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1 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and 2 Departments of Molecular Biology and Biophysics and Physiology, Medical Biotechnology Center and School of Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201
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ABSTRACT |
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Modulation of mouse ventricular action potentials and
K+ currents was examined using the whole cell patch-clamp
technique. The composite mouse ventricular K+ current
(consisted of an outward transient followed by a slowly decaying
sustained component. Use of the K+ channel blockers
tetraethylammonium and 4-aminopyridine and a transgenic mouse model
revealed three pharmacologically and kinetically distinct currents:
Ito, which contributed to the transient component; IK, which contributed to the sustained component;
and a slowly activating current (Islow), which
contributed to both components. The immunosuppressant FK-506 increased
action potential duration at 90% repolarization by 66.7% by
decreasing the sustained component (
48% at +60 mV) and
prolonging recovery from inactivation (by 26% at 200 ms) of the
transient component. These effects were isolated to
IK and Ito, respectively.
Rapamycin had strikingly similar effects on these currents. Both FK-506
and rapamycin are known to target the immunophilin FKBP12. Thus we
conclude that FKBP12 modulates specific mouse K+ channels,
and thus the mouse ventricular action potential, by interacting
directly with K+ channel proteins or with other associated
regulatory proteins.
transient outward current; FK-binding proteins; Kv1.5
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INTRODUCTION |
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WE RECENTLY REPORTED the surprising finding that
FK-506, an agent that acts primarily through interactions with
modulatory proteins (14), decreased the magnitude of the rat
ventricular K+ currents, Ito and
IK (10, 12). All other known effects of FK-506
result from interactions with intracellular receptors known as
FK-506-binding proteins or FKBPs (14). Of these, the best understood is
FKBP12. In T lymphocytes, FK-506 targets FKBP12 to calcineurin, a
Ca2+- and calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase. The
resulting inhibition of calcineurin blocks the activation of T cells in response to an immune system challenge (18). FKBP12 is also an integral
component of at least three membrane-bound protein complexes:
1) the striated muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+
release channel (8, 24), 2) the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) receptor (9), and 3) the transforming growth
factor-
(TGF-
) receptor (21, 27). In each of
these systems, FK-506 binds with high affinity to FKBP12 and removes it
from the protein complex.
FKBP12 also interacts with the immunosuppressant rapamycin. Like
FK-506, rapamycin removes FKBP12 from the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-release channel (8), the IP3 receptor (9),
and the TGF-
receptor (21). However, the FKBP12-rapamycin complex
does not target calcineurin but instead inhibits other enzymes, known
in mammalian systems as RAFTs (rapamycin and FKBP12 targets) (23) or
FRAPs (FKBP12-rapamycin-associated proteins) (31). This dichotomy between the actions of FK-506 and rapamycin was exploited in the present study to examine the role of FKBP12 in regulating cardiac K+ currents.
The studies were conducted in mouse ventricular myocytes to take advantage of the recently developed ability to manipulate the murine genome (4). However, there is variation from species to species in the K+ currents that define the action potential (6). In fact, there is uncertainty regarding the individual K+ currents present in adult mouse ventricle. Zhou et al. (32) recently reported that 50 µM 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) blocked a slowly inactivating K+ current, Islow. However, Fiset et al. (13) reported that only a sustained current (Isus) was blocked under the same conditions. Furthermore, although it is known that a portion of the mouse ventricular K+ current is sensitive to the K+ channel blocker tetraethylammonium (TEA), the specific current or currents have not yet been characterized (15, 32). Consequently, initial experiments were undertaken with the K+ channel blockers 4-AP and TEA, as well as a transgenic mouse model (7), to reveal and characterize the individual mouse ventricular K+ currents.
The results indicate that three pharmacologically and kinetically distinct currents, Ito, Islow, and IK, are the main components of the mouse ventricular K+ current. Ito and Islow comprise the transient component of the current, whereas Islow and IK make up the sustained component. The results also show that the effects of FK-506 previously observed in rat ventricle (10, 12), action potential prolongation, inhibition of IK, and prolonged recovery from inactivation of Ito, are recapitulated in the mouse. Finally, based on the remarkably similar effects of FK-506 and rapamycin on K+ currents, we conclude that FKBP12 is an important modulator of the cardiac action potential through its interaction with either K+ channel proteins or associated regulatory components.
