Channelpedia

PubMed 1280351


Referenced in: none

Automatically associated channels: Kv1.2



Title: Charybdotoxin, dendrotoxin and mast cell degranulating peptide block the voltage-activated K+ current of fibroblast cells stably transfected with NGK1 (Kv1.2) K+ channel complementary DNA.

Authors: T R Werkman, T Kawamura, S Yokoyama, H Higashida, M A Rogawski

Journal, date & volume: Neuroscience, 1992 Oct , 50, 935-46

PubMed link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1280351


Abstract
The blocking actions of the K+ channel toxins charybdotoxin, dendrotoxin and mast cell degranulating peptide were studied in B82 mouse fibroblast cells transformed to express NGK1 (Kv1.2) K+ channels. All three toxins were potent blockers of the K+ current in these cells, with KD values of 1.7, 2.8 and 185 nM, respectively. The toxin block exhibited a weak voltage-dependence with the degree of inhibition decreasing at positive membrane potentials. For charybdotoxin and dendrotoxin, reducing [K+]i did not increase the fractional block, demonstrating that the relief of block at positive membrane potentials is not due to displacement of the toxin molecules by outward flow of K+ ions. A voltage-jump protocol was used to determine the rates of binding and unbinding of dendrotoxin and mast cell degranulating peptide; binding of charybdotoxin was too rapid to be quantitatively evaluated in this manner. The binding rates (dendrotoxin, approximately 5 x 10(7)/M per s; mast cell degranulating peptide, approximately 0.8 x 10(7)/M per s) were largely voltage-independent, suggesting that association of the toxin molecules with the channel is diffusion limited. The rates of unbinding (dendrotoxin, approximately 0.3/s; mast cell degranulating peptide, approximately 3/s at +60 mV) of both toxins increased e-fold per approximately 40 mV change in membrane potential, thus accounting for the voltage-dependence of the equilibrium block. Internal perfusion with the three toxins failed to affect the K+ current (in contrast to internal tetraethylammonium which strongly blocked the current), indicating that the toxins exert their blocking action by binding to extracellular sites.