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* Centro Universitario de Investigaciones Biomédicas, Universidad de Colima, 28047 Colima, Col., México; and
Centro de Investigación Científica de Yucatán, 97200 Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico
Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Dr. Igor Pottosin, Centro Universitario de Investigaciones Biomédicas, Universidad de Colima, Av. 25 de julio s/n, Villa de San Sebastián, 28047 Colima, Col., México. Tel: +52-312-31-61000, x47456; Fax: +52-312-31-27581; E-mail: pottosin{at}cgic.ucol.mx.
| ABSTRACT |
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= 0.25 e-/nm2. Vacuolar K+ had a specific effect on the FV channel gating at negative potentials without significant effect on closed-open transitions at positive ones. Due to K+ effects at either membrane side, the potential at which the FV channel has minimal activity was always situated at
50 mV below the potassium equilibrium potential, EK+. At tonoplast potentials below or equal to EK+, the FV channel open probability was almost independent on the cytosolic K+ but varied in a proportion to the vacuolar K+. Therefore, the release of K+ from the vacuole via FV channels could be controlled by the vacuolar K+ in a feedback manner; the more K+ is lost the lower will be the transport rate. | INTRODUCTION |
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threefold in the midday as compared to the maximal level achieved in the morning hours, whereas K+ is replaced by sucrose to balance the decrease in osmotic pressure (Talbott and Zeiger, 1996| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Patch-clamp protocols and analyses
Patch pipettes were pulled from KIMAX-51 capillaries (Kimble, Toledo, Ohio) in three steps on a Brown/Flaming model P-97 puller (Sutter Instruments, Novato, CA), fire polished (LPZ 101 microforge, List Medical, Germany), and covered by Sylgard-curing agent (Dow Corning, Midland, MI). The resistance of patch electrodes filled with a 100-mM KCl solution was 23 M
; pipettes with higher resistance of 710 M
have been selected for single-channel recordings. Current measurements were performed using an Axopatch 200A integrating patch-clamp amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). Reference AgCl electrode was connected to the bath via 3% agar bridge filled with 100 mM KCl. The sign of voltage referred to the cytosolic side, and positive (outward) currents represented an efflux of cations into the vacuole. Liquid junction potential between reference electrode and solution containing 10 mM K+ plus 90 mM NMDG+, measured as described by Ward and Schroeder (1994)
, was +7.1 ± 0.1 mV (bath positive). Large (C = 0.52 pF) outside-out and inside-out tonoplast patches, respectively, have been examined to test the effects of cytosolic and vacuolar K+ on the FV current; K+ concentration was changed by bath perfusion. The identity of the FV current was verified by its characteristic rapid (<1 ms) activation and bipolar voltage dependence, i.e., activation at large potentials of either sign, with a minimal open probability at around -40 mV in symmetrical K+ (Tikhonova et al., 1997
; Dobrovinskaya et al., 1999
). The conductance in the high resistance region between -20 and -60 mV was taken as a measure of the membrane integrity and seal stability. Patches with the conductance >250 pS in this voltage region in symmetrical 100 mM KCl have been rejected from further analysis. From holding potential of -40 mV, voltage has been switched to a sequence of test potentials in 20-mV steps. Depending on the patch stability, the range of command potentials was from (-160, +140) mV up to ±200 mV. The amplitude of the FV current was measured at the first 510 ms of the test pulse after cessation of a small capacitance artifact. Each experiment has been started in symmetrical 100 mM K+. To ensure the reversibility, at the end of the experiment symmetrical 100-mM K+ conditions have been restored. The variation of FV current amplitudes between the beginning and the end of experiments was less than 20%.
Records were filtered at 5 kHz by a low-pass Bessel filter, digitized using a DigiData 1200 Interface (Axon Instruments), and recorded directly on a hard disk of an IBM-compatible PC at 15-kHz sampling rate. The command voltage protocols were applied and the