The Journal of General Physiology
Avanti Polar Lipids
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Published online Dec 28 2004. doi:10.1085/jgp.200409197
The Rockefeller University Press, 0022-1295 $8.00
JGP, Volume 125, Number 1, 57-69
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The Cooperative Voltage Sensor Motion that Gates a Potassium Channel

Medha Pathak1, Lisa Kurtz2, Francesco Tombola2, and Ehud Isacoff1,2

1 Biophysics Graduate Group, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720
2 Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720

Correspondence to Ehud Y. Isacoff: eisacoff{at}socrates.berkeley.edu

The four arginine-rich S4 helices of a voltage-gated channel move outward through the membrane in response to depolarization, opening and closing gates to generate a transient ionic current. Coupling of voltage sensing to gating was originally thought to operate with the S4s moving independently from an inward/resting to an outward/activated conformation, so that when all four S4s are activated, the gates are driven to open or closed. However, S4 has also been found to influence the cooperative opening step (Smith-Maxwell et al., 1998a), suggesting a more complex mechanism of coupling. Using fluorescence to monitor structural rearrangements in a Shaker channel mutant, the ILT channel (Ledwell and Aldrich, 1999), that energetically isolates the steps of activation from the cooperative opening step, we find that opening is accompanied by a previously unknown and cooperative movement of S4. This gating motion of S4 appears to be coupled to the internal S6 gate and to two forms of slow inactivation. Our results suggest that S4 plays a direct role in gating. While large transmembrane rearrangements of S4 may be required to unlock the gating machinery, as proposed before, it appears to be the gating motion of S4 that drives the gates to open and close.

Key Words: potassium channel • S4 • gating • cooperativity • coupling


Abbreviations used in this paper: 4-AP, 4-aminopyridine; HP, holding potential; TGM, tetraglycine maleimide; TEVC, two-electrode voltage clamp; TM, transmembrane; TMRM, tetramethylrhodamine; WT, wild type.


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