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Figure 1. Extracellular Cu2+ inhibits mSlo1 activation. (A) Ik evoked in response to a pulse to +240 mV from a holding potential of â80 mV (0 Ca2+). Currents in 0 Cu2+ (control), 100 μM Cu2+, and washout with 5 mM EGTA were recorded from the same patch. Tail currents are shown on an expanded time scale, and have their own time scale bar. (B) The time course of inhibition by 100 μM Cu2+ was measured with a double pulse protocol. The ratio of steady-state IK during two 30-ms test pulses to +220 mV is plotted against the interval between pulses (t). Cu2+ was applied at â80 mV with rapid perfusion immediately following the first test pulse (t = 0). IK is inhibited rapidly (Ï = 0.2 s, dotted curve) following a delay of â¼0.1 s likely representing the time for Cu2+ to reach the patch. (C) Single channel IK-V relation is unaffected by 100 μM Cu2+ (top). Representative traces at +160 mV from a single channel patch show a marked decrease in PO (bottom). (D) Normalized GK-V relations determined in 0 Cu2+ (â¢), 100 μM Cu2+ (âµ), and 1000 μM Cu2+ (âª) for the same patch are fit by Boltzmann functions (0 Ca: GKmax = 1, V0.5 = 218 mV, Zapp = 0.82 e; 1000 Cu2+: GKmax = 0.81, V0.5 = 300 mV, Zapp = 0.57 e). (E) Normalized outward IK at +220 mV and (F) tail currents at â80 mV in 0 Cu2+ and 100 μM Cu2+ are fit by exponential functions. 100 μM Cu2+ increased the activation time constant 1.6-fold from 1.25 to 1.98 ms and decreased the deactivation time constant 1.4-fold from 153 to 108 μs.
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Figure 2. mSlo1 channels are extremely Cu2+ sensitive. (A) Mean GK-V relations with [Ca2+]i = 3 μM at different [Cu2+]: 0 (â), 0.1 (â¢), 0.2 (â¡), 0.5(â´), 1.0 (âµ), 2.5 (âª), 5 (â¿), 10 (â¾), 20 (â), 50 (â¦), 100 () and 200 μM (â), are normalized by GKmax in 0 Cu2+ and fit by Boltzmann functions. (B) Mean GK-V relations from panel A are normalized by GKmax at each [Cu2+] based on Boltzmann fits. (C) Cu2+ doseâresponse relations for ÎV0.5 = (V0.5 [Cu2+] â V0.5[0]) (â¢) and GK[Cu2+] at 110 mV (â), 150 mV (âµ) and 190 mV (â¿) were determined from fits in A. Solid lines are fits to a Hill equation. Thick dotted curve is a fit to Eq. 1 with most parameters set to previously determined values (zJ = 0.58 e, L0 = 10â6, zL = 0.3 e, KD(Ca2+) = 11 μM, C = 8, D = 25, E = 2.4) (Horrigan and Aldrich, 2002). VhC = 162 mV was adjusted to fit V0.5 of the 0 Cu2+ control, and Cu2+-dependent parameters (KDcu = 0.75 μM, Ecu = 0.124) were then varied to fit the V0.5-[Cu2+] relation. Thin dotted curve is a fit to Eq. 2 with KDcu = 2.1 μM, Ecu = 0.129, and all other parameters the same as for Eq. 1. (D) IC50 and (E) nH obtained by fitting GK-[Cu2+] relations in 3 μM Ca2+ (â¢) and 0 Ca2+ (â¡) are plotted at different voltages. Dashed lines are IC50 = 1.97 μM, nH = 1.01 from the ÎV0.5-[Cu2+] relation fit in panel C. (F) Apparent charge (Zapp) from Boltzmann GK-V fits in A are plotted versus [Cu2+] and fit by a Hill equation (IC50 = 0.72 ± 0.12 μM, nH = 1.1 ± 0.2). Curves A and B are the predictions of Eqs. 1 and 2, respectively, using parameters from C.
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Figure 3. The mechanism and state dependence of Cu2+ action. (A) Mean log(Po)-V relations for mSlo1 for 0 and 5 μM [Ca2+]i in 0 Cu2+(â) and 100 μM Cu2+(âª), respectively. Dotted lines are exponential fits to the limiting slope of log(Po) with partial charge zL = 0.3 e. (B) Log(Po)-V relations from A are superimposed by shifting the 0 Cu2+ curves along the voltage axis by +45 mV. (C) IK evoked by 30-ms test pulses to +120 mV before (IP1) and after (IP2) application of 100 μM Cu2+ using the illustrated protocol (5 μM [Ca2+]i), without leak subtraction. IP1 was evoked from a holding potential of â80 mV in 0 Cu2+ following perfusion with standard external solution for 5 s. IP2 was recorded in 100 μM Cu2+ following perfusion with 100 μM Cu2+ for 500 ms at different prepulse voltages (VPRE). Following the second pulse the patch was washed at â80 mV for 5 s with 5 mM EGTA and then for 5 s with standard external solution before repeating the protocol. Maximal inhibition of IP2 was observed with VPRE = â80 to +40 mV (green traces) and minimal inhibition with VPRE = +180 to +220 mV (red traces). (D) The fraction of channels not inhibited fNI = (IP2[VPRE] â IP2[â80])/(IP1 â IP2[â80]) from C (âª, fNI[100 Cu2+]) is plotted against VPRE and compared with the mean steady-state Po-V relation (â) in 0 Cu2+ and 5 μM [Ca2+]i estimated as GK/GKmax. A control experiment (â¡, fNI[0 Cu2+]) obtained from a different patch using the pulse protocol in C shows that fNI is voltage independent when the 100 μM Cu2+ solution is replaced with 0 Cu2+.