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METHODS |
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Cardiac myocyte preparation. Hearts were removed from adult CD-1 mice after deep anesthesia was induced by 30 mg/kg ip pentobarbital sodium (Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, IL). The aorta was quickly cannulated for Langendorff perfusion, and ventricular myocytes were isolated by a standard enzymatic technique using a HEPES-buffered solution containing (in mM) 130 NaCl, 5 KCl, 25 HEPES, 0.33 NaH2PO4, 1.0 MgCl2, 20 D-glucose, 3.0 Na-pyruvate, and 1.0 lactic acid, pH to 7.4 with NaOH. The coronary arteries were perfused with this solution containing, in addition, 50 µM CaCl2, 2.4 mg/ml collagenase (type II; Worthington Biochemical, Lakewood, NJ), and 0.08 mg/ml protease (type XIV). After 5 min of perfusion, the ventricles were cut down, minced, and then gently agitated for 4 min in digestion buffer containing 100 µM Ca2+ and 1.0% BSA. The cells were filtered through nylon mesh (300 µm) and then washed and resuspended, in succession, in enzyme-free buffer (1.0% BSA), containing 250 µM and 500 µM Ca2+. After the final wash the cells were resuspended at room temperature in HEPES-buffered DMEM with 10% fetal calf serum.
Measurement of action potentials and membrane
K+ currents. The electrophysiological
experiments were carried out on a Nikon Diaphot 300 inverted microscope
mounted on a vibration isolation table (Technical Manufacturing,
Peabody, MA). The voltage-clamp amplifier was an Axopatch 200A with a
CV202A headstage (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA), and all
experiments were conducted under computer control (pClamp software,
Axon Instruments). All of the electrophysiological recordings were made
using patch-type microelectrodes (0.7-2.0 M
) pulled from
borosilicate glass (TW150F, WPI, Sarasota, FL) using a programmable
pipette puller (model P87, Sutter Instrument, Novato, CA). The pipette
filling solution consisted of (in mM) 130 KCl, 15 HEPES, 1 MgCl2, 5 MgATP, pH adjusted to 7.2 with KOH. Because
very low intracellular Ca2+ concentration was required for
the action potential experiments, 10 mM EGTA was included in the
pipette filling solution, with KCl reduced to 115 mM to compensate for
the additional KOH required to obtain a pH of 7.2. The extracellular
buffer consisted of (in mM) 137 NaCl, 5 KCl, 20 HEPES, 15 D-glucose, 1.3 MgSO4, 1 NaH2PO4, pH adjusted to 7.4 with KOH.
Extracellular CaCl2 concentration was 0.25 mM for all
voltage-clamp experiments and 1.0 mM for all action potential experiments.
Whole cell K+ currents were recorded from mouse ventricular
myocytes without including EGTA in the pipette filling solution. Na+ currents were blocked with 10 µM extracellular
tetrodotoxin (Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA). Ca2+ currents were
minimized with the combination of 0.5 µM nifedipine and low (0.25 mM)
extracellular Ca2+ concentration. This regimen was used
because inorganic Ca2+ channel blockers, such as
Co2+ or Cd2+, change the voltage dependence of
steady-state inactivation of the transient outward K+
current, Ito (2). It has been shown that nifedipine
blocks certain K+ currents, in particular the current
carried through Kv1.5 channels (30). In that study the peak amplitude
of the current was not affected by 0.5 µM nifedipine. However, the
drug did slightly accelerate the inactivation of the current at this
concentration. Thus the use of nifedipine in the present study will not
prevent the observation of Kv1.5 K+ current but may
influence its apparent kinetics. These conditions (normal extracellular
Na, reduced extracellular Ca, normal intra- and extracellular K, no
intracellular Ca buffering) preserve, as much as possible, the normal
physiological environment of the cell and the properties of the
voltage- and time-dependent K+ currents, while also
assuring adequate block of overlapping inward currents. All
electrophysiological recordings were low-pass filtered at 2 kHz,
digitized at 5 kHz, and stored on a computer for subsequent analysis.
The magnitude of the transient portion of the current was calculated as
the difference between the fast peak of outward current and the current
remaining after 300 or 1,000 ms of voltage-clamp depolarization. The
magnitude of the sustained current was calculated as the difference
between the holding current and the current remaining at either of
these two times. All currents were normalized to cell capacitance to
account for differences in cell size, and the average data are reported
as current densities (pA/pF). Cell capacitance was calculated by
integrating the uncompensated capacity transients elicited by 10 ms
hyperpolarizing pulses from
70 to
80 mV. Action
potentials were stimulated under current clamp by a small depolarizing
current pulse through the pipette.
