Large Conductance Ca2+-Activated K+ Channel (BKCa) α-Subunit Splice Variants in Resistance Arteries from Rat Cerebral and Skeletal Muscle Vasculature
Author(s) -
Zahra Nourian,
Min Li,
M. Dennis Leo,
Jonathan H. Jaggar,
Andrew P. Braun,
Michael A. Hill
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0098863
Subject(s) - cremaster muscle , protein subunit , cerebral arteries , biology , biotinylation , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , medicine , microcirculation , biochemistry , gene
Previous studies report functional differences in large conductance Ca 2+ activated-K + channels (BK Ca ) of smooth muscle cells (VSMC) from rat cerebral and cremaster muscle resistance arteries. The present studies aimed to determine if this complexity in BK Ca activity may, in part, be due to splice variants in the pore-forming α-subunit. BK Ca variants in the intracellular C terminus of the α-subunit, and their relative expression to total α-subunit, were examined by qPCR. Sequencing of RT-PCR products showed two α-subunit variants, ZERO and STREX, to be identical in cremaster and cerebral arteries. Levels of STREX mRNA expression were, however, significantly higher in cremaster VSMCs (28.9±4.2% of total α-BK Ca ) compared with cerebral vessels (16.5±0.9%). Further, a low level of BK Ca SS4 α-subunit variant was seen in cerebral arteries, while undetectable in cremaster arteries. Protein biotinylation assays, in expression systems and arterial preparations, were used to determine whether differences in splice variant mRNA expression affect surface membrane/cytosolic location of the channel. In AD-293 and CHO-K1 cells, rat STREX was more likely to be located at the plasma membrane compared to ZERO, although the great majority of channel protein was in the membrane in both cases. Co-expression of β1-BK Ca subunit with STREX or ZERO did not influence the dominant membrane expression of α-BK Ca subunits, whereas in the absence of α-BK Ca , a significant proportion of β1-subunit remained cytosolic. Biotinylation assays of cremaster and cerebral arteries showed that differences in STREX/ZERO expression do not alter membrane/cytosolic distribution of the channel under basal conditions. These data, however, revealed that the amount of α-BK Ca in cerebral arteries is approximately 20X higher than in cremaster vessels. Thus, the data support the major functional differences in BK Ca activity in cremaster, as compared to cerebral VSMCs, being related to total α-BK Ca expression, regardless of differences in splice variant expression.
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