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Na+ Block and Permeation in a K+ Channel of Known Structure
Address correspondence to Christopher Miller, Department of Biochemistry, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA 02454. Fax: (781) 736-2365; E-mail: cmiller{at}brandeis.edu
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: selectivity KCSA punchthrough
| INTRODUCTION |
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These remarkable characteristics of K+ channels are immediately comprehensible (see Fig. 1 A) from the KcsA structure (Doyle et al., 1998
). The protein projects backbone carbonyl and sidechain oxygen atoms into a narrow selectivity filter on the extracellular side of the pore with a geometry that precisely mimics the hydration waters surrounding K+ in aqueous solution (Zhou et al., 2001b
); this arrangement produces an isoenergetic landscape along which dehydrated K+ ions can diffuse rapidly through the filter (Morais-Cabral et al., 2001
; Bernèche and Roux, 2001
). In contrast, Na+ is thermodynamically disfavored in this region, presumably because the selectivity filter is not flexible enough to collapse inwards and intimately coordinate this smaller ion. In the crystal structure, a closed conformation, the pore widens on the intracellular side of the selectivity filter to form a cytoplasmic cavity, where a single ion (either K+ or Na+) may be accommodated. The cation is fully hydrated in this cavity, which terminates in a 34-Å intracellular constriction that must widen when the channel opens (Armstrong, 1971
; Holmgren et al., 1997
; Perozo et al., 1999
; Zhou et al., 2001a
). Recently, the open conformation of a different bacterial K+ channel, determined crystallographically at high resolution (Jiang et al., 2002a
,b
), reveals a roughly cylindrical 12-Å-wide aqueous vestibule directly connecting the intracellular solution to the selectivity filter, strikingly similar to the pore architecture for ion-selective channels anticipated on the basis of functional properties alone (Miller, 1982
). In view of its width, we would not at first glance expect this intracellular access pathway to display much selectivity between K+ and Na+.
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10-fold lower in concentration than K+, but at increasingly positive voltages, Na+ entering the cavity would be expected to become electrostatically trapped and to severely block K+ current. Such voltage-dependent Na+ block has been described in several pregenomic K+ channels (Bezanilla and Armstrong, 1972| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Expression, Purification, and Reconstitution of KcsA
KcsA labeled with an NH2-terminal His6 tag was expressed at high levels in Escherichia coli (JM-83) as described previously (Heginbotham et al., 1997
, 1999
; LeMasurier et al., 2001
). The overexpressed membrane protein was extracted in dodecylmaltoside, purified over a Ni-NTA agarose column, and reconstituted into POPE/POPG (7.5:2.5 mg/ml) liposomes at a concentration of 0.41 µg protein/mg lipid. Aliquots were stored at -80°C for no longer than three months.
Single-channel Recording
KcsA channels in liposomes were incorporated into bilayers formed from POPE/POPG (7.5:2.5 mg/ml) in n-decane. We used a horizontal planar bilayer system consisting of two aqueous chambers separated by a partition with an
50-µm hole on which the bilayer (2560 pF) was formed (Chen and Miller, 1996
; Heginbotham et al., 1999
). Channels were inserted by adding 1 µl of the KcsA-containing liposomes to a bilayer and waiting up to 5 min for channels to appear. A pH gradient was set up across the membrane to establish faithful orientation of the system, with the "internal" solution buffered at pH 4.0 with 10 mM succinate and the "external" solution at pH 7.0 with 10 mM HEPES (Heginbotham et al., 1999
). This strategy silences any channels incorporated with reverse orientation because KcsA requires low internal pH for opening (Cuello et al., 1998
; Heginbotham et al., 1999
). Single-channel currents were recorded with an amplifier (Axopatch 200; Axon Instruments, Inc.) and sampled at 1050 kHz with low-pass filtering at 25 kHz. In some cases, small amplitude channels obtained in low salt concentrations (25 mM K+ and/or 2550 mM Rb+) were digitally filtered offline at 0.251 kHz. Voltage is referenced to the external solution as ground, according to electrophysiological convention. For each dataset, control recordings were first collected, and then the internal chamber was perfused with Na+-containing solutions to obtain blocked-channel data. Conductance measurements were made as described previously (LeMasurier et al., 2001
) on >50 hand-picked long openings taken from at least three separate bilayers and were checked with all-point amplitude histograms.