Unless otherwise indicated, the reagents used for all of the procedures described herein were obtained from Sigma Chemical (St. Louis, MO). Nifedipine, FK-506 (gift of Fujisawa), and rapamycin were added to the extracellular buffer from stock solutions (in ethanol; Pharmco Products, Brookfield CT) of 20, 25, and 10 mM, respectively. Control and experimental buffers always contained identical concentrations of ethanol and the total concentration never exceeded 0.1%. All experiments were carried out at 32°C within 8 h of cell isolation. All experimental values are expressed as the means ± SE, with statistical significance (P < 0.05) assessed using Student's paired t-test.
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RESULTS |
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Because there is uncertainty regarding the K+ currents
responsible for repolarization in mouse ventricle, the initial
experiments examined the effects of the K+ channel blockers
4-AP and TEA on the waveform of the mouse ventricular action potential.
Under control conditions (32°C, 5-Hz stimulation) the action
potential duration (APD) is extremely short (APD50 = 6.52 ± 0.60 ms, APD90 = 33.9 ± 3.66 ms; n = 11).
Both of the K+ channel blockers markedly increased the APD
without changing either resting potential or overshoot (Fig.
1). In 50 µM 4-AP, APD50 and
APD90 were increased from 7.1 ± 1.2 to 15.9 ± 4.4 ms and 40.0 ± 4.0 to 89.9 ± 13.7 ms, respectively (n = 4, P < 0.05). TEA (20 mM) also prolonged the average
APD50 and APD90, from 7.3 ± 0.9 to 26.9 ± 8.1 ms and 40.3 ± 3.5 to 129.5 ± 14.1 ms, respectively (n = 4, P < 0.05). Note that the effects of each
blocker were manifest within 1 ms of the peak of the action
potential (Fig. 1, insets). For all action potential
experiments, changes in intracellular Ca2+ activity were
minimized by including 10 mM EGTA in the pipette filling solution. This
assured that any increases in APD were attributable to direct effects
on membrane currents and not to the secondary effects of altered
intracellular Ca2+ concentration. These data underscore the
critical role of K+ currents in determining the mouse
ventricular action potential waveform.
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Subsequent experiments were designed to characterize the composite
mouse ventricular K+ current. The experimental conditions
preserved the normal physiological properties of each individual
K+ current while at the same time minimizing contamination
by other overlapping voltage- and time-dependent currents, as described in METHODS (see Ref. 10). The basic properties of the
composite mouse ventricular K+ current measured under these
conditions are presented in Fig. 2. Figure
2A shows a representative family of currents recorded during a
protocol that defines the current-voltage relationship of the composite
current. There is a large, rapid peak of early outward current followed
by what appears to be a biphasic decay that approaches, but does not
reach, a steady state by the end of the 1,000-ms pulse. In fact, this
decay phase was well fit as the sum of two exponentials. For example,
at +60 mV the time constant of decay was 28 ± 1.0 ms for the fast
component and 427 ± 16 ms for the slow component (n = 21). Both fast and slow components of decay were independent of
membrane potential between 0 and +60 mV (not shown).
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In our previous studies of rat ventricular myocytes (10, 12), the magnitude of the transient component of the current was reported as the difference between the early peak of outward current and the steady-state current remaining at the end of a 300-ms voltage-clamp pulse, because there was little change in the magnitude of the sustained current beyond this point. However, it is clear that the mouse ventricular K+ currents continue to inactivate beyond 300 ms (Fig. 2A, first arrow). Figure 2B shows the average current-voltage relationships of the transient and sustained components of the current, measured at both 300 and 1,000 ms. The magnitude of the transient component is calculated with respect to the sustained current present at either 300 or 1,000 ms. Thus because of the slow inactivation of the composite current, there was an apparent increase in the magnitude of the transient component as depolarization duration increased. For example, at +60 mV the calculated density of the transient component is 65 ± 5.4 pA/pF at 300 ms of depolarization and 76 ± 5.9 pA/pF at 1,000 ms (P < 0.01). For the same reason, the density of the sustained component at +60 mV, which is calculated with respect to the holding current, decreased from 29.7 ± 1.6 to 17.4 ± 0.8 pA/pF between 300 and 1,000 ms.
Subsequent experiments defined the voltage dependence of steady-state
inactivation of both components (Fig. 2, C and D). The magnitudes of both the transient and sustained components decrease as
the cell is depolarized (Fig. 2C). To determine the voltage dependence of this effect, the densities of both current components at
each holding potential were normalized to those recorded from
100 mV. The resulting inactivation curves are displayed in Fig. 2D. The curve describing the voltage dependence of steady-state inactivation of the transient component is complex. Inactivation begins
at approximately
70 mV and is not complete until approximately
10 mV. In addition, the curve appears to deviate from a sigmoid relationship at approximately
50 mV. The inactivation curve of the sustained component is also complex. There are two distinct phases
of inactivation separated by a region, between
80 and
50
mV, over which there is very little inactivation. In addition, the
sustained current does not completely inactivate, with 20% of the
total outward current remaining at
2.5 mV.