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Figure 4. Cu2+ selectively inhibits mSlo1 activation. (A) GK-V shift (ÎV0.5) produced by 100 μM of different transition metals (Cd2+, Mn2+, Fe3+, Co2+, Ni2+, Cu2+, Zn2+) (0 [Ca2+]i). Stars indicate a significant change in V0.5 relative to the control (P < 0.05, paired t test). (B) GK-V relations in the absence of metal ions (â), 100 μM Cu2+ (â¢), 100 μM Cd2+ (âª), or 4,000 μM Cd2+ (â¡) were normalized by the control and fit with Boltzmann functions (10 μM [Ca2+]i). (C) Doseâresponse relations for inhibition of GK[+220 mV] by different metal ions (0 [Ca2+]i) fit with Hill equations (Cu2+ (â) IC50 = 2.0 μM, nH = 0.98; Cd2+ (â¢) IC50 = 0.70 mM, nH = 1.0; Zn2+ (â¡) IC50 = 1.2 mM, nH = 0.87; Mn2+ (âª) IC50 = 6.7 mM, nH = 1.4; Ni 2+ (âµ) IC50 = 7.8 mM, nH = 1.5).
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Figure 5. Cu2+ action is independent of native Cys and His residues but is pH dependent. (A) GK-V relations for WT (â: 0 Cu2+; â¢: 100 Cu2+) and C14A/C141A/C277A (âC3Aâ, âµ: 0 Cu2+; â´: 100 Cu2+) show similar inhibition by 100 μM Cu2+. (B) GK-V relations for WT (â: 0 Cu2+; â¢: 100 Cu2+) and H254A (<: 0 Cu2+; â¾: 100 Cu2+) also respond similarly to 100 μM Cu2+ as indicated by the shift in V0.5. (C) Mean doseâresponse relations (GK-[Cu]2+) measured at voltages near V0.5 for WT (â), C14A/C141A/C277A (âµ), and H254A (â¾) are indistinguishable. The solid line is a fit by the Hill equation (IC50 = 2.0 μM, nH = 0.98) (D) Dependence of Cu2+ action on extracellular pH (pHO) is fit by Hill equation (pH0.5 = 6.0, nH = 1.15). GK-pHO relation for WT channels at +220 mV in 0 Ca2+ represents GK in 100 μM Cu2+ normalized by GK in 0 Cu2+ at each pHO.
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Figure 6. Acidic residues contribute to metal sensitivity of mSlo1 and other voltage-gated channels. (A) Multiple sequence alignment of voltage sensor domain from mSlo1, Kv channels (Shaker, Kv1.2, and Kv2.1), dEAG, and hERG, and other voltage-gated channels (Nav1.4, Nav1.5, Cav1.4, Cav3.2 Domain IV) (based on Liu et al., 2003; Long et al., 2007). Putative transmembrane segments are indicated by solid bars (Long et al., 2007). Charged residues that are highly conserved in mSlo1 and other voltage-gated channels are in red (acidic) or blue (basic). Sites that were mutated in mSlo1 are highlighted yellow with positions labeled. Putative metal coordinating residues in mSlo1, dERG, and hERG are indicated by boxes. (B) Doseâresponse relations (GK at +260 mV) fit by Hill equations for D153K (âª, IC50 = 16.7 μM, nH = 1.0) and D153H (â´, IC50 = 0.26 μM, nH = 0.73) (5 μM [Ca2+]i). Dashed curve represents fit to WT data from Fig. 5 C. (C) The doseâresponse relation (GK at +160 mV) for D186A (â¢, IC50 = 2.53 μM, nH = 0.97), D186H (â´, IC50 = 2.82 μM, nH = 0.95) (1 μM [Ca2+]i). (D) The doseâresponse relations (GK at +240 mV) for D133A (â¢, IC50 = 56.5 μM, nH = 0.97), D133C (<, IC50 = 1.5 μM, nH = 0.74) and D133H (â´, IC50 = 0.73 μM, nH = 0.63) (0 [Ca2+]i).