Data Analysis
For each dataset, open channel I-V curves were constructed. These were fit according to two separate models based on either equilibrium block or kinetic punchthrough (see RESULTS). Parameters were derived independently from each dataset. For equilibrium block analysis (see Eqs. 1 and 2), two parameters were obtained, effective valence z and blocker dissociation constant
at zero voltage. For the kinetic analysis (see Eq. 5), which required five parameters, these same two parameters were determined robustly from the fits. For K+ data, the values of z,
, and
were largely insensitive to the values of
K and
B, which were not well constrained by the data. For Rb+ data, we additionally constrained
Rb,
B, and
according to the values used for fitting K+ data. Specifically, we required that
K/
Rb = 5, according to conductance-concentration behavior of KcsA (LeMasurier et al., 2001
). Despite these uncertainties, no conclusions from this work rely on specific values of these unconstrained parameters.
Online Supplemental Material
A figure and a cartoon providing a closer look at the concerted Na+ blocking transition are available at http://www.jgp.org/cgi/content/full/jgp.20028614/DC1.
| RESULTS |
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10 µs (Pusch et al., 2000
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200 mV, Na+ acts as a conventional voltage-dependent blocker (Woodhull, 1973
We examined the influence of Na+ on single-channel I-V curves at different concentrations of K+, as illustrated by comparison of Fig. 2 B (100 mM K+) and Fig. 3 (24 and 500 mM K+). Under all conditions, Na+ produces similar effects, and Na+ and K+ behave in a competitive manner; as K+ concentration increases, correspondingly higher concentrations of Na+ are required to produce similar levels of block. This behavior is expected for a blocker operating within the K+ conduction pathway because it is established from the KcsA structure that pore-associated ions occupy well-defined sites (Doyle et al., 1998
; Jiang and MacKinnon, 2000
; Morais-Cabral et al., 2001
).
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![]() | (1) |
is its apparent equilibrium dissociation constant. Because the reaction operates within a transmembrane protein, we expect that in general
will depend on applied voltage:
![]() | (2) |
will follow a strict competition relation:
![]() | (3) |
This conventional equilibrium model spectacularly fails to account for the effect of Na+ on K+ currents (Fig. 2 B, dashed curve) because at high voltages, the I-V curves completely abandon the negative resistance characteristic reflecting equilibrium block. However, we thought it worthwhile to apply this analysis below 200 mV, where satisfactory correspondence between data and prediction prevails. In Fig. 6, we present the results of this analysis in the "blocking regime" for K+. We find that both z and
increase with K+ concentration. The increase in charge movement is expected from the multi-ion character of KcsA, which offers opportunities for coupling of K+ movements to blocker entry (Hille, 1975
; Spassova and Lu, 1998
), a coupling that is expected to increase with K+ occupancy. The linear increase in
with K+ concentration is in accord with simple competition between K+ and Na+, as demanded by Eq. 3, and the slope of this relation signifies that K+ is favored in the vestibule over Na+ by a factor of five. Repeating this analysis for Rb+ as the conducting ion (Fig. 4 B, dashed curves), we come qualitatively to the same conclusions (Fig. 6) in the low voltage blocking range of the I-V curves.
increases linearly with Rb+, with values nearly identical to those seen in K+. However, in Rb+, the absolute values of z are two- to threefold smaller (0.20.3) than those in K+ (0.40.8), as is obvious from the absence of a negative resistance in the Rb+ I-V curves.
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For this reason, we incorporated a punchthrough pathway into a quantitative picture of Na+ interaction with KcsA. We emphasize that it is not our intention to build a pore permeation model, but rather a theory to explain how Na+ modifies K+ and Rb+ currents. We propose (Scheme I)
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Here, V represents the unoccupied vestibule, and V:K and V:B denote the vestibule site occupied by a K+ ion or a blocker. Rate constants are assumed to be conventionally voltage dependent, with forward rates increasing and backward rates decreasing exponentially with voltage. According to this scheme, Na+ punchthrough is a rare process that gains prominence only at high voltages, where b2 becomes large and b-1 small. The scheme leads to a prediction of flux through the channel, J(V):
![]() | (4) |
Analysis (Eq. 14) shows that the second term in the numerator, which represents the current carried by Na+ itself, is negligible (<10%) compared with the first term, the K+ current. This means that the "upturn" in the punchthrough regime is K+ current arising from Na+ escape. For simplicity in subsequent exposition, we will drop the Na+ current term, to yield the I-V curve:
![]() | (5) |
K = k2/k1 (Michaelis constant of the permeant ion for vestibule-occupancy), and
B = b2/b1 (punchthrough constant, a Michaelis constant for the blocker).