The complexity of these inactivation curves suggests that both the
transient and sustained components of the mouse ventricular K+ current are composed of contributions from more than one
K+ current. This hypothesis was tested by examining the
effects of the K+-channel blockers TEA and 4-AP on each
component of the composite mouse ventricular K+ current.
Others have shown that TEA blocks the delayed rectifier K+
current, IK, in rat ventricle without affecting
Ito (3). As shown in Fig.
3A and Table
1, TEA (20 mM) had no effect on the magnitude of the transient component of the current. However, it
markedly decreased the magnitude of the sustained component of the
current at both 300 and 1,000 ms (Table 1). The TEA-sensitive difference current shown in Fig. 3A explains these results.
There is fast activation to a plateau but only very slow inactivation during the voltage-clamp pulse. For this reason, the application of TEA
affects only the sustained component of the mouse ventricular K+ current .
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The effects of a low dose of 4-AP (50 µM) on both components of the composite current are shown in Fig. 3B. This concentration of 4-AP has been reported by others to spare Ito in mouse ventricle (13), while blocking a K+ current referred to as Islow (13, 32). As shown in Fig. 3B, the magnitudes of both the transient and sustained components of the composite mouse ventricular K+ current were significantly decreased by 50 µM 4-AP when measured from 300 ms of depolarization (see Table 1). The difference current shown at the bottom of Fig. 3B explains these results. The 4-AP-sensitive current activates rapidly to a peak and then inactivates to about 50% of the peak within 300 ms. When examined with respect to a 1,000-ms depolarization, 50 µM 4-AP still decreases the transient component of the current. However, it has only a small effect on the sustained component at 1,000 ms. This indicates that inactivation of the 50 µM 4-AP-sensitive current (Fig. 3B) is nearly complete by the end of a 1,000-ms depolarization. These results show that Islow contributes to both components of the composite mouse ventricular K+ current. However, because of its slow inactivation, the extent of its contribution to the sustained component decreases as depolarization duration increases.
Although the results indicate that Islow
contributes to the transient component of the mouse ventricular
K+ current, they also reveal that most of the transient
component is insensitive to the low concentration of 4-AP. For example, at +60 mV, 50 µM 4-AP decreased the magnitude of the transient component by only 15.3% (Table 1). The nature of this residual, low
4-AP-insensitive current is shown in Fig.
4. In the presence of 50 µM 4-AP and 20 mM TEA, the remaining current rises very rapidly to a peak and then
decays within 50 ms to a plateau. Application of 4 mM 4-AP (Fig.
4A) almost completely blocked the remaining transient component
of the current, a response expected of the cardiac transient outward
current, Ito (3). This conclusion is also supported
by the properties of the difference current shown in Fig. 4B.
This current, sensitive only to high concentrations of 4-AP, rises
rapidly to a peak within 3 ms and decays rapidly to a plateau within 50 ms. The time course of this current is consistent with identification
as Ito, although Ito is
generally thought to inactivate completely (3). These results indicate that Ito comprises most of the transient component
of the mouse ventricular K+ current.
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Because the transient component of the current includes contributions
from both Ito and Islow (Fig.
3), it seemed likely that the complex steady-state inactivation curve
seen in Fig. 2B could be explained by the overlapping
inactivation of these two currents. As expected, TEA was without effect
on the inactivation of the transient component (not shown). However, 50 µM 4-AP had a marked effect on the inactivation of the transient
component of the current (Fig. 5A).
4-AP shifted the curve in the negative direction and narrowed the
voltage range over which inactivation occurred. Furthermore, the
deflection seen in the control curve was eliminated, resulting in a
curve more characteristic of a single current. Based on these results,
inhibition of Ito should shift the inactivation
curve of the transient component in the positive direction. Clearly, this cannot be accomplished with millimolar 4-AP without blocking Islow as well. However, we capitalized on the
recent development of transgenic mice expressing a dominant-negative
mutant of the Kv4.2 gene, which results in functional elimination of
Ito (7). As shown in Fig. 5A, the
steady-state inactivation curve of the transient component of the
current in these cells is indeed shifted to the right of control. These
results are consistent with the hypothesis that the complex
inactivation exhibited by the transient component of the current
reflects the overlapping inactivation of only Islow
and Ito.
