The Binding of Kappa-Conotoxin PVIIA and Fast C-type Inactivation of Shaker K+ Channels Are Mutually Exclusive
Overview
Affiliations
Kappa-conotoxin PVIIA (kappa-PVIIA), a 27-amino acid peptide identified from the venom of Conus purpurascens, inhibits the Shaker K+ channel by blocking its outer pore. The toxin appears as a gating modifier because its binding affinity decreases with relatively fast kinetics upon channel opening, but there is no indication that it interferes with the gating transitions of the wild-type channels (WT), including the structural changes of the outer pore that underlie its slow C-type inactivation. In this report we demonstrate that in two outer pore mutants of Shaker-IR (M448K and T449S), that have high toxin sensitivity and fast C-type inactivation, the latter process is instead antagonized by and incompatible with kappa-PVIIA binding. Inactivation is slowed by the necessary preliminary unbinding of kappa-PVIIA, whereas toxin rebinding must await recovery from inactivation causing a double-exponential relaxation of the second response to double-pulse stimulations. Compared with the lack of similar effects in WT, these results demonstrate the ability of peptide toxins like kappa-PVIIA to reveal possibly subtle differences in structural changes of the outer pore of K+ channels; however, they also warn against a naive use of fast inactivating mutants as models for C-type inactivation. Unfolded from the antagonistic effect of inactivation, toxin binding to mutant noninactivated channels shows state- and voltage-dependencies similar to WT: slow and high affinity for closed channels; relatively fast dissociation from open channels at rate increasing with voltage. This supports the idea that these properties depend mainly on interactions with pore-permeation processes that are not affected by the mutations. In mutant channels the state-dependence also greatly enhances the protection of toxin binding against steady-state inactivation at low depolarizations while still allowing large responses to depolarizing pulses that relieve toxin block. Although not obviously applicable to any known combination of natural channel and outer-pore blocker, our biophysical characterization of such highly efficient mechanism of protection from steady-state outer-pore inactivation may be of general interest.
Turcio R, Di Matteo F, Capolupo I, Ciaglia T, Musella S, Di Chio C Mar Drugs. 2024; 22(8).
PMID: 39195466 PMC: 11355921. DOI: 10.3390/md22080350.
Pore-modulating toxins exploit inherent slow inactivation to block K channels.
Karbat I, Altman-Gueta H, Fine S, Szanto T, Hamer-Rogotner S, Dym O Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2019; 116(37):18700-18709.
PMID: 31444298 PMC: 6744907. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1908903116.
Dysregulation of Intracellular Calcium Signaling in Alzheimer's Disease.
Popugaeva E, Pchitskaya E, Bezprozvanny I Antioxid Redox Signal. 2018; 29(12):1176-1188.
PMID: 29890840 PMC: 6157344. DOI: 10.1089/ars.2018.7506.
Small Packages, Big Returns: Uncovering the Venom Diversity of Small Invertebrate Conoidean Snails.
Gorson J, Holford M Integr Comp Biol. 2016; 56(5):962-972.
PMID: 27371389 PMC: 6058754. DOI: 10.1093/icb/icw063.
Stabilization of the conductive conformation of a voltage-gated K+ (Kv) channel: the lid mechanism.
Santos J, Syeda R, Montal M J Biol Chem. 2013; 288(23):16619-16628.
PMID: 23609443 PMC: 3675597. DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.468728.