From a83d37a4b6d8a42bfdb3d423dcb45e2ae5388673 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: ackman678 Date: Thu, 6 Oct 2016 16:21:29 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] lecture05 --- 2016-10-03-lecture05.md | 1147 ++++++++++++--------------------------- 1 file changed, 358 insertions(+), 789 deletions(-) diff --git a/2016-10-03-lecture05.md b/2016-10-03-lecture05.md index b469773..252a57e 100644 --- a/2016-10-03-lecture05.md +++ b/2016-10-03-lecture05.md @@ -1,67 +1,116 @@ ## Ion channels underlie action potentials * Predictions about the nature of ion channels from Hodgkin and Huxley: -* Because conductances are large, channels must be able to pass ions at high rate. -* Channels must be gated by the membrane potential. -* Different channels for Na+ and K+. -* Problem– Voltage clamping cannot look at individual channels…its measuring the aggregate current flowing through a whole bunch of channels at once. What does an individual channel look like? How does it work? -* Solution– Patch Clamping - -2016-01-19 17:18:07 + * Because conductances are large, channels must be able to pass ions at high rate + * Channels must be gated by the membrane potential + * Different channels for Na⁺ and K⁺ +* Problem– Voltage clamping cannot look at individual channels...it's measuring the aggregate current flowing through a whole bunch of channels at once. What does an individual channel look like? How does it work? + * Solution– Patch Clamping Note: -Today we will take a closer look at how ion channels are able to exhibit their remarkable properties and enable action potentials and all forms of electrical signaling in the nervous system. +Today we will take a closer look at the nature of **ion channels** and how they are able to exhibit their remarkable properties that enable action potentials and all forms of electrical signaling in the nervous system. Now we know from our previous classes covering the work by HH, that there are some predictions we make concerning the nature of ion channels: - ---- +-- ## Question -* During the rising phase of the action potential: -* a. All sodium channels are closed. -* b. Some of the sodium channels are closed -* c. All potassium channels are open. -* d. All sodium channels are open. -* e. The membrane potential is hyperpolarizing. +During the rising phase of the action potential: - During the rising phase of the action potential: - -a. All sodium channels are closed. - -b. Some of the sodium channels are closed - -c. All potassium channels are open. - -d. All sodium channels are open. - -e. The membrane potential is hyperpolarizing. +* a. All sodium channels are closed +* b. Some of the sodium channels are closed +* c. All potassium channels are open +* d. All sodium channels are open +* e. The membrane potential is hyperpolarizing Note: So a quick question + +Answer to myelinated question from last time: + +[Hartline and Colman Curr Biol, 2007](http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982206025231) + +>It seems to have arisen independently in evolution several times in vertebrates, annelids and crustacea. + +>absent in primitive members of the vertebrate line (hagfish and lampreys) + +>Myelin has not been reported in either molluscs or insects + +>The first myelinated vertebrate was likely to have been a placoderm [9], the antecedent of contemporary sharks and bony fish. + + --- -## The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1991) +## Patch clamp recordings -“for their discoveries concerning the the function of single ion channels in cells” +* Allows one to look at currents flowing through a single channel +* Pipette with small opening makes a tight seal with the membrane +* Currents are amplified and measured +* Can be adapted to do whole cell recordings, inside out recordings or outside out recordings + +Note: + +Remember voltage-clamp recordings that we've been talking about before. Patch-clamping is an adaptation of the voltage-clamp method that allows you to assess the currents flowing across very small patches of lipid membrane. So if you have one or few ion channels in that small patch of cell membrane you can study the microscopic functional properties of those individual channels. + + +--- + +## The patch clamp method + +Can measure ion flow through a single channel. + +
Neuroscience 5e Box 4A
+ + +Note: + + +--- + +## The patch clamp method + +
Neuroscience 5e Box 4A
+Can measure potentials and currents +from entire cell and introduce +things into the cytoplasm +
+ +
Neuroscience 5e Box 4A
+Makes it easy to introduce things to +the cytoplasmic side of the channel +
+ +
Neuroscience 5e Box 4A
+Makes it easy to introduce things to the extracellular side of the channel +
+ + +Note: + + +--- + +## The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1991) + +>"for their discoveries concerning the the function of single ion channels in cells" + +
Erwin Neher -Bert Sakmann +
+
+Bert Sakmann -[http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1991/press.html](http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1991/press.html) +
-
- -
- -
+ Note: @@ -69,197 +118,113 @@ Note: --- -## Title Text +## Patch clamping Na⁺ channels -* What ions are permeable at rest? -* What ions are permeable at peak? -* What ions are permeable during overshoot? - -
- -