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Analogous experiments were done using the same K+ channel
blockers to test the hypothesis that the complex inactivation of the
sustained component results simply from the individual
voltage-dependent inactivation properties of Islow
and IK (Fig. 5, B and C). Recall that inactivation of the sustained component occurred over two distinct
voltage ranges, with an intervening plateau over which there was no
inactivation (Fig. 2D). The contribution of
Islow to the inactivation curve is revealed when 20 mM TEA is added to block IK (Fig. 5B). Note
the similarity between this TEA-insensitive curve (Fig. 5B) and
the 4-AP-sensitive "difference" curve in Fig. 5C. The
Islow inactivation curve has a relatively simple
voltage dependence, with little inactivation between
100 and
50 mV, and then inactivation to a plateau at about
20 mV.
Thus it would appear that Islow is responsible for
the more positive of the two inactivating regions. However, when 50 µM 4-AP is used to block Islow, the
4-AP-insensitive inactivation curve retains the complex character of
the control curve (Fig. 5C). That the 4-AP-insensitive inactivation curve represents IK is supported by
the similarity between it and the TEA-sensitive "difference"
curve (Fig. 5B). Thus both IK and
Islow contribute to the inactivation that occurs between
50 and
20 mV. Furthermore, the fact that the
TEA-sensitive current inactivates over two distinct regions suggests
that IK may contain contributions from two distinct
TEA-sensitive channels.
We previously showed that the immunosuppressant FK-506 prolonged the
rat ventricular action potential by inhibiting the K+
currents Ito and IK. However,
because of the large diversity of K+ channels (6), the
question remained as to whether the mouse ventricular action potential
is also modulated by immunosuppressants. Figure
6 shows that 5 µM FK-506 does indeed
prolong the mouse ventricular action potential. After 2 min of
exposure, the APD50 had increased by 22.6% (n = 3)
from 4.73 ± 0.03 to 5.8 ± 0.2 ms (P = 0.03) and the
APD90 had increased by 66.7% from 17.1 ± 0.32 to
28.5 ± 2.4 ms (P = 0.046).
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In the next series of experiments, the effects of FK-506 on mouse
ventricular K+ currents were examined in detail (Fig.
7). Note that the FK-506-sensitive difference current exhibits only slight inactivation over the course of
the 300-ms pulse (Fig. 7A). Average data (Fig. 7B)
reveal that 5 µM FK-506 has no effect on the magnitude or voltage
dependence of the transient component of the K+ current.
However, the magnitude of the sustained component is significantly
decreased (i.e., by 48% at +60 mV) at all potentials positive to
30 mV (P < 0.05). As in the rat (10), FK-506 did not
affect the voltage dependence of steady-state inactivation of the
transient component of the current (data not shown). However, it had a
marked effect on the voltage dependence of inactivation of the
sustained component. A representative example is shown in Fig.
7C. Average data (Fig. 7D) indicate that, as in the rat (10), the magnitude of the sustained current recorded from all holding
potentials is decreased in FK-506. The difference, which should reflect
the inactivation properties of the current inhibited by FK-506,
exhibits the same complex character as IK; the
current inhibited by TEA (Fig. 5B) and insensitive to 4-AP
(Fig. 5C).
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The other effect of FK-506 observed in rat ventricle was prolongation of the recovery from inactivation of Ito (10). This was difficult to address directly in the mouse because the transient component of the current consists of both Ito and Islow. However, Fig. 7E shows that the recovery from inactivation of the transient component of the mouse ventricular K+ current is prolonged by FK-506. These experiments were conducted by applying pairs of 200-ms pulses with the interval between the pulses ranging from 20 to 200 ms. The magnitude of the current elicited by the conditioning pulses (I0), i.e., the fully recovered current, was not affected by 5 µM FK-506, with an average density of 58.1 ± 3.3 pA/pF in control and 54.6 ± 2.8 pA/pF in FK-506 (P = 0.426). However, at 20 ms the amount of recovery, calculated as Itest/I0, decreased from 0.29 ± 0.01 to 0.18 ± 0.02 (P = 0.012), and at 200 ms the amount of recovery decreased from 0.72 ± 0.06 to 0.53 ± 0.07 (P = 0.005) (Fig. 7F). To better isolate the effect of FK-506 on mouse ventricular Ito, we also measured its effects on the recovery from inactivation of the transient component in the presence of 50 µM 4-AP. Under these conditions the transient component should consist almost entirely of Ito. As under control conditions, FK-506 did not decrease the magnitude of I0. However, in the presence of 50 µM 4-AP, FK-506 still decreased the extent of recovery at all times between 60 and 200 ms (P < 0.05, n = 3). For example, at 200 ms the value was decreased from 0.89 ± 0.05 to 0.72 ± 0.03. These data indicate that the effects of FK-506 on mouse ventricular K+ currents are the same as those in rat ventricle: voltage- and time-independent inhibition of IK and prolongation of recovery from inactivation of Ito.
