4.8 Article

Structure of the Human BK Channel Ca2+-Activation Apparatus at 3.0 Å Resolution

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 329, Issue 5988, Pages 182-186

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1190414

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Funding

  1. American Asthma Foundation [07-0127]

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High-conductance voltage-and Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channels encode negative feedback regulation of membrane voltage and Ca2+ signaling, playing a central role in numerous physiological processes. We determined the x-ray structure of the human BK Ca2+ gating apparatus at a resolution of 3.0 angstroms and deduced its tetrameric assembly by solving a 6 angstrom resolution structure of a Na+-activated homolog. Two tandem C-terminal regulator of K+ conductance (RCK) domains from each of four channel subunits form a 350-kilodalton gating ring at the intracellular membrane surface. A sequence of aspartic amino acids that is known as the Ca2+ bowl, and is located within the second of the tandem RCK domains, creates four Ca2+ binding sites on the outer perimeter of the gating ring at the assembly interface between RCK domains. Functionally important mutations cluster near the Ca2+ bowl, near the flexible interface between RCK domains, and on the surface of the gating ring that faces the voltage sensors. The structure suggests that the Ca2+ gating ring, in addition to regulating the pore directly, may also modulate the voltage sensor.

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