+* Block K⁺ channels with Cs⁺ or with tetraethylammonium (TEA) +* Brief depolarizations cause small inward currents that disappear right away +* Each inward current is the opening of one Na⁺ channel +* About 1-2 pA of current ≈ thousands of ions/ms +* Stochastic opening, biased at the beginning of a pulse +* Probability of opening varies with membrane potential +* If you remove Na⁺ from medium, do not see currents +* Tetrodotoxin (TTX) blocks currents Note: -How would the shape of the action potential change if the extracellular Na concentration was lowered, what if the K+ was raised - ---- - -## Patch clamp method: - -## Neher and Sakmann - -cell-attached recording - -
- -
- -Note: - - --- -## Patch clamp +## Measurements of ionic currents flowing through single Na⁺ channels + +
+
+ +* Small inward currents +* Open at beginning of pulse +* Inactivate quickly + +
+ +
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.1
-* Allows one to look at currents flowing through a single channel. -* Pipette with small opening makes a tight seal with the membrane. -* Currents are amplified and measured -* Can be adapted to do whole cell recordings, inside out recordings or outside out recordings. Note: +Patch a piece of membrane and block K currents. Do a bunch of short recordings while clamping the membrane at depolarized potential. e.g. here is 7 trials. Notice the amplitude is discrete— it is unitary. If you were recording from lots of these single channels simultaneously or added together all the recordings from one channel you'd --> +Transient channel opening in Na⁺ channels (inward current). --- -## The patch clamp method +## Measurements of ionic currents flowing through single Na⁺ channels -* Can measures ion flow through a single channel +
+
-
- -Note: - - - ---- - -## The patch clamp method - - - -Pipette is continuous with cytoplasm. Can measure potentials and currents from the entire cell and also can introduce things into the cytoplasm - -Makes it easy to introduce things to the cytoplasmic side of the channel - -Makes it easy to introduce - -things to the extracellular - -side of the channel - -
- -
- -
- -Note: - - - ---- - -## Patch clamping Na+ channels - -* Block K+ channels with Cs+ or with tetraethylammonium (TEA). -* Brief depolarizations cause small inward currents that disappear right away. -* Each inward current is the opening of one Na+ channel. -* About 1-2 pA of current == thousands of ions/ms -* Stochastic opening, biased at the beginning of a pulse. -* Probability of opening varies with membrane potential. -* If you remove Na+ from medium, do not see currents. -* Tetrodotoxin (TTX) blocks currents. - -Note: - - - ---- - -## Measurements of ionic currents flowing through single Na+ channels - -Small inward currents - -Open at beginning of pulse - -Close quickly - -Neuroscience5e Fig. 4.1 - -
- -Note: - -Patch a piece of membrane and block K currents. Do a bunch of short recordings while clamping the membrane at depolarized potential. e.g. here is 7 trials. Notice the amplitude is discrete— it is unitary. If you were recording from lots of… - - - -Transient channel opening in Na+ channels (inward current). - - - ---- - -## Measurements of ionic currents flowing through single Na+ channels - -Neuroscience5e Fig. 4.1 - -Summed current from many single channels looks like macroscopic currents seen in voltage clamping - -Probability of opening increases as a function of membrane potential +* **Summed current from many single channels looks like macroscopic currents seen in voltage clamping** +* Probability of opening increases as a function of membrane potential +
+
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.1
Note: -You’d expect this macroscopic current— - - +get something similar to this microscopic current shown at the top. Average the microscopic currents together and you get something very similar. - - Sum these microscopic inwa --- -## Patch clamping K+ channels +## Patch clamping K⁺ channels -* Add tetrodotoxin (TTX) to block Na+ channels -* Depolarization pulses cause outward currents. -* Once a channel opens (usually with a delay) it remains open for the duration of the pulse. -* The probability of channel opening depends on the membrane potential. -* Sensitive to TEA. +* Add tetrodotoxin (TTX) to block Na⁺ channels +* Depolarization pulses cause outward currents +* Once a channel opens (usually with a delay) it remains open for the duration of the pulse +* The probability of channel opening depends on the membrane potential +* Sensitive to TEA Note: +Now let's examine patch clamp experimental data from K+ channels. --- -## Measurements of ionic currents flowing through single K+ channels +## Measurements of ionic currents flowing through single K⁺ channels -Early delay in opening +
+
-Once open stay open +* Early delay in opening +* Once open stay open -Neuroscience5e Fig. 4.2 +
+ +
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.2
-
Note: -Sustained channel opening in K+ channels (outward current). +Sustained channel opening in K⁺ channels (outward current). --- -## Measurements of ionic currents flowing through single K+ channels +## Measurements of ionic currents flowing through single K⁺ channels -Summed current from many single channels looks like macroscopic currents seen in voltage clamping +
+