An important question arises concerning the mechanisms through which
FK-506 modulates these repolarizing K+ currents. All of the
previously known cellular effects of FK-506 involve interactions with
cognate binding proteins (14), or FKBPs, including FKBP12, which is
highly expressed in heart (5, 25). Figure 8
depicts the two major pathways through which FK-506/FKBP12 is known to
act. As depicted schematically in Fig. 8A, FK-506 can remove or
"strip-away" FKBP12 from integral membrane proteins (5, 8, 9, 21,
24). Alternatively, as depicted in Fig. 8B, FK-506 binds to
FKBP12, thereby targeting this complex to modulate the function of
other cellular targets (18).
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As also depicted, a related immunosuppressant, rapamycin, should be a
valuable probe to distinguish between these two possible signaling
mechanisms (1, 8, 28). Thus if FK-506 modulates K+ currents
by removing FKBP12 from the K+ channel or an associated
regulatory protein, then the effects of rapamycin on K+
currents should converge with those of FK-506 (Fig. 8A).
Alternatively, if FK-506 acts through the targeting model, then the
effects of FK-506 and rapamycin should diverge (Fig. 8B). The
results of the experiments done to test this idea are shown in Fig.
9. Like FK-506, 5 µM rapamycin decreased
only the magnitude of the sustained component of the current recorded
during current-voltage protocols (Fig. 9A) without decreasing
the magnitude of the transient component. Importantly, the
rapamycin-sensitive difference current (Fig. 9A) is very
similar to the FK-506-sensitive difference current (Fig. 7A).
Furthermore, 5 µM rapamycin also prolonged the recovery from
inactivation of the transient component of the current (Fig. 9B). The plots of average
Itest/I0 (n = 5) reveal
inhibition comparable to that produced by 5 µM FK-506. Recovery at 20 ms decreased from 0.40 ± 0.06% to 0.29 ± 0.03%
(P = 0.036) and at 200 ms from 0.82 ± 0.05% to 0.63 ± 0.04% (P = 0.013). Thus the effects of rapamycin on the mouse
ventricular K+ current are virtually identical to the
effects of FK-506.
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DISCUSSION |
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In the present study we have used pharmacological techniques as well as a genetically engineered mouse (7) to examine the idea that the immunophilin FKBP12 modulates mouse ventricular K+ currents and thus the cardiac action potential. In the process, we have resolved three time- and voltage-dependent K+ currents from the composite mouse ventricular K+ current, showing that both Ito and Islow contribute to the transient component of the current, whereas Islow and IK comprise the sustained component. We also demonstrate that the previously observed effects of FK-506 on rat ventricular Ito and IK (10) are recapitulated in the mouse. Finally, based on the remarkably similar effects of both FK-506 and rapamycin, we provide evidence that FKBP12 is an important regulatory component in the control of at least two cardiac K+ channels.
Characterization of the composite mouse ventricular K+ current. There have been several recent studies describing individual components of the mouse ventricular K+ current (7, 15, 19, 26, 32) and a very recent study reporting four kinetically distinct mouse ventricular K+ currents (29). However, none of these has been carried out under nearly physiological conditions. The experimental strategy employed in the present study focused on accurately measuring each individual current in its physiological setting, while at the same time minimizing other overlapping time- and voltage-dependent currents. This approach included the use of near physiological temperature and minimal intracellular Ca2+ buffering. Nifedipine was used as a Ca2+ channel blocker, rather than Co2+ or Cd2+, which evoke marked shifts in the voltage dependence of inactivation of Ito (2). Nifedipine can block current through the Kv1.5 channel (30), the channel identified by others as responsible for Islow in mouse (13, 32). However, at the concentration used in the present study, nifedipine only accelerates inactivation of the Kv1.5 current without affecting its peak magnitude or voltage dependence (30). Thus the selected conditions represent a compromise that concedes minor effects on Islow but preserves the normal properties of Ito.
