4.6 Article

Identification of an N-terminal amino acid of the CLC-3 chloride channel critical in phosphorylation-dependent activation of a CaMKII-activated chloride current

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 556, Issue 2, Pages 353-368

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2003.058032

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CLC-3, a member of the CLC family of chloride channels, mediates function in many cell types in the body. The multifunctional calcium-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) has been shown to activate recombinant CLC-3 stably expressed in tsA cells, a human embryonic kidney cell line derivative, and natively expressed channel protein in a human colonic tumour cell line T84. We examined the CaMKII-dependent regulation of CLC-3 in a smooth muscle cell model as well as in the human colonic tumour cell line, HT29, using whole-cell voltage clamp. In CLC-3-expressing cells, we observed the activation of a Cl- conductance following intracellular introduction of the isolated autonomous CaMKII into the voltage-clamped cell via the patch pipette. The CaMKII-dependent Cl- conductance was not observed following exposure of the cells to 1 mum autocamtide inhibitory peptide (All?), a selective inhibitor of CaMKII. Arterial smooth muscle cells express a robust CaMKII-activated Cl- conductance; however, CLC-3(-/-) cells did not. The N-terminus of CLC-3, which contains a CaMKII consensus sequence, was phosphorylated by CaMKII in vitro, and mutation of the serine at position 109 (S109A) abolished the CaMKII-dependcnt Cl- conductance, indicating that this residue is important in the gating of CLC-3 at the plasma membrane.

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