The I-V curve is given by the product of the unblocked I-V curve, I0(V), and a voltage-dependent "scaling term" that describes the interaction of the blocker with the channel. We recognize that Eq. 5 has the same competitive-inhibition form of the equilibrium model (Eq. 1), but with a crucial difference. Now, the apparent dissociation constant of the blocker contains the sum of two terms, an equilibrium block parameter, KB, and a new punchthrough constant
B. The former term decreases strongly with voltage, as in the equilibrium case, but the latter is expected from the electric field profile across KcsA to rise weakly with voltage (Roux et al., 2000
). This consideration leads to a natural distinction between the blocking and punchthrough regimes in the I-V curve; the blocking regime prevails at low voltages where KB >>
B, whereas the reverse relation defines the high voltage punchthrough regime. Finally, we note that
K, a kinetic parameter, becomes the equilibrium dissociation constant of K+, KK (0), at V = 0.
The solid curves of Figs. 25 show that this model accounts well for both effects of Na+: block and punchthrough. The key blocking parameters extracted from these curves are, as with the equilibrium approach,
and z. Fig. 7 compares these parameters with their counterparts derived from the equilibrium treatment. We see that despite the profound difference in underlying mechanism, the same qualitative features of these parameters remain: an increase of z with K+ or Rb+ concentration, and a competitive relationship between Na+ and the permeant ion, with substantial selectivity against Na+. Also common to both ways of analyzing the data is the puzzling lower voltage dependence of Na+ block in Rb+ as compared with K+. We note that Na+ punchthrough in Rb+ is less apparent than in K+, since it is masked by the lower voltage dependence of Na+ block.
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| DISCUSSION |
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200 mV, whereas the latter appears above this voltage, where the slope of the I-V curve turns positive again as block is relieved by Na+ penetrating the selectivity filter. We consider it worthwhile to scrutinize both of these processes in light of the KcsA structure. Na+ block provides information about ion interactions in the wide, hydrated intracellular vestibule, whereas punchthrough reflects Na+ permeation through a highly K+-specific region of the channel, a low probability process that cannot be observed directly by Na+ current or reversal potential measurements (LeMasurier et al., 2001We used standard equilibrium analysis (Eq. 1) in the low voltage blocking regime, a procedure that explicitly ignores any nonequilibrium processes present such as punchthrough. This analysis, of course, provides information only about Na+ binding to the vestibule (its voltage dependence and selectivity), and is necessarily silent about permeation of the blocker through the selectivity filter. In parallel, we applied a simplified kinetic model of Na+ entering the vestibule from the intracellular side and leaving it in either of two ways: (1) by the same reversible-block pathway modeled in the equilibrium picture or (2) by an irreversible punchthrough pathway that becomes increasingly important at higher voltages. This kinetic approach eschews details of K+ permeation through the selectivity filter, focusing instead on the vestibule site alone, and the kinetics of ions entering and leaving it. The same parameters (voltage dependence and selectivity of block) as in the equilibrium approach are obtained from this treatment, which additionally provides information about slow permeation of Na+ through the pore.
Ionic Selectivity of the Vestibule
In both treatments, the apparent dissociation constant at zero voltage increases linearly with K+ concentration (Figs. 6 and 7). This behavior is required if Na+ and K+ compete for the binding site in the vestibule. The slope of this line, a direct measure of the inherent selectivity of ion binding at this site (Eq. 3), tells us definitively that the vestibule displays a five- to sevenfold preference for K+ over Na+, equivalent to
1 kcal/mol free energy difference. This selectivity is perhaps counterintuitive given the width and hydration of the cavity, but it is in remarkable accord with previous work on ion binding to sites in a mammalian Ca2+-activated K+ channel (Neyton and Miller, 1988b
). In that channel, a permeation site now known (Jiang and MacKinnon, 2000
) to be analogous to the intracellular vestibule displayed an equilibrium binding selectivity of 5.1 for K+ over Na+ in the channel's open conformation. The close agreement between this literature value and our current results argues for the appropriateness of KcsA as a structural pore model for K+ channels in general in the vestibule and the selectivity filter. Our results establish that the vestibule also selects for Rb+ against Na+; the nearly identical variation of Na+ dissociation constant with concentration of K+ or Rb+ shows that there is no significant selectivity between these two permeant ions, in quantitative agreement with results on the Ca2+-activated K+ channel (Neyton and Miller, 1988b
).