Xu et al. (29) have recently reported that the composite mouse ventricular K+ current consists of four kinetically distinct components. They report a current sensitive to low concentrations of 4-AP (IK,slow), a TEA-sensitive noninactivating current (Iss), and a transient outward current that could be attributed to either of two high 4-AP-sensitive components, Ito,f and Ito,s. In most aspects, our results support these conclusions, with the current designated in the present study as Islow corresponding to IK,slow, IK corresponding to Iss, and Ito corresponding to Ito,f. Ito,s was reported to be found exclusively in cells originating from the interventricular septum and to usually coexist with Ito,f (29). Thus it is unlikely that we would have detected it in our experiments with control mice. However, we did observe this current in our experiments with the Kv4.2W362F transgenic mice. Despite the similarity in the main conclusions, however, there are aspects of the present study that differ from that of Xu et al. (29). For example, the decay time constants of the composite current reported here are much faster, a discrepancy that is likely related to the higher temperature (32 vs. 22°C) used in the present study. In this regard, our values are similar to those reported by Zhou et al. (32), a study in which currents were recorded at 37°C. In addition, Xu et al. (29) report that IK,slow (Islow) may consist of multiple components, based on the complex nature of its steady-state inactivation curve. Our methodology did not enable us to directly measure the steady-state inactivation of this current so our results cannot either support or refute this observation. However, we report the possibility that IK (Iss) may consist of multiple components, an observation not put forward by Xu et al. (29). In general, however, the present results regarding the components of the mouse ventricular K+ current are in agreement with those of Xu et al. (29), with minor differences that are likely related to the different methodology employed and the very different conditions under which the experiments were carried out.
Multiple currents contribute to the transient component. We have demonstrated that the transient component of the mouse ventricular K+ current is composed of both Ito and Islow. Evidence for this was seen initially in the complex inactivation curve of this component (Fig. 2D), which was similar to those modeled by Po et al. (22) for systems expressing two distinct inactivating K+ currents. Four experimental observations confirmed this conclusion. First, a block of Islow with 50 µM 4-AP (7) reduced the magnitude of the transient component of the current (Fig. 3B). Second, the current remaining after block of Islow had the characteristic kinetics and pharmacology of Ito (Fig. 4). Third, the inactivation curve of the current remaining after block of Islow was shifted to the left of the control curve (Fig. 5A) and was in fact very similar to that of rat ventricular Ito under the same conditions (10). Fourth, the inactivation curve for the transient component recorded from Ito-deficient transgenic mice (7) was shifted to the right of the control curve. However, this latter result may be complicated by a novel K+ current that is upregulated in these cells (7). Taken together, these results provide compelling evidence that Islow and Ito combine to produce the transient component of the mouse ventricular K+ current.
Multiple currents contribute to the sustained component. The
complex steady-state inactivation curve of the sustained component, with two inactivating regions separated by a plateau (Fig. 2D), suggested contributions from at least two currents to this phase as
well. Whereas Islow contributed only to the
inactivation seen between
50 and
20 mV,
IK exhibited inactivation over both voltage ranges
(Fig. 5, B and C). It is important to note that this
property is shared by rat ventricular IK (10). In
the present study, IK was solely responsible for
the inactivation observed between
100 and
80 mV. However,
it is unclear how much this portion of IK would
contribute to either the mouse ventricular action potential or to
voltage-clamp currents recorded from
70 mV. The fact that the
experimentally defined "IK" itself exhibits
two distinct regions of voltage-dependent inactivation suggests that it
is made up of contributions from at least two distinct K+
channels. Perhaps the sustained component of the mouse ventricular K+ current may actually be comprised of three distinct
K+ currents.
K currents and the action potential. Our results (Fig. 1), and those of others (13, 32) clearly demonstrate the importance of Islow in controlling the waveform of the mouse ventricular action potential. In addition, Barry et al. (7) have demonstrated the importance of Ito because the action potential is prolonged in ventricular myocytes isolated from transgenic mice in which Ito has been functionally depressed. However, our results indicate a greater role for IK in the mouse ventricular action potential than others have previously reported (15, 32). This is probably because of the high concentration of TEA (20 mM) that we have used. It may be that because of the properties of IK and the waveform of the mouse ventricular action potential, a greater degree of block of IK is required to substantially change the APD. Our results also indicate that both Islow and IK are critical for the rapid repolarization of the action potential because block of either produces prolongation of the action potential beginning immediately after the peak (Fig. 1). This is probably explained by the fast activation kinetics of both of these currents (Fig. 3). It is interesting to note the importance of all three of these large, rapidly activating, repolarizing K+ currents in producing the short action potential required to sustain the high heart rates exhibited by the mouse [>600 beats/min (20)].
