethanol favors channel dwelling in a calcium-driven, low-activity mode. The agonist-adjuvant mechanism that we advance from the calcium-ethanol interaction on slo1 might be applicable to data of ethanol action on a wide variety of ligand-gated channels

    Ethanol Modulates BK Ca

    No full text

    Embryonic Hyperglycemia Delays the Development of Retinal Synapses in a Zebrafish Model

    No full text
    Embryonic hyperglycemia negatively impacts retinal development, leading to abnormal visual behavior, altered timing of retinal progenitor differentiation, decreased numbers of retinal ganglion cells and Müller glia, and vascular leakage. Because synaptic disorganization is a prominent feature of many neurological diseases, the goal of the current work was to study the potential impact of hyperglycemia on retinal ribbon synapses during embryonic development. Our approach utilized reverse transcription quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) and immunofluorescence labeling to compare the transcription of synaptic proteins and their localization in hyperglycemic zebrafish embryos, respectively. Our data revealed that the maturity of synaptic ribbons was compromised in hyperglycemic zebrafish larvae, where altered ribeye expression coincided with the delay in establishing retinal ribbon synapses and an increase in the immature synaptic ribbons. Our results suggested that embryonic hyperglycemia disrupts retinal synapses by altering the development of the synaptic ribbon, which can lead to visual defects. Future studies using zebrafish models of hyperglycemia will allow us to study the underlying mechanisms of retinal synapse development

    Modulatory effects of dextran sulfate and fucoidan on binding and channel properties of AMPA receptors isolated from rat brain

    No full text
    Previous work showed that the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) dextran sulfate (500 kDa) altered the binding and channel properties of α‐amino‐3‐hydroxy‐5‐methyl‐4‐isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA)‐type glutamate receptors. The current study compared the effects of dextran sulfate with another GAG, fucoidan (100–180 kDa), to determine whether GAG‐mediated changes in high‐affinity binding of AMPA receptors have a concomitant influence on specific channel properties. Dextran sulfate was more potent in inhibiting high‐affinity AMPA binding to solubilized receptors (EC50 of 7 nM) compared to fucoidan (EC50 of 124 nM). Similarly, dextran sulfate was more potent in modulating the channel properties of purified and reconstituted AMPA receptors. Dextran sulfate, at 1 μg/ml (2 nM), produced a three to fourfold increase in open channel probability and a threefold increase in mean burst duration of channel activity elicited by 283 nM AMPA. The mean open time was increased by two to threefold and closed times were decreased by two to eightfold. Fucoidan produced similar effects at a concentration many times higher than that of dextran sulfate. Dextran sulfate and fucoidan had no effect on the single channel conductance or the ability of a specific antagonist to block AMPA channels. The effects of GAGs on multichannel patches showed an interactive channel gating behavior resulting in macroscopic currents with long lived open channel life times. These findings suggest that GAG components of proteoglycans can interact with and alter the binding affinity of AMPA receptors and modulate their functional properties. Synapse 60:456–464, 2006. © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc

    The Interplay between Neurotransmitters and Calcium Dynamics in Retinal Synapses during Development, Health, and Disease

    No full text
    The intricate functionality of the vertebrate retina relies on the interplay between neurotransmitter activity and calcium (Ca2+) dynamics, offering important insights into developmental processes, physiological functioning, and disease progression. Neurotransmitters orchestrate cellular processes to shape the behavior of the retina under diverse circumstances. Despite research to elucidate the roles of individual neurotransmitters in the visual system, there remains a gap in our understanding of the holistic integration of their interplay with Ca2+ dynamics in the broader context of neuronal development, health, and disease. To address this gap, the present review explores the mechanisms used by the neurotransmitters glutamate, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), glycine, dopamine, and acetylcholine (ACh) and their interplay with Ca2+ dynamics. This conceptual outline is intended to inform and guide future research, underpinning novel therapeutic avenues for retinal-associated disorders

    Single Channel Recordings From Synaptosomal AMPA Receptors

    No full text
    Synaptic glutamate receptors play a prominent role in the excitatory neurotransmission in the vertebrate central nervous system. Although elucidation of the functional properties of glutamate receptors using electrophysiologic analyses has yielded important information, methodological and technological limitations have prevented direct measurement of single channel properties of synaptic receptors. Here, we have isolated murine mossy fiber synaptosomes and reconstituted them into small artificial lipid bilayers to characterize the single-channel properties of synaptic α amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid (AMPA)-subtype glutamate receptors. The reconstituted synaptosomal receptors were activated by nanomolar concentrations of AMPA and blocked by a potent AMPA receptor antagonist. The synaptosomal AMPA receptors exhibited channel conductances of 14–56 pS and linear current-voltage relationship. The open and closed dwell time distributions of single channel currents were best described by three exponentials. These channels frequently exhibited burst behavior with long burst duration of approx 60 ms. Experiments with multichannel recordings revealed that steady state probabilities could not be fitted using a binomial distribution, indicating a cooperative channel gating behavior that would account for larger membrane currents. Our findings suggest that isolation, reconstitution into lipid bilayers, and subsequent single channel analysis of synaptosomal receptors is a useful method for investigation of synaptic AMPA receptors
    corecore