Abstract

Abtract

BK channel

BK channel

Introduction

The human BK channel (AKA Big K+ channel) is characterized by its distinctly high conductance of K+ through the cell membrane. They take part in many physiological activities like neuronal excitability, smooth muscle contraction and hair cell tuning. It works as a negative feedback regulator component which causes the neuronal cell to hyperpolarize when one or both variables reach a certain threshold (dual regulation is a key aspect of this channel):

1: The Ca2+ concentration.
2: The  membrane voltage.

It is composed roughly out of three domains:

The integral membrane pore and selectivity filter which is shared by all K+ channels (this fact is subsequently exploited when the CTD information is combined with the TM information) and is formed between the intervening domains of S5 and S6.

The integral membrane voltage sensor domains present in voltage-dependant channels (large homology between voltage gated channels) which is formed by the transmembrane segments S1 to S4.

The cytoplasmic domain which accounts for about two thirds of the protein and contains the tools that allows it to sense Ca2+ concentrations.
Fig. 1. Left: Simple representation of a BK channel monomer. The BK channel contains four identical subunits, each comprising seven transmembrane segments and a large intracellular C terminus. Right: Ribbon representation of a single subunit from the BK model. (Both images have been adapted from Peng's Yuan, et. al's paper)
In this paper, the authors have attempted to build the structure of the BK channel through the use of an x-ray crystal structure of 3 angstroms resolution of the gating apparatus (CTD) to construct the CTD monomer. In order to determine how these CTD monomers form a tetramer, the authors used molecular replacement against an x-ray diffraction pattern of a Slo2.2 chicken homologue which had been elucidated at a resolution of 6.0 angstroms. 

Once the postulated tetramer of the CTD was obtained, the authors superimposed the paddle chimera (voltage dependant potassium channel found in rats) structure onto the MthK channel (a bacterial homologue found in Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum). Then the human BK channel CTD tetramer was superimposed over the MthK channel. This allowed the authors to create a speculative model for the complete structure of the human BK channel.

Fig. 2: Left:The tetrameric structure of the Human BK channel (adapted from Peng's Yuan, et. al's paper); Centre: the octameric structure of MthK potassium channel (created in PyMol); Right: tetrameric structure of paddle chimera (created in PyMol)

13 comments:

Stephen said...

Very nice. Very slick. Any way you can get the Å character into your title?

Angad said...

Thank you Prof Curry. Weve added in a dot on top of the A. Unfortunately the font set didn't include the Å symbol!

Marc said...

Great work! Didnt find anything to criticise...

Guy Needham said...

Hi Guys, an interesting and informative blog overall. Do you have any idea how the Ca2+ binding is linked to the gating of the channel?

LPope said...

As slick as an oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

tpp09 said...

Looking great guys, the graphics (pymol and vids and such) are especially effective.

Raj said...

Love the look, guys, nice and informative, too. Just had to point out a little grammar bunder - you said "you're problem will be solved" when talking about your double-click answers.com thing (slick touch).

Chi Hyun Park said...

I love a layout and how you organised. Very nice idea on double-cliking phrases!

Angad said...

@Raj - good spot! Thanks for that. Should be sorted now. Angad & Chris.

Christopher Schoene said...

@Guy: The interaction between the two domains is unknown because the voltage sensor domain hasn't been elucidated yet. The only link between the two has been obtained from site directed mutagenesis studies that have found that many residues on the N-terminal lobe of RCK1 (the area that is thought to interact with the voltage sensor component) such as T396 and Q397 leads to a change in function.
@all: Thanks for all the positive comments!
Angad and Chris

Guy Needham said...

Thanks for clearing that up. Really like the double-click thing as well.

varshana said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
varshana said...

Hi guys,

The design and layout of this webpage is simple yet effective. I like the inclusion of an abstract as it helps give a good overview on your research paper. Furthermore, there is clear evidence that the both of you spent a good amount of time creating images through pymol and the images are slick. The videos clearly explain the text and are very clear.
The summary page was done very well with the inclusion of implications and further research. The idea of including the double-click is unique and definitely will help readers.
Overall amazing job guys!

Post a Comment

 

Dont Understand a Term or Phrase we Used?

We've really tried to ensure that our content is clear, logical and easy to follow. However, we appreciate some terminology may be difficult to understand - for this reason we've implemented a special tool to get round this! Simply double-click on a word you're struggling with and your problem will be solved! We hope this makes our blog content a lot more enjoyable!

Try it! Double click any word now!

View Original Paper

View Paper