4.7 Article

Kir7.1 disease mutant T153I within the inner pore affects K+ conduction

期刊

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00093.2022

关键词

electrophysiology; innerpore structure; Kir7.1; pediatric blindness; potassium channels

资金

  1. Endocrinology and Reproductive Physiology [NICHDT32]
  2. NIH [R01 EY024995, R24 EY032434]
  3. Retina Research Foundation M. D. Matthews Research Professorship

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigates the structure and function of the Kir7.1 channel's narrow inner pore. It demonstrates that a single amino acid substitution T153I leads to dysfunctional channels with altered localization. The study also reveals that substituting amino acids with different side-chain properties affects channel function due to differences in pore radius.
Inward-rectifier potassium channel 7.1 (Kir7.1) is present in the polarized epithelium, including the retinal pigmented epithelium. A single amino acid change at position 153 in the KCNJ13 gene, a substitution of threonine to isoleucine in the Kir7.1 protein, causes blindness. We hypothesized that the disease caused by this single amino acid substitution within the transmembrane protein domain could alter the translation, localization, or ion transport properties. We assessed the effects of amino acid side-chain length, arrangement, and polarity on channel structure and function. We showed that the T153I mutation yielded a full-length protein localized to the cell membrane. Whole cell patch-clamp recordings and chord conductance analyses revealed that the T153I mutant channel had negligible K+ conductance and failed to hyperpolarize the membrane potential. However, the mu-tant channel exhibited enhanced inward current when rubidium was used as a charge carrier, suggesting that an inner pore had formed and the channel was dysfunctional. Substituting with a polar, nonpolar, or short side-chain amino acid did not affect the localization of the protein. Still, it had an altered channel function due to differences in pore radius. Polar side chains (cysteine and serine) with inner pore radii comparable to wildtype exhibited normal inward K+ conductance. Short side chains (glycine and alanine) produced a channel with wider than expected inner pore size and lacked the biophysical characteristics of the wild-type channel. Leucine substitution produced results similar to the T153I mutant channel. This study provides direct electrophysio-logical evidence for the structure and function of the Kir7.1 channel's narrow inner pore in regulating conductance.

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