-Probability of opening increases as a function of membrane potential +* **Summed current from many single channels looks like macroscopic currents seen in voltage clamping** +* Probability of opening increases as a function of membrane potential +
- - - -Neuroscience5e Fig. 4.2 +
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.2
Note: @@ -267,24 +232,23 @@ Sum a bunch of these microscopic channel currents and you get this top curve and --- -## Functional states of voltage-gated Na+ and K+ channels +## Functional states of voltage-gated Na⁺ and K⁺ channels -Neuroscience5e Fig. 4.3 +
Neuroscience 5e fig. 4.3
-
Note: -Shown here is a model of the functional states for these channels. Notice a few states for Na vs two for K. +Remember this figure from last time, shown here is a model of the functional states for these channels. Notice a few states for Na vs two for K. --- ## Conclusions from patch clamp experiments -* Allowed the direct observation of ionic currents flowing through single ion channels. -* Both Na+ and K+ channels are voltage gated. -* Thus there must be a voltage sensor in these channels. -* Depolarization inactivates Na+ channels but not K+ channels. +* Allowed the direct observation of ionic currents flowing through single ion channels +* Both Na⁺ and K⁺ channels are voltage gated +* Thus there must be a voltage sensor in these channels +* Depolarization inactivates Na⁺ channels but not K⁺ channels Note: @@ -292,11 +256,10 @@ So the conclusions are… --- -## Title Text +## Patch clamp method summary video -[http://courses.pbsci.ucsc.edu/mcdb/bio125/Animation04-01ThePatchClampMethod.mov](http://courses.pbsci.ucsc.edu/mcdb/bio125/Animation04-01ThePatchClampMethod.mov) +
Neuroscience 5e Animation 4.1
-
Note: @@ -306,9 +269,9 @@ Note: ## Many genes encode ion channels -* There are hundreds of genes encoding ion channels (e.g. about 100 K+ channel genes). -* They have common properties (similarities in amino acid sequence and protein topology). -* They also have variations (differences in ion selectivity, how they are gated, inactivation mechanisms). +* There are hundreds of genes encoding ion channels (e.g. about 100 K⁺ channel genes) +* They have common properties (similarities in amino acid sequence and protein topology) +* They also have variations (differences in ion selectivity, how they are gated, inactivation mechanisms) Note: @@ -318,33 +281,29 @@ Now everything going on in our nervous systems depends on the function of ion ch ## Different ways to gate ion channels -
+
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.4
+ Note: Different classes of gated ion channels. - - voltage gated ion channels, such as we’ve been discussing over the last couple classes. - - ligand gated channels such as those that bind neurotransmitters, will talk about more later and next class. -others are ligand gated channels sensitive to chemical signals arising in the cytoplasm of neurons such second messengers like Ca2+, cyclic nucleotide cAMP and cGMP. - +others are ligand gated channels sensitive to chemical signals arising in the cytoplasm of neurons such second messengers like Ca²⁺, cyclic nucleotide cAMP and cGMP. --- -## Even within a family of channelsthere is huge variation +## Lots of variation among ion channels and their properties -* Voltage gated– Na+, K+, Cl-, and Ca2+ channels. -* Approximately 10 different genes for Na+ channels, 16 Ca2+, 3–5 Cl- and 100 K+ channels. -* Different genes may give rise to channels with different properties– e.g. different inactivation times, probability of opening at a given voltages, gating mechanisms. -* Can also be multiple splice variants of the same gene. -* Creates huge diversity of channels. +* Voltage gated– Na⁺, K⁺, Cl⁻, and Ca²⁺ channels +* Approximately 10 different genes for Na⁺ channels, 16 Ca²⁺, 3–5 Cl⁻ and 100 K⁺ channels +* Different genes may give rise to channels with different properties– e.g. different inactivation times, probability of opening at a given voltages, gating mechanisms +* Can also be multiple splice variants of the same gene +* Creates huge diversity of channels * How to characterize all these channels? Note: @@ -353,10 +312,10 @@ Note: --- -## Lets say you have a gene for a channel, how do you determine its properties +## If you have a gene for a channel, how do you determine its properties? -* Need an experimental system where you can express gene of interest functionally and away from other channels. -* Xenopus oocytes have been a historical way to do this. +* Need an experimental system where you can express gene of interest functionally and away from other channels +* Xenopus oocytes have been a historical way to do this Note: @@ -366,90 +325,21 @@ frog germ cells ## Xenopus oocytes -* Large (1 mm in diameter) cell that contains lots of protein synthesis machinery. -* Can inject RNA into it and it will express protein encoded by RNA. -* Works great for ion channels, can voltage clamp and determine properties of a given channel. -* Can make specific mutations in genes and see what happens to function of protein. +* Large (1 mm in diameter) cell that contains lots of protein synthesis machinery +* Can inject RNA into it and it will express protein encoded by RNA +* Works great for ion channels, can voltage clamp and determine properties of a given channel +* Can make specific mutations in genes and see what happens to function of protein Note: - --- ## Xenopus oocytes for ion channel physiology studies -Channel gene (DNA) +Inject ion channel mRNA into oocyte ⟶ oocyte makes protein ⟶ patch clamp recordings - - -Transcribe in vitro - -mRNA - - - - - - - - - -Oocyte makes protein - - - - - -Whole cell record or - - patch clamp channel - - - - - -Note: - - - ---- - -## Xenopus oocytes for ion channel physiology studies - -Ion channel mRNA - - - - - - - - - -Oocyte makes protein - - - - - -Whole cell record or - - patch clamp channel - - - - - -Note: - - - ---- - -## Xenopus oocytes for ion channel physiology studies - -