FK-506 and K+ currents. New results presented here indicate that the effects of FK-506 on the mouse ventricular action are identical to those seen previously in rat (10, 12). Despite the species differences in the repolarizing K+ currents underlying the action potential, it was interesting to discover that FK-506 regulates IK and Ito in mouse in a manner identical to that seen in rat. Several results reveal that FK-506 inhibits IK. First, FK-506 decreases the sustained component of the current without any change in the magnitude of the transient component (Fig. 7, A and B). Second, this effect is similar to that produced by the IK blocker TEA (Fig. 2B). Third, the FK-506-sensitive current (Fig. 7A) is nearly identical to the TEA-sensitive current (Fig. 3A). As in the rat ventricle, the effects of FK-506 on mouse Ito were observed only at high stimulation rates, as the immunosuppressant prolonged its recovery from inactivation (Fig. 7). Thus FK-506 evokes characteristic and novel regulatory mechanisms on an array of K+ currents in mouse myocytes as well.
The detailed characterization of Islow as a constituent of the transient current led to the important question as to whether or not FK-506 was regulating this component as well. Whereas it was not possible to inhibit Ito pharmacologically without also blocking Islow, the Kv4.2W362F transgenic mouse, in which Ito is functionally eliminated (7), should in principle be an ideal system to directly examine this possibility. However, many of the transgenic myocytes exhibited a large, transient current that was insensitive to 50 µM 4-AP. This is likely to be the novel upregulated current described by Barry et al. (7) and is probably the current described by Xu et al. as Ito,s (29). The expression of this current prevented unambiguous interpretation of recovery experiments so we were unable to examine the effects of FK-506 on Islow. This underscores the fact that gene expression which compensates for a knocked-out or over-expressed gene may complicate studies in transgenic hearts.
FKBP12 and K+ currents. The
intriguing physiological importance of the FK-506 effects, reported
here and previously (10, 12), resides with FKBPs, the family of
intracellular cognate binding proteins for this drug (14). Experiments
focused on the possible role of FKBP12 because it is highly expressed
in the heart (25) and is a natural component of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release channel (16). As depicted
schematically in Fig. 8, all of the known effects of the FK-506/FKBP12
cascade can be understood through two signaling motifs. The first is
defined by FK-506-evoked removal of FKBP12 from an endogenous membrane
protein such as the ryanodine receptor (17), the IP3
receptor (9), or the TGF-
receptor (21) (Fig. 8A). In the
second mechanism (Fig. 8B) FK-506 binds to FKBP12, resulting in
a functional targeting of the complex to other intracellular proteins
such as the phosphatase calcineurin (18). Whereas our previous results
reveal that calcineurin is not involved in K+ channel
modulation by FK-506 (10), other possible roles for FKBP12 were
explored by exploiting rapamycin as a probe. As depicted in Fig. 8,
rapamycin can distinguish between these motifs because it shares the
ability of FK-506 to dissociate FKBP12 from complexes but diverges from
FK-506 action since it targets the immunophilin differently (1). It was
striking to observe that rapamycin acted exactly like FK-506 in the
regulation of both IK and Ito. These results show that in mouse, as in rat (10), the effects of FK-506
are not mediated by inhibition of calcineurin because the
rapamycin-FKBP12 complex is devoid of calcineurin inhibitory activity
(1). Furthermore, the fact that the ability of both FK-506 and
rapamycin to dissociate FKBP12 from membrane-bound proteins is well
established (8, 9, 17, 21) and that it is the only action they are
known to share (14) strongly supports the idea that FKBP12 is a
functional component of particular cardiac K+ channels. It
is clear that further studies are needed to define a molecular
mechanism for FKBP12 action in the cardiac cell. By analogy with other
systems, i.e., the TGF-
receptor and the IP3 receptor,
it is possible that FKBP12 is involved in tethering important
regulatory proteins to the K+ channels for the efficient
coupling of components of a signaling cascade.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
|---|
We thank Fujisawa (Melrose Park, IL) for generously supplying the FK-506 used in our experiments. We thank Dr. Jeanne Nerbonne for graciously providing us with the Kv4.2W362F transgenic mice.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
This work is supported in part by the National Institutes of Health Grants HL-27867 and AG-14637.
Portions of this work have appeared in abstract form (11).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: T. B. Rogers, Dept. of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 108 North Greene St., Baltimore, MD 21201 (E-mail: trogers{at}umaryland.edu).
Received 27 May 1999; accepted in final form 28 September 1999.
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