The energetic preference for K+ in the vestibule is understandable in terms of KcsA structure. Recent high resolution crystallographic results on KcsA (Zhou et al., 2001b
) reveal a full inner hydration shell of eight water molecules coordinating the single K+ ion in the vestibule. The fourfold symmetry of this extraordinary structural feature is imposed by the tetrameric channel; in other words, the vestibule matches the preferred structure of a hydrated K+ ion. But no such ordered water was observed with Na+ in the vestibule. Therefore, we suggest that the selectivity in this wide region arises from a subtle disruption of the larger hydration shell of Na+ when this ion enters the vestibule. Of course, because the KcsA structure is of a closed conformation, this suggestion must remain speculative until a similarly high resolution structure of the open channel is achieved. In any case, this vestibule-selectivity mechanism is very different from the much more severe exclusion of Na+ from the selectivity filter, which discriminates among ions largely denuded of their waters of hydration.
From a physiological viewpoint, the sixfold selectivity of the vestibule acts to lower blockade of K+ channels that unavoidably arises from the presence of intracellular Na+. But is this property of K+ channels a biological imperative or just an adventitious consequence of channel architecture? We suspect that it has compelling biological meaning. Applying our KcsA blocking parameters to a typical K+ channel at the node of Ranvier, for instance, we expect <10% Na+ block at the peak of an action potential; but without selectivity in the vestibule, the channel would be blocked
40%, and repolarization would be seriously impeded. In fact, the problem might be much worse than this because this rough calculation ignores the transient, localized increase in internal Na+ concentration expected near the plasma membrane's inner surface at the peak of the action potential.
Voltage Dependence of Na+ Block and Coupled-ion Movement
The block of K+ current by Na+ is voltage dependent, becoming stronger at higher positive voltages. The precise values of effective valence of block differ for the two types of data analysis, with the equilibrium approach producing
20% lower values than the full kinetic treatment. This difference is understandable because this simplified treatment underestimates the degree of block by ignoring punchthrough that occurs in the low voltage blocking regime. Nonetheless, according to either analysis, the effective valence of block lies in the range 0.40.9. These values are too large to reflect merely the voltage drop a Na+ ion experiences in attaining a blocking site in a wide cytoplasmic vestibule, according to the classical view of effective valence (Woodhull, 1973
).
An explanation for these higher-than-expected effective valence values is suggested by the increase in z with K+ or Rb+ concentration (Fig. 6). Because KcsA is a multi-ion channel, it is natural to suppose that as Na+ attains its blocking site, coupled movements of permeant ions occur, as has been clearly shown in quaternary ammonium block of inward-rectifier K+ channels (Spassova and Lu, 1998
). Ion coupling adds charge movement to the blocking reaction, and the effect should increase as pore occupancy rises with permeant ion concentration. An additional conclusion from our data analysis, one that was counterintuitive to us, is that the voltage dependence of Na+ block is systematically different in Rb+ than in K+ (Figs. 6 and 7).
A Structure-based Picture of Ion Coupling in Na+ Block
How can we understand the lower value of voltage dependence of Na+ block in Rb+? We find that the difference falls naturally out of a mechanistic feature of KcsA recently deduced from structural analysis: the inhomogeneous energetic landscape of Rb+ in the selectivity filter (Morais-Cabral et al., 2001
). We modeled Na+ block coupled to ion permeation using the scheme in Fig. 8, which shows the correspondence between real positions of ions in the pore and states in the model. We made the simplifying approximation (Morais-Cabral et al., 2001
) that the selectivity filter is always occupied by a pair of permeant ions that can shift back and forth between two configurations: inner or outer (Fig. 8). The vestibule can be empty or occupied by either a permeant ion or Na+. Simultaneous exchange between a K+ and a Na+ in the vestibule is prohibited (transitions 13 and 24), but knock-on transitions are permitted (transitions 12 and 23). With these constraints, Fig. 8 B shows the allowed transitions among the six kinetic states.
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3 kcal/mol in the outer configuration. Accordingly, we introduce an ion-dependent free energy difference between inner and outer configurations (Fig. 8 C). We also include an factor ß to account for the possibility of electrostatic repulsion between the ion in the vestibule and ions in the inner configuration, which would tend to favor the outer configuration whenever the vestibule is occupied.
With these considerations in mind, we modeled the Na+ block in K+-like and Rb+-like conditions, using conventional chemical kinetics and assuming exponential voltage dependence to the rate constants. This procedure would be egregiously inappropriate if it were being used to model the I-V curve shapes in the absence of blocker; simple models like this are famously unable to account for the voltage dependence of permeant ion currents (Chen et al., 1992
). Our intention is different: we wish only to examine the predicted blocking effect of Na+, with a particular focus on how the voltage dependence of block varies with the free energy landscape of permeant ions in the selectivity filter.