+
Neuroscience 5e Box 4C
Note: @@ -457,30 +347,38 @@ shows voltage clamp experiment results after expression of a K channel in an ooc --- -## Diverse properties of K+ channels +## Diverse properties of K⁺ channels -Neuroscience5e Fig. 4.5 +
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.5
-Similar to action potential - -K+ channels - -Inactivates like Na+ channels - -Same conductance vs voltage profiles, different inactivation properties. - - - - - -
- -
Note: - Kv2.1 show little inactivation and are closely related to the delayed rectifier K channels involved in AP repolarization +from [channelpedia](http://channelpedia.epfl.ch/ionchannels/9): + +>Kv2.1 is widely expressed in brain and composes the majority of delayed rectifier K+ current in pyramidal neurons in cortex and hippocampus and is also widely expressed in interneurons. Dynamic modulation of Kv2.1 localization and function by a mechanism involving activity dependent Kv2.1 dephosphorylation dramatically impacts intrinsic excitability of neurons. + +- Kv4.1 channels inactivate during a depolarization. + +>a voltage-activated A-type potassium ion channel and is prominent in the repolarization phase of the action potential. This gene is expressed at moderate levels in all tissues analyzed, with lower levels in skeletal muscle. + +HERG channels inactivate so rapidly that current flows only when inactivation is rapidly removed at end of a depolarization + +inward rectifier K channels allow more K current to flow at hyperpolarized potentials than at depolarized potentials + +Ca activated K channels open in response to intracellular Ca ions + +2-P K channels usually respond to chemical signals rather than changes in membrane potential. These are primarily responsible for the resting membrane potential of neurons. e.g. TASK channels can by regulated by extracellular pH + + + --- ## Molecular structures of ion channels * Multiple membrane spanning domains -* K+ channels 4 subunits come together, (each with 6 transmembrane helices). -* Na+ channels 1 protein with 24 transmembrane helices +* K⁺ channels– 4 subunits come together, (each with 6 transmembrane helices) +* Na⁺ channels– 1 protein with 24 transmembrane helices * Center has an opening that makes a pore for the ion to flow through * Contains selectivity filter * Voltage-gated ion channels also contain a voltage sensitive transmembrane domain @@ -544,106 +406,39 @@ Note: We’ve learned from biophysical structure studies that in general ion channels have 24 transmembrane peptide domains with… - - We can also guess a few characteristics of their structure from the classic voltage clamp and patch clamp studies we’ve discussed over the past couple classes… - - from wikipedia: >X-ray crystallography is a tool used for identifying the atomic and molecular structure of a crystal, in which the crystalline atoms cause a beam of incident X-rays to diffract into many specific directions. By measuring the angles and intensities of these diffracted beams, a crystallographer can produce a three-dimensional picture of the density of electrons within the crystal. From this electron density, the mean positions of the atoms in the crystal can be determined, as well as their chemical bonds, their disorder and various other information. - - - - --- -## Molecular structures of ion channels +## Structure of the bacterial K⁺ channel -* Voltage-gated cation channels consist of four subunits, each of which has 6 transmembrane segments and a pore loop. In sodium and calcium channels, the four subunits are part of the same molecule. In potassium channels, they are different molecules. - -The resulting channel has four-fold symmetry - - - -
- -
+
Each subunit has 2 transmembrane domains, 4 subunits make a channel
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.7
Note: +(Doyle et al, Science 280:69, 1998) + + --- -## Molecular structures of ion channel proteins +## Structure of the bacterial K⁺ channel -
- -Note: - -- Kv2.1 show little inactivation and are closely related to the delayed rectifier K channels involved in AP repolarization - -- Kv4.1 channels inactivate during a depolarization. - -HERG channels inactivate so rapidly that current flows only when inactivation is rapidly removed at end of a depolarization - -* human Ether-à-go-go-Related Gene), best known for its contribution to the electrical activity of the heart that coordinates the heart's beating, mediates the repolarizing IKr current in the cardiac action potential). - -inward rectifier K channels allow more K current to flow at hyperpolarized potentials than at depolarized potentials - -Ca activated K channels open in response to intracellular Ca ions - -2-P K channels usually respond to chemical signals rather than changes in membrane potential. These are primarily responsible for the resting membrane potential of neurons. e.g. TASK channels can by regulated by extracellular pH - - - ---- - -## Channel selectivity - - - - - - - -can get through a Na channel - -Can’t - -
