4.7 Article

Tunable Action Potential Repolarization Governed by Kv3.4 Channels in Dorsal Root Ganglion Neurons

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 42, Issue 46, Pages 8647-8657

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1210-22.2022

Keywords

action potential plasticity; Kv channel phosphorylation; Kv3; 4 inactivation; nociception

Categories

Funding

  1. Autifony Therapeutics
  2. Farber Discovery Fund
  3. Jefferson Synaptic Biology Center
  4. Dubbs Fellowship Fund

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The Kv3.4 channel plays a role in regulating action potential in nociceptors and synaptic transmission in the spinal cord, and this regulation is influenced by the phosphorylation status of the Kv3.4 channel. Experimental results on rat dorsal root ganglion neurons suggest that the phosphorylation status of Kv3.4 affects current and action potential duration.
The Kv3.4 channel regulates action potential (AP) repolarization in nociceptors and excitatory synaptic transmission in the spinal cord. We hypothesize that this is a tunable role governed by protein kinase-C-dependent phosphorylation of the Kv3.4 cytoplasmic N-terminal inactivation domain (NTID) at four nonequivalent sites. However, there is a paucity of causation evi-dence linking the phosphorylation status of Kv3.4 to the properties of the AP. To establish this link, we used adeno-associ-ated viral vectors to specifically manipulate the expression and the effective phosphorylation status of Kv3.4 in cultured dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons from mixed-sex rat embryos at embryonic day 18. These vectors encoded GFP (back-ground control), wild-type (WT) Kv3.4, phosphonull (PN) Kv3.4 mutant (PN = S[8,9,15,21]A), phosphomimic (PM) Kv3.4 mutant (PM = S[8,9,15,21]D), and a Kv3.4 nonconducting dominant-negative (DN) pore mutant (DN = W429F). Following viral infection of the DRG neurons, we evaluated transduction efficiency and Kv3.4 expression and function via fluorescence microscopy and patch clamping. All functional Kv3.4 constructs induced current overexpression with similar voltage depend-ence of activation. However, whereas Kv3.4-WT and Kv3.4-PN induced fast transient currents, the Kv3.4-PM induced currents exhibiting impaired inactivation. In contrast, the Kv3.4-DN abolished the endogenous Kv3.4 current. Consequently, Kv3.4-DN and Kv3.4-PM produced APs with the longest and shortest durations, respectively, whereas Kv3.4-WT and Kv3.4-PN produced intermediate results. Moreover, the AP widths and maximum rates of AP repolarization from these groups are negatively cor-related. We conclude that the expression and effective phosphorylation status of the Kv3.4 NTID confer a tunable mechanism of AP repolarization, which may provide exquisite regulation of pain signaling in DRG neurons.

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