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Functional role of the slow activation property of ERG K + channels
Author(s) -
Schönherr Roland,
Rosati Barbara,
Hehl Solveig,
Rao Valesvara G.,
Arcangeli Annarosa,
Olivotto Massimo,
Heinemann Stefan H.,
Wanke Enzo
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
european journal of neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1460-9568
pISSN - 0953-816X
DOI - 10.1046/j.1460-9568.1999.00493.x
Subject(s) - erg , biophysics , gating , xenopus , kinetics , chemistry , biology , neuroscience , microbiology and biotechnology , physics , biochemistry , retina , gene , quantum mechanics
ERG ( ether‐à‐go‐go‐ related gene) K + channels are crucial in human heart physiology (h‐ERG), but are also found in neuronal cells and are impaired in Drosophila ‘seizure’ mutants. Their biophysical properties include the relatively fast kinetics of the inactivation gate and much slower kinetics of the activation gate. In order to elucidate how the complex time‐ and voltage‐dependent activation properties of ERG channels underlies distinct roles in excitability, we investigated different types of ERG channels intrinsically present in cells or heterologously expressed in mammalian cells or Xenopus oocytes. Voltage‐dependent activation curves were highly dependent on the features of the eliciting protocols. Only very long preconditioning times produced true steady‐state relationships, a fact that has been largely neglected in the past, hampering the comparison of published data on ERG channels. Beyond this technical aspect, the slow activation property of ERG can be responsible for unsuspected physiological roles. We found that around the midpoint of the activation curve, the time constant of ERG open–close kinetics is of the order of 10–15 s. During sustained trains of depolarizations, e.g. those produced in neuronal firing, this leads to the use‐dependent accumulation of open‐state ERG channels. Accumulation is not observed in a mutant with a fast activation gate. In conclusion, it is well established that other K + channels (i.e. Ca 2+ ‐activated and M) control the spike‐frequency adaptation, but our results support the notion that the purely voltage‐dependent activation property of ERG channels would allow a slow inhibitory physiological role in rapid neuronal signalling.

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