This key feature, the ion's energy landscape, captures the puzzling trend in our experimental results, namely, the reduced voltage dependence of Na+ block in Rb+ compared with K+. With reasonable values of charge movement for individual steps, Na+ blocks the simulated currents in a voltage-dependent manner. We derived a measure of effective valence of Na+ block by analyzing the simulated I-V curves via the equilibrium blocking treatment. The simulated z-values (Fig. 9) are indeed much smaller in Rb+-like (
Go
-3 kcal/mol) than in K+-like (
Go
0) conditions. We are interested only in this trend and are not motivated to adjust parameters to obtain agreement with the absolute experimental values of z. This basic feature is a robust property of these simulations and is preserved under all reasonable variation of kinetic parameters; if mild repulsion (ß = 100) is added to the model, the difference between effective valence in K+ versus Rb+ is slightly enhanced (Fig. 9).
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With K+ as the conducting ion, however, the situation is different. Now, the inner and outer configurations are more in balance, and so neither is highly disfavored. As a consequence, a knock-on blocking pathway operates in addition to the low-z vacancy-filling pathway. In this pathway (Fig. 8 B, states 2 > 34), a Na+ ion, seeking to bind in the K+-occupied vestibule, pushes the K+ ion into the selectivity filter, which in consequence switches from the outer to the inner configuration. A more in depth picture detailing ion movements associated with this knock-on pathway is discussed in the PowerPoint file in the online supplemental material (available at http://www.jgp.org/cgi/content/full/jgp20028614/DC1). The net effect of these concerted ion movements is one Na+ ion entering from the inside and one K+ ion exiting to the outside, along with a small redistribution of charge within the selectivity filter. The charge movement associated with this pathway is substantially greater than with vacancy filling, and so the measured effective valence, which reflects a state-weighted average of both pathways, is always higher in K+ than in Rb+.
The Na+ Punchthrough Process
In a formal sense (Eq. 5), we have accounted for the relief of Na+ block at high voltages as representing blocker escape through the selectivity filter. But how does this happen in a K+-specific region? Is the selectivity filter deformed by such high voltages that it loses its preference for K+, or does Na+ simply acquire enough electrostatic energy to surmount the barrier posed by the selectivity filter? Under the first hypothesis, Na+ current should be observed at high voltages in the absence of K+, in contradiction to our observations with KcsA (unpublished data). For this reason, we favor the second hypothesis, which envisions Na+ punchthrough as occurring at all voltages, but with increasing frequency as voltage increases, as embodied in Scheme I.
By conventional electrophysiological measurements, the permeability of KcsA to Na+ is unmeasurably low (LeMasurier et al., 2001
). However, the punchthrough process provides an alternative estimate of Na+ permeation rates. We use the predictions of Scheme I to extract a novel selectivity indicator: the relative values of k2 and b2, the rate constants describing escape from the vestibule of K+ versus Na+. In the high voltage limit, where Na+ dissociation toward the outside is much faster than back to the inside (b2 >> b-1), Eq. 1 can be readily manipulated to derive a lower limit on this "escape ratio," expressed in terms of measurable quantities:
![]() | (6) |
To use this relation, the experimental value I0/I is best measured at a voltage where punchthrough is beginning to appear but before K+ diffusion-limitation sets in. We chose 300 mV as a compromise and report values (Table I) of Io/I measured at a variety of Na+ and K+ concentrations. To estimate the lower limit for the escape ratio, we use two conservative assumptions. First, we assign a value of 2.5 to the entry rate ratio, k1/b1, partitioning the equilibrium binding selectivity of the vestibule equally into forward and backward rate constants of transfer between the vestibule and the internal solution. Second, the value of
K is unknown and quite unconstrained in the I-V fits, although conductance-concentration data suggests that it is on the order of 100 mM (LeMasurier et al., 2001
); however, to arrive at a lower limit, we set
K = 0. With these considerations, we find that the estimated escape ratio is greater than
30 (Table I).
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Conclusions
Intracellular Na+ block has been recognized as a general property of K+ channels for many years. In this paper, we have closely examined this phenomenon in a structural context: single KcsA channels in a defined system. The high resolution structure of this protein provides us with an enhanced level of confidence in interpreting our electrophysiological results. We find that the wide intracellular vestibule, where Na+ blocks the channel, shows significant selectivity toward conducting ions, and we suggest that this novel discrimination among hydrated cations is biologically relevant. In addition, we have shown that Na+ block is strongly influenced by coupled movements of conducting ions cohabiting the channel. Our results provide understanding of block in terms of an ion-permeation model emerging from crystallographic results. Finally, we developed a new measurement of slow Na+ permeation through the K+-selectivity filter.
| FOOTNOTES |
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health grant GM-31867 to C. Miller.
Submitted: 23 April 2002
Revised: 20 June 2002
Accepted: 24 June 2002
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