Palmitoylation of BK channels
Item Status
Embargo End Date
Date
Authors
Abstract
Palmitoylation is a post-translational modification that has been implicated in the
control of multiple proteins, including ion channels. S-Palmitoylation is a lipophilic
modification that involves the attachment of palmitate through a thioester linkage to
a cysteine residue in a target protein. By increasing the hydrophobicity of the target
region, palmitoylation can promote membrane targeting. Here, palmitoylation is
shown to play an important role in regulating large conductance calcium- and
voltage- activated (BK) potassium channels.
The STREX splice variant of the BK channel contains a 58 amino acid insert at the
splice site C2 within the intracellular C-terminal RCK1-RCK2 linker that confers
increased calcium sensitivity to the channel and determines PKA inhibition of
channel activity. The cysteine rich STREX domain was predicted to be
palmitoylated, and using an imaging assay STREX was shown to act as a
membrane targeting domain through palmitoylation of a di-cysteine motif
(C645:C645). A membrane potential assay and electrophysiological analysis
demonstrates that palmitoylation at the C645:C646 site in STREX is important in
mediating the increased calcium sensitive properties inherent to the STREX
channel. Palmitoylation is also shown to modulate PKA channel inhibition.
The stability of palmitoylation can often be reliant on the local environment within the
protein. Generally in most proteins; lipidated regions, basic domains or
transmembrane domains are found adjacent to a palmitoylation site. In STREX, a
polybasic domain composed of 11 basic residues just upstream from the C645:C646
palmitoylation site, functions to control the palmitoylation status of the STREX insert.
A site directed mutagenesis approach to disrupt the polybasic domain revealed an
important role in controlling membrane targeting of the STREX C-terminus,
mediating the increased calcium sensitivity inherent to STREX channels and
controlling the palmitoylation status of the C645:C646 palmitoylation site using
multiple techniques involving electrophysiology, fluorescent imaging and
biochemical assays. Further to this, using imaging to examine the membrane
association of fluorescently tagged C-terminal proteins, phosphorylation is shown to function as a physiological electrostatic switch to regulate the polybasic region in
controlling palmitoylation of the STREX insert.
Finally, an additional palmitoylation site that is constitutively expressed in all BK
channels was identified to be located in the S0-S1 linker (C53:C54:C56). Mutation of
the C53:C54:C56 palmitoylation site in the S0-S1 linker was shown to abolish all
palmitoylation in BK channels that did not contain the STREX insert. Palmitoylation
allows the S0-S1 linker to associate with the plasma membrane however the
mutated de-palmitoylated channels did not affect channel conductance or the
calcium/voltage sensitivity of the channel. Palmitoylation of the S0-S1 linker was
shown to be a critical determinant of cell surface expression of BK channels, as
steady state surface expression levels were reduced by ~55% in the C53:C54:C56
mutant. STREX channels that could not be palmitoylated in the S0-S1 linker also
showed decreased surface expression even through STREX insert palmitoylation
was unaffected.
Palmitoylation is rapidly emerging as an important post-translational mechanism to
control ion channel behaviour. This work reveals that palmitoylation of the BK
channel can control channel function of the STREX splice variant channel and can
regulate cell surface expression in all other channel variants. Palmitoylation appears
to be functionally independent at these two distinct sites expressed within the same
channel protein.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

