Alternative splicing switches potassium channel sensitivity to protein phosphorylation. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Alternative exon splicing and reversible protein phosphorylation of large conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK) channels represent fundamental control mechanisms for the regulation of cellular excitability. BK channels are encoded by a single gene that undergoes extensive, hormonally regulated exon splicing. In native tissues BK channels display considerable diversity and plasticity in their regulation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). Differential regulation of alternatively spliced BK channels by PKA may provide a molecular basis for the diversity and plasticity of BK channel sensitivities to PKA. Here we demonstrate that PKA activates BK channels lacking splice inserts (ZERO) but inhibits channels expressing a 59-amino acid exon at splice site 2 (STREX-1). Channel activation is dependent upon a conserved C-terminal PKA consensus motif (S869), whereas inhibition is mediated via a STREX-1 exon-specific PKA consensus site. Thus, alternative splicing acts as a molecular switch to determine the sensitivity of potassium channels to protein phosphorylation.

publication date

  • January 19, 2001

Research

keywords

  • Alternative Splicing
  • Potassium Channels
  • Proteins

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0035896535

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1074/jbc.C000741200

PubMed ID

  • 11244090

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 276

issue

  • 11