- -Note: - - - ---- - -## Potassium channel with four subunits - -Crude understanding of structure– 4 subunits come together to - -make a pore. - -
- -Note: - - - ---- - -## Structure of the bacterial K+ channel - -* Bacteria have K+ channels that are very similar in structure to mammalian K+ channels. Main difference is that they are not gated by voltage. -* Could be crystallized in the bacterial membrane. -* 3D structure tells us a lot about function. +* Bacteria have K⁺ channels that are very similar in structure to mammalian K⁺ channels. Main difference is that they are not gated by voltage +* Could be crystallized in the bacterial membrane +* 3D structure tells us a lot about function * Roderick Mackinnon Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2003 -“for structural and mechanistic studies of ion channels” +>"for structural and mechanistic studies of ion channels" Note: @@ -651,177 +446,73 @@ prokaryotic eukaryotic - - --- -## Structure of the bacterial K+ channel +## Structure of the bacterial K⁺ channel -3D structure of bacterial K channel. Yellow is the K channel, +A space-filling model of the KcsA channel, showing the pore. Ions (green balls) tend to occupy three sites in the channel, two in the selectivity filter and one in a pool of water in the center of the channel. -white are phospholipids, purple Na, green K. - -
+
red (–) charge; blue (+) charge; yellow hydrophobic
Doyle et al, Science 280:69, 1998
Note: +(Doyle et al, Science 280:69, 1998) --- -## Structure of a bacterial K+ channel determined by crystallography +## Structure of a bacterial K⁺ channel determined by crystallography -helps dehydrate +
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.7
-K+ ions - -inside - -outside - -Neuroscience5e Fig. 4.7 - -
Note: Simplified model of bacterial K channel, showing you the pore and selectivity filter. +helical domains of channel point negative charges towards cavity allowing K ions to become dehydrated and then push through selectivity filter through electrostatic repulsion. - -helical domains of channel point negative charges towards cavity allwing K ions to become dehydrated and then push through selectivity filter through electrostatic repulsion. - - +outside +inside +helps dehydrate K⁺ ions --- -## Structure of the bacterial K+ channel +## Selectivity filter of the K⁺ channel -Each subunit has 2 +
+
-transmembrane domains, 4 subunits make a channel +* Up to 4-6 water molecules form hydration shells around both Na⁺ and K⁺ ions +* Ions move with their hydration shells +* To pass through the potassium channel, an ion must remove most of its surrounding water molecules (dehydrated) +* K⁺ is dehydrated by the K⁺ channel selectivity filter (leaving just two water molecules– one at front and one at back) +* Na⁺ has a more stable water shell, binding H2O more strongly and thus has a larger effective diameter— would require more dehydration energy than K channel pore region can provide -Neuroscience5e Fig. 4.7 +
-
+
-Note: +
+
+ion | ion diameter (nm) free | ion diameter hydrated +--- | ---------------------- | ------------------- +Na | 0.19 | 0.52 +K | 0.27 | 0.46 +
+
-(Doyle et al, Science 280:69, 1998) - ---- - -## Structure of the bacterial K+ channel - -A space-filling model of the KcsA channel, showing the pore. Ions (green balls) tend to occupy three sites in the channel, two in the selectivity filter and one in a pool of water in the center of the channel. - -red – charge; blue + charge; yellow hydrophobic - -(Doyle et al, Science 280:69, 1998) - -
- -Note: - - - - - - - -(Doyle et al, Science 280:69, 1998) - ---- - -## Selectivity filter of the K+ channel - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Up to 4-6 water molecules form hydration shells around both Na+ and K+ ions - -Ions move with their hydration shells - -To pass through the potassium channel, an ion must remove most of its surrounding water molecules (dehydrated) - -K+ is dehydrated by the K+ channel selectivity filter (leaving just two water molecules– one at front and one at back) - -Na+ has a more stable water shell, binding H2O more strongly and thus has a larger effective diameter— would require more dehydration energy than K channel pore region can provide. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -H2O - -K+ - - - - - - - - - - - -K+ - - - - - - - -dehydrate, move through filter - -filter - -
- -
