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Published online 13 June 2005 doi:10.1085/jgp.200509262
The Rockefeller University Press, 0022-1295 $8.00
JGP, Volume 126, Number 1, 7-21
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ARTICLE

Heme Regulates Allosteric Activation of the Slo1 BK Channel

Frank T. Horrigan1, Stefan H. Heinemann2, and Toshinori Hoshi1

1 Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104
2 Molecular and Cellular Biophysics, Medical Faculty of the Friedrich Schiller University Jena, D-07747 Jena, Germany

Correspondence to Toshinori Hoshi: hoshi{at}hoshi.org

Large conductance calcium-dependent (Slo1 BK) channels are allosterically activated by membrane depolarization and divalent cations, and possess a rich modulatory repertoire. Recently, intracellular heme has been identified as a potent regulator of Slo1 BK channels (Tang, X.D., R. Xu, M.F. Reynolds, M.L. Garcia, S.H. Heinemann, and T. Hoshi. 2003. Nature. 425:531–535). Here we investigated the mechanism of the regulatory action of heme on heterologously expressed Slo1 BK channels by separating the influences of voltage and divalent cations. In the absence of divalent cations, heme generally decreased ionic currents by shifting the channel's G–V curve toward more depolarized voltages and by rendering the curve less steep. In contrast, gating currents remained largely unaffected by heme. Simulations suggest that a decrease in the strength of allosteric coupling between the voltage sensor and the activation gate and a concomitant stabilization of the open state account for the essential features of the heme action in the absence of divalent ions. At saturating levels of divalent cations, heme remained similarly effective with its influence on the G–V simulated by weakening the coupling of both Ca2+ binding and voltage sensor activation to channel opening. The results thus show that heme dampens the influence of allosteric activators on the activation gate of the Slo1 BK channel. To account for these effects, we consider the possibility that heme binding alters the structure of the RCK gating ring and thereby disrupts both Ca2+- and voltage-dependent gating as well as intrinsic stability of the open state.



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