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Palmitoylation gates phoshorylation-dependent regulation of BK potassium channels

Authors :
Owen Jeffries
Hans-Guenther Knaus
Luke H. Chamberlain
Lijun Tian
Iain Rowe
Michael J. Shipston
Peter Ruth
Heather McClafferty
Fozia Saleem
Lie Chen
Adam Molyvdas
Jennifer Greaves
Source :
Tian, L, Jeffries, O J, McClafferty, H, Molyvdas, A, Rowe, I, Saleem, F, Chen, L, Greaves, J, Chamberlain, L H, Knaus, H G, Riuth, P & Shipston, M J 2008, ' Palmitoylation gates phoshorylation-dependent regulation of BK potassium channels ', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 105, no. 52, pp. 21006-21011 . https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0806700106
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Large conductance calcium- and voltage-gated potassium (BK) channels are important regulators of physiological homeostasis and their function is potently modulated by protein kinase A (PKA) phosphorylation. PKA regulates the channel through phosphorylation of residues within the intracellular C terminus of the pore-forming α-subunits. However, the molecular mechanism(s) by which phosphorylation of the α-subunit effects changes in channel activity are unknown. Inhibition of BK channels by PKA depends on phosphorylation of only a single α-subunit in the channel tetramer containing an alternatively spliced insert (STREX) suggesting that phosphorylation results in major conformational rearrangements of the C terminus. Here, we define the mechanism of PKA inhibition of BK channels and demonstrate that this regulation is conditional on the palmitoylation status of the channel. We show that the cytosolic C terminus of the STREX BK channel uniquely interacts with the plasma membrane via palmitoylation of evolutionarily conserved cysteine residues in the STREX insert. PKA phosphorylation of the serine residue immediately upstream of the conserved palmitoylated cysteine residues within STREX dissociates the C terminus from the plasma membrane, inhibiting STREX channel activity. Abolition of STREX palmitoylation by site-directed mutagenesis or pharmacological inhibition of palmitoyl transferases prevents PKA-mediated inhibition of BK channels. Thus, palmitoylation gates BK channel regulation by PKA phosphorylation. Palmitoylation and phosphorylation are both dynamically regulated; thus, cross-talk between these 2 major posttranslational signaling cascades provides a mechanism for conditional regulation of BK channels. Interplay of these distinct signaling cascades has important implications for the dynamic regulation of BK channels and physiological homeostasis.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Tian, L, Jeffries, O J, McClafferty, H, Molyvdas, A, Rowe, I, Saleem, F, Chen, L, Greaves, J, Chamberlain, L H, Knaus, H G, Riuth, P & Shipston, M J 2008, ' Palmitoylation gates phoshorylation-dependent regulation of BK potassium channels ', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 105, no. 52, pp. 21006-21011 . https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0806700106
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....69297c1bcab69709a2656be90827a0c4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0806700106