- Note: Larger cations cannot traverse the pore region, smaller cations like Na cannot enter the pore because the walls are just too far apart to stabilize a dehydrated Na ion long enough to pass through. - - Na is the most hydrated ion with 4 to 6 water molecules in the first shell. Binds water strongly, making a stable hydration shell and moving together with the cation. Any sodium movement is followed by H2O movement (water retention, excretion). - - -Potassium ion is larger, having 8 more electrons shielding positively charged nucleus, thus K+ makes transient associations with water rather than a discrete hydration layer. Helps explain higher permeability across cell membrane for K+. - - +Potassium ion is larger, having 8 more electrons shielding positively charged nucleus, thus K⁺ makes transient associations with water rather than a discrete hydration layer. Helps explain higher permeability across cell membrane for K⁺. ion | ion diameter (nm) free | ion diameter hydrated @@ -832,41 +523,24 @@ Na | 0.19 | 0.52 K | 0.27 | 0.46 - - - [http://web-books.com/MoBio/Memory/Channel.htm :](http://web-books.com/MoBio/Memory/Channel.htm) >To pass through the potassium channel, an ion must remove most of its surrounding water molecules, leaving only two - one at the front and another at the back. -The selectivity filter of the sodium channel is slightly larger than that of the potassium channel. It may accommodate a Na+ ion attached with three water molecules, but not enough for a K+ ion attached with three water molecules. +The selectivity filter of the sodium channel is slightly larger than that of the potassium channel. It may accommodate a Na⁺ ion attached with three water molecules, but not enough for a K⁺ ion attached with three water molecules. +>In the sodium channel, the Na⁺ ion is more permeable than the K⁺ ion. This is because the selectivity filter of the sodium channel is slightly larger than that of the potassium channel. It is large enough to accommodate a Na⁺ ion attached with three water molecules, but not enough for a K⁺ ion attached with three water molecules. Therefore, to pass through the sodium channel, the Na⁺ ion needs to remove only three, but the K⁺ ion has to remove four, water molecules from its first hydration shell. The required dehydration energy for the K⁺ ion is greater than the Na⁺ ion. ->In the sodium channel, the Na+ ion is more permeable than the K+ ion. This is because the selectivity filter of the sodium channel is slightly larger than that of the potassium channel. It is large enough to accommodate a Na+ ion attached with three water molecules, but not enough for a K+ ion attached with three water molecules. Therefore, to pass through the sodium channel, the Na+ ion needs to remove only three, but the K+ ion has to remove four, water molecules from its first hydration shell. The required dehydration energy for the K+ ion is greater than the Na+ ion. - - - - - ->In calcium channels, the permeability of monovalent cations (Na+ and K+) is about three orders of magnitude smaller than the Ca2+ permeability. This ion selectivity does not seem to involve hydration, because Ca2+ is more heavily hydrated than Na+, and the unhydrated diameters of Ca2+ and Na+ are almost identical. Then, how could calcium channels select Ca2+ over Na+? - - - ->Although the permeability of monovalent cations in the calcium channel is quite small at normal ionic concentrations, large monovalent cationic current can be observed in the absence of Ca2+ and other divalent cations. This suggests that the calcium channel is basically permeable to both divalent and monovalent cations, but the selectivity arises from competition between ions. The calcium channel may contain a negatively charged binding site to facilitate ion conduction. The monovalent cations simply cannot compete with Ca2+ for this binding site. This idea has been confirmed experimentally. In the calcium channel, if a negatively charged glutamate residue in the pore-lining region is mutated into a positively charged lysine, the calcium channel becomes more permeable to Na+ than Ba2+ +>In calcium channels, the permeability of monovalent cations (Na⁺ and K⁺) is about three orders of magnitude smaller than the Ca²⁺ permeability. This ion selectivity does not seem to involve hydration, because Ca²⁺ is more heavily hydrated than Na⁺, and the unhydrated diameters of Ca²⁺ and Na⁺ are almost identical. Then, how could calcium channels select Ca²⁺ over Na⁺? +>Although the permeability of monovalent cations in the calcium channel is quite small at normal ionic concentrations, large monovalent cationic current can be observed in the absence of Ca²⁺ and other divalent cations. This suggests that the calcium channel is basically permeable to both divalent and monovalent cations, but the selectivity arises from competition between ions. The calcium channel may contain a negatively charged binding site to facilitate ion conduction. The monovalent cations simply cannot compete with Ca²⁺ for this binding site. This idea has been confirmed experimentally. In the calcium channel, if a negatively charged glutamate residue in the pore-lining region is mutated into a positively charged lysine, the calcium channel becomes more permeable to Na⁺ than Ba2+ This explains the selectivity but not the voltage sensor - - - - Atomic masses - - 1H < 2He 3Li < Be < B < 6C < N < 8O < 9F < 10Ne @@ -881,164 +555,118 @@ Atomic masses --- -## Structure of the subunit of a voltage gated +## Structure of a mammalian voltage-gated K⁺ channel -## channel protein +
side view
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.8
+ +
top view
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.8
-
Note: -N-terminus (amino terminus). Start of a protein or polypeptide. Translation from mRNA occurs from N—>C. Often occurs targeting signals. - - - -C-terminus (carboxyl terminus), carboxyl group. Often contains retention signals for protein sorting (such as keeping protein in the ER and out of the secretory pathway) - ---- - -## Structure of a mammalian voltage-gated K+ - -Neuroscience5e Fig. 4.8 - -top view - -side view - -
