Intracellular Ca(2+) inhibits voltage-gated potassium channels of the ether à go-go (EAG) family. To identify the underlying molecular mechanism, we expressed the human version hEAG1 in Xenopus oocytes. The channels lost Ca(2+) sensitivity when measured in cell-free membrane patches. However, Ca(2+) sensitivity could be restored by application of recombinant calmodulin (CaM). In the presence of CaM, half inhibition of hEAG1 channels was obtained in 100 nM Ca(2+). Overlay assays using labelled CaM and glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusion fragments of hEAG1 demonstrated direct binding of CaM to a C-terminal domain (hEAG1 amino acids 673-770). Point mutations within this section revealed a novel CaM-binding domain putatively forming an amphipathic helix with both sides being important for binding. The binding of CaM to hEAG1 is, in contrast to Ca(2+)-activated potassium channels, Ca(2+) dependent, with an apparent K(D) of 480 nM. Co-expression experiments of wild-type and mutant channels revealed that the binding of one CaM molecule per channel complex is sufficient for channel inhibition.
Human ether a © go-go potassium channel 2 (hEAG2) was cloned and its properties were compared with the previously characterized isoform hEAG1. In the Xenopus oocyte expression system the time course of activation was about four times slower and the voltage required for half-maximal subunit activation was about 10 mV greater for hEAG2 channels. However, its voltage dependence was smaller and, therefore, hEAG2 channels start to open at more negative voltages than hEAG1. Coexpression of both isoforms and kinetic analysis of the resulting currents indicated that they can form heteromeric channel complexes in which the slow activation phenotype of hEAG2 is dominant. Upon expression in mammalian cells, quinidine blocked hEAG1 channels (IC 50 1.4 W WM) more potently than hEAG2 channels (IC 50 152 W WM), thus providing a useful tool for the functional distinction between hEAG1 and hEAG2 potassium channels. ß 2002 Published by Elsevier Science B.V. on behalf of the Federation of European Biochemical Societies.
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