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Figure 7. Nonacidic residues also contribute to Cu2+ sensitivity. (A) IC50s of mutant channels are plotted at each position tested for Cu2+ (open symbols) or Cd2+ (filled symbols). Error bars were within the symbol size and therefore excluded. Symbols indicate different substitutions (WT: , ; Ala: â, â¢; Lys: â¡; Gln: â; Asn: â; Cys: â¿,â¾; His: âµ, â´). Dashed line indicates the IC50 of the WT for Cu2+. Vertical solid lines indicate the differences in IC50 between mutants at putative coordination sites. Doseâresponse relations (GK-[Cu2+]) for putative coordination sites 151 and 207 in 0 Ca2+ are plotted and fit by Hill equations in (B) Q151A (â, IC50 = 23.8 μM, nH =1.0), Q151C (<, IC50 = 0.96 μM, nH = 0.97) at +240 mV and (C) R207Q (â, IC50 = 85.8 μM, nH = 0.77) and R207C (<, IC50 = 0.52 μM, nH = 0.77) at +180 mV.
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Figure 8. The role of R207 in Cu2+ sensitivity. (A) GK-V relations fit by Boltzmann functions for R207C (â) and R207Q (â¿) in 0 Cu2+ (V0.5 = 149 mV, zAPP = 0.64 e) and in 100 μM Cu2+ (R207C, â¾) and 1000 μM Cu2+ (R207C: â, V0.5 = 314.5 mV, zAPP = 0.64 e; R207Q: â¦, V0.5 = 245.6 mV, zAPP = 0.46 e). (B) Log(Po)-V relation for R207C in 0 (<) and 100 μM Cu2+ (â¾). (C) Cd2+ doseâresponse relations (GK-[Cd2+]) fit by Hill equations for WT (â¢, IC50 = 720 μM, nH = 0.98) at +220 mV and R207C (â´, IC50 = 0.038 μM, nH = 0.73) at +180 mV (0 [Ca2+]i). (D) GK-V relations for R207C in 0 Cd2+ (<, V0.5 = 149 mV, zAPP = 0.64 e), 100 μM Cd2+ (â¾), and 1000 μM Cd2+ (â, V0.5 = 316 mV, zAPP = 0.61 e) (0 [Ca2+]i).
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Figure 9. Effect of mutations on Cu2+-efficacy. (A) The maximal GK-V shift (ÎV0.5MAX) in response to saturating 1000 μM Cu2+ are plotted for the WT () and mutants at the four putative Cu2+-coordinating sites (Ala: â¢; Lys: âª; Gln: â; Cys: â¿; His: â´). The dashed line indicates ÎV0.5MAX for the WT. The vertical solid lines indicate the range of ÎV0.5MAX for mutants at each position. (B) A speculative model of the Cu2+ binding site in the resting (R) and activated (A) state of the voltage sensor. In the resting state, Cu2+ is coordinated by D133(S1), Q151(S2), D153(S2), and R207(S4). The relative size and position of transmembrane segments correspond to those in the structure of a Kv1.2/Kv2.1 chimera (Long et al., 2007). During activation, the S2 residues interact with Cu2+ in a state-independent manner while interactions with D133 and R207 are weakened or disrupted, presumably by changes in the position or orientation of S1 and S4 relative to S2. In this way, mutation of any of these residues alter IC50, but only mutation of D133 or R207 alter efficacy.
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Figure 10. The Cu2+ coordination sites are conserved in Shaker channels. (A) IK evoked from WT Shaker channels in response to pulses to â10 mV from a holding potential of â90 mV at the indicated [Cu2+] (0â100 μM). (B) GK-V relations from the same patch in different [Cu2+] are normalized by GKmax in 0 Cu2+. (0 (â), 1 (â¢), 5 (â¾), 20 (â´), and 100 μM Cu2+ (âª)). (C) IK at 0 mV from WT channels at the indicated [Zn2+] (0â10,000 μM). (D) GK-V relations in different [Zn2+], normalized by GKmax in 0 Zn2+ (0 (â), 100 (â¢), 1,000 (â¾), 4,000 (â´), 10,000 μM Zn2+ ()). (E) IK at 0 mV from E247A channels in 0, 1, and 5 μM Cu2+. (F) IK at +30 mV from E247C in 0, 0.1, 1, and 5 μM Cu2+. (G and H) IK at +10 mV from E247A (G) or E247C (H) in 0, 100, and 1,000 μM Zn2+. (I and J) IK from R365A at 0 mV (I) or R365C at â40 mV(J) in 0, 1, and 5 μM Cu2+. All Shaker experiments were performed from a holding potential of â90 mV. Most data were obtained in standard Shaker internal and external solutions (see Materials and methods) with the exception of R365 mutant data in I and J, which were obtained in a low chloride external solution with all but 10 mM Clâ replaced by MeO3â, as in standard mSlo1 external solution.
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Figure 11. Mechanism and site of Cu2+ action. (A) Scheme 1 (see text), green indicates Cu2+-dependent mechanisms, black represents HA model (Horrigan and Aldrich, 2002). (B and C) Residues mutated in mSlo1 are mapped onto the structure of a Kv1.2/Kv2.1 chimera (Long et al., 2007). B and C show side and top views, respectively. Only the S1âS4 segments from one subunit are shown with S1âS2 linker removed for clarity. Putative Cu2+-coordinating residues were changed to the corresponding residue from mSlo1: D133(red), Q151(yellow), D153(red), R207(cyan). The backbone was colored dark blue at other positions that were tested. Dotted spheres indicate the position of water molecules in the structure. The green sphere illustrates a possible position for Cu2+.
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