- -
- -Note: - -Now we know from what we’ve learned over the past couple classes that neurons have K+ channels that are gated by voltage - - - - +Now we know from what we’ve learned over the past couple classes that unlike bacteria, neurons have K⁺ channels that are **gated by voltage** [http://web-books.com/MoBio/Memory/Channel.htm :](http://web-books.com/MoBio/Memory/Channel.htm) >There are many types of potassium channels. The one involved in the generation of action potentials is composed of four subunits, each is homologous to the Shaker protein (Fig. 3.2). The hydrophobicity profile indicates that it contains six hydrophobic segments, designated as S1 - S6. These segments are likely to be the transmembrane domains. Other experimental results suggests that the P-region is lining the channel pore. + + --- -## Structure of a mammalian voltage-gated K+ +## Structure of a mammalian voltage-gated K⁺ channel -Neuroscience5e Fig. 4.8 - -
+
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.8
Note: - --- -## Topology of the principal subunits of voltage-gated Na+ channels +## Molecular structures of ion channel proteins + +
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.6
-
Note: Yellow are voltage sensing tm domains ---- - -## Topology of the principal subunits of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels - -
- -Note: - -Yellow are voltage sensing tm domains - ---- - -## Topology of the principal subunits of voltage-gated K+ channels - -
- -Note: - K channels are more diverse +- Kv2.1 show little inactivation and are closely related to the delayed rectifier K channels involved in AP repolarization +- Kv4.1 channels inactivate during a depolarization. -Yellow are voltage sensing tm domains +HERG channels inactivate so rapidly that current flows only when inactivation is rapidly removed at end of a depolarization + +* human Ether-à-go-go-Related Gene), best known for its contribution to the electrical activity of the heart that coordinates the heart's beating, mediates the repolarizing IKr current in the cardiac action potential). + +inward rectifier K channels allow more K current to flow at hyperpolarized potentials than at depolarized potentials + +Ca activated K channels open in response to intracellular Ca ions + +2-P K channels usually respond to chemical signals rather than changes in membrane potential. These are primarily responsible for the resting membrane potential of neurons. e.g. TASK channels can by regulated by extracellular pH + + + + --- -## How do Na+ channels inactivate? +## How do Na⁺ channels inactivate? * Contains an activation gate that binds to the channel in the intracellular region and blocks the channel * Activation gate changes conformation (closes/swings shut) to block channel only during the channel’s open state -* Therefore, at resting Vm channel is closed and activation gate is open. -* After depolarization, the channel opens and Na+ ions go through. After a little bit of time (~ 1 ms) the activation gate swings shut to block channel. +* Therefore, at resting Vm channel is closed and activation gate is open +* After depolarization, the channel opens and Na⁺ ions go through. After a little bit of time (~ 1 ms) the activation gate swings shut to block channel -[http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v475/n7356/full/nature10238.html](http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v475/n7356/full/nature10238.html) +[http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v475/n7356/full/nature10238.html](http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v475/n7356/full/nature10238.html) Note: - - - - The theory is that the inactivation gate “swings” shut, turning off the channel - - - - The physical structure of voltage gated Na channels has only recently begun to be solved, with the results so far fitting the models for Na channel opening and inactivation. - - - - --- ## Sodium channel inactivation cycle -Lodish, Mol Cell Bio - - - - - - - -
+
Lodish *Mol Cell Biol* 5e Fig. 21.13
Note: - - - - -Figure 21-13 Lodish 4th edition OR Figure 7-33 Lodish 5th edition. Structure and function of the voltage-gated Na+ channel. - - +Figure 21-13 Lodish 4th edition OR Figure 7-33 Lodish 5th edition. Structure and function of the voltage-gated Na⁺ channel. [http://www.amazon.com/Molecular-Cell-Biology-Lodish/dp/0716776014](http://www.amazon.com/Molecular-Cell-Biology-Lodish/dp/0716776014) + --- ## Toxins that poison ion channels -prolongs Na+ currents +
prolongs Na⁺ currents by messing up channel inactivation
Neuroscience 5e Box 4B
-by messing up channel inactivation +
AP profile reflects the shift in Na⁺ conductance
Neuroscience 5e Box 4B
+ +[http://www.nature.com/news/rodent-immune-to-scorpion-venom-1.14014](http://www.nature.com/news/rodent-immune-to-scorpion-venom-1.14014) -AP profile reflects - -the shift in Na+ - -conductance. - -[http://www.nature.com/news/rodent-immune-to-scorpion-venom-1.14014](http://www.nature.com/news/rodent-immune-to-scorpion-venom-1.14014) - -
- -
