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Vol. 62, Issue 1, 127-134, July 2002
Departments of Internal Medicine (B.J.P., T.L., B.A.P., H.L.), and
Physiology & Biophysics (T.H., E.F.S.), the University of Iowa College
of Medicine; and Department of Veterans Administration Medical Center,
Iowa City, Iowa (H.L.)
A-type K+ currents serve important functions in neural and
cardiac physiology. The human A-type Kv1.4 channel (hKv1.4) shows fast
N-type inactivation when expressed in Xenopus laevis
oocytes. We found that intracellular pH (pHi) regulated the
macroscopic inactivation time constant (
) and current amplitude
(Ipeak), producing a 2-fold change with each pH unit change
in the physiologically relevant range of 8.0 to 6.0. These effects of
pHi were completely abolished by a large deletion in the
hKv1.4 N terminus. Site-directed mutagenesis identified a histidine
(H16) in the inactivation ball domain as a critical H+
titratable site mediating the pH effects on N-type inactivation between
pH 7.0 and 9.0. Substituting this histidine with arginine not only
accelerated the time course of macroscopic channel inactivation but
also eliminated the H+ effects on hKv1.4. In addition, a
glutamic acid (E2) in the ball domain constitutes another
H+ titratable site that mediates the pH effects in the more
acidic pH range of 5.0 to 7.0. These results suggest that N-type
inactivation in hKv1.4 is regulated by pHi in the
physiologic range through ionization of specific amino acid residues in
the ball domain. Such pHi effects may represent an
important fundamental mechanism for physiological regulation of
excitable tissue function.
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