B Sub unit regulation Flashcards

1
Q

What are B sub units with regards to K+ channels?

A

Proteins that modify the properties of a sub units
Can be located at the membrane or the cytoplasm
Interconnected with helices at the alpha sub unit of channels

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2
Q

KCNE FAMILY - what do the relevant sub units regulate?

A

KCNE1, 2 and 3 regulate the K+ channels found in the epithelia and regulate KCNQ1 – they are excitable, consist of one TMD

E1 mutated in Long Q-T syndrome!!

Sub units have different effects on the channel (in terms of voltage dependence etc) - determines how channels function under normal conditions!!!

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3
Q

KCNQ1 and its relationship with E1?

A

KCNQ1 is the ion channel and E1 is the sub unit that regulates it

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4
Q

Results of voltage dependant current when xenopus oocyte expressing cRNA encoding KCNQ1 only AND both KCNQ1 and E1

A

With overexpression of E1, the WT currents produced were larger, had slower activation and a shift in voltage dependence was seen

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5
Q

Where was the majority of E1 localised to (area of nephron and membrane?)

A

Majority seen in the proximal tubule and on the apical membrane. Some Q1 seen in the distal nephron and E1 / Q1 expression not the exact same

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6
Q

In clearance studies of KO Q1/E1 mice, what is cannulated and for what reason?

A
  • Jugular vein - measure blood ion concentrations
  • Bladder - measure urine ion concentrations
  • carotid artery - measure blood pressure and blood ion concs
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7
Q

In clearance studies of KO E1 mice, what are the impacts on plasma K+/CL-, GFR and plasma glucose conc?

A
  • No difference to plasma K+/Cl-, v similar GFR to wild type and a (unusual) higher plasma glucose concentration
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8
Q

In clearance studies of KO E1 mice, what are the impacts on FE? (robson paper)

A

Increased fractional excretion of Na+, Cl- and H20 (there is a struggle in the re-absoprtion of these ions in the absence of E1), increased urine flow rate –» this is a good indicator that there has been change in the tubular function

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9
Q

What do the results of the clearance studies from the KO E1 mouse suggest about the loss of E1?

A

Loss of E1 = loss of functioning of KCNQ1 channel –> loss of channel contribution to the membrane potential = decrease in the driving force for absorption of Na+/ Cl-/ H20

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10
Q

KO E1 mice with and without c329B (Q1 channel inhibitor) – what were the impacts seen?

What does this show?

A

The increase in fractional excretion seen upon addition of the KCNQ1 channel blocker in the WT and KCNE1 knockout mice was around the same –> inhibiting the channel and knocking out E1 was having the same impact!!

E1 is regulating a chromanol-sensitive K+ channel

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11
Q

KCNQ1 mouse knockouts - what was the impact on fractional excretion?

A

There are some differences in glucose handling but under normal conditions there is no impact in the fractional excretion of ions – doesn’t mimic E1 knockout – this shows that E1 is not regulating the Q1 channel in the kidney!!

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12
Q

Patch studies of total whole cell currents in the proximal tubule with Chromanol added –> the decrease in current showed properties of channels / channel profiles!

How is this consolidated by KO mouse data?

A

Voltage dependant K+ channel chromanol sensitive current profile very different to what is expected from proximal tubule – E1 is regulating a different K+ channel!

Consolidated by same experiement in KO Q1/E1 animals - no currents at all –» no chrom-sensitive K+ currents in the proximal tubule that don’t have E1!!!!!

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13
Q

Main functions of E1 in the proximal tubule?

A
  • KCNE1 needed for Na+/Cl-/HC03- handling
  • Probably in proximal tubule but late (little impact of KO on glucose handling suggests that it impacts late PT as there is little glucose handling here)
  • Role in maintenance of the membrane potential – transport function!!!
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14
Q

KCNQ1/E2 and its link to gastric function – how is acid secreted and how is this gradient maintained?

A

H+ secreted into the stomach in exchange for an K+ back in by H+/K+ ATPase pump on the apical side of the epithelial cells.
The K+ is recycled back out across the apical membrane via a K+ channel as there is not enough in the stomach to support the action of the H+ pump

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15
Q

KCNQ1/E2 and its link to gastric function – how is Cl- secreted and how is this gradient maintained?

A

Cl- is secreted at the apical membrane via a Cl- channel - this gradient is generated by the HCO3-/Cl- exchanger on the basolateral membrane.
This means that Cl- is above its electrochemical gradient and is secreted via a channel

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16
Q

KCNQ1 K.O – ammonium pulse technique - what does this technique measure in cells?

A

Measures H+ secretion in cells and therefore is used as a measure of PH recovery under shock changes to PH in cells / cells ability to recover from changes in PH

17
Q

What was shown in KCNE2 KO cells ??

A

No PH recovery seen in E2 KO cells –> lack of function of this apical K+ channel meant that the apical H+/K+ ATPase could not work as there was no sufficent supply of K+ in the stomach outside of the cell (which is mediated by the action of this K+ channel) –> gastric endothelium couldn’t secrete H+ therefore and no PH recovery seen.

18
Q

What ligands can stimulate H+ secretion at the level of the stomach and what receptors do they bind to?

A
  • Ach - stimulates secretion via muscarinic receptors
  • 5HT - via H2 receptors
  • Gastrin - via CCUB receptors