Note: already learned about tetrodotoxin from puffer fish. blocks voltage gated Na channels underlying the AP - - saxitoxin similar (homologue) to ttx, produced by dinoflagellates and possible effects from ‘red tide’ or eating shellfish that have injested these dinoflagellates. - - scorpions paralyse prey by injecting alpha-toxins (left panels). Slow inactivation of Na channels, prolonging the AP and messing up information flow in CNS. Beta-toxins in scorpion venom shift the voltage dependence of Na channel activation (right panel), causing Na channels to open at potential much more negative than normal inducing uncontrolled AP firing. - - Some alkaloid toxins (batrachotoxin, produced by S. American frogs) do both of these mechanisms. - - Similar toxins from plants (aconitine from buttercups, veratridine from lilies) and insecticidal toxins (pyrethrins) produced by chrysanthemums and rhododendrons. - - dendrotoxin from wasps affects K channels apamin from bees K channels charybdotoxin from scorpions K channels ---- - -## Toxin binding sites + --- ## Diseases caused by altered ion channels -EA1: episodic ataxia type 1 (abnormal limb movements and severe ataxia) +EA1: episodic ataxia type 1 (abnormal limb movements and severe ataxia) +BFNC: benign familial neonatal convulsion. Frequent brief seizures starting in first postnatal week then disappearing in a few months. Mutation mapped to two K⁺ channel genes +
Neuroscience 5e Box 4D
-BFNC: benign familial neonatal convulsion. Frequent brief seizures starting in first postnatal week then disappearing in a few months. Mutation mapped to two K+ channel genes - -
Note: @@ -1144,23 +745,29 @@ myotonia: muscle contraction ## Diseases caused by altered ion channels -FHM: familial hemiplegic migraine; CSNB: congenital stationary night blindness, rod photoreceptors nonfunctional (resulting in decreased acuity, myopia, nystagmus, strabismus); EA2: episodic ataxia type 2 (abnormal limb movements and severe ataxia); Paralysis: muscle weakness +
+
+FHM: familial hemiplegic migraine +CSNB: congenital stationary night blindness, rod photoreceptors nonfunctional (resulting in decreased acuity, myopia, nystagmus, strabismus) + +EA2: episodic ataxia type 2 (abnormal limb movements and severe ataxia) +Paralysis: muscle weakness + +
+ +
Neuroscience 5e Box 4D
-
Note: +nystagmus: involuntary eye movements (dancing eyes) +strabismus: eyes not directed towards same fixation point, disruption of binocular vision, depth perception, resulting in amblyopia when present in children - -nystagmus: involuntary eye movements (dancing eyes) - -strabismus: eyes not directed towards same fixation point, disruption of binocular vision, depth perception, resulting in amblyopia when present in children - -amblyopia: greek for ‘blunt vision’, decr vision through an eye because of a developmental pathophysioloy of the brain (e.g. visual cortex), 1-5% of population +amblyopia: greek for ‘blunt vision’, decr vision through an eye because of a developmental pathophysioloy of the brain (e.g. visual cortex), 1-5% of population @@ -1168,110 +775,72 @@ amblyopia: greek for ‘blunt vision’, decr vision through an eye because of a ## Diseases caused by altered ion channels -GEFS: generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures, begins at infancy and continues through puberty. Mapped to two mutations, one on an alpha Na channel subunit and one on a beta subunit. Cause slowing of sodium channel inactivation; Myotonia: muscle contractions; Paralysis: muscle weakness +
+
+GEFS: generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures, begins at infancy and continues through puberty. Mapped to two mutations, one on an alpha Na channel subunit and one on a beta subunit. Cause slowing of sodium channel inactivation +Myotonia: muscle contractions + +Paralysis: muscle weakness + +
+ +
Neuroscience 5e Box 4D
-
Note: - --- -## Diseases caused by altered ion channels +## Epilepsy can result from mutated Na⁺ channels -
+
Neuroscience 5e Box 4D
-Note: - - - ---- - -## Epilepsy can result from mutated Na+ channels - -
Note: You can see the the slower inactivation kinetics in this figure here in patch clamp recordings from normal and a number of different Na channel mutants. This slowing of Na inactivation is just enough to mess up spike patterns in single neurons and elicit hyperexcitability that results in seizures in networks of connected neurons. - - GEFS: generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures + --- ## Ion transporters -Neuroscience5e Fig. 4.9 +
Neuroscience 5e Fig. 4.9
-
- -Note: - - - ---- - -## Title Text - -[http://courses.pbsci.ucsc.edu/mcdb/bio125/Animation04-02TheSodiumPotassiumPump.mov](http://courses.pbsci.ucsc.edu/mcdb/bio125/Animation04-02TheSodiumPotassiumPump.mov) - -
Note: +Lastly let's remind ourselves of the importance of ion transporters in maintaining the concentration gradients across the nerve cell membrane. We've previously discussed the active transporter the Na/K pump that is crucial for maintaining Na/K gradients but there are others that maintain gradients for other physiologically relevant ions like Cl, Ca. Remember these transporters are all very slow compared to ion channels, requiring several milliseconds to move a few ions compared to thousands of ions per second conducted across the membrane for an ion channel. +Ouabain, plant 'arrow' poison traditionally from africa from the Acokanthera schimperi and Strophanthus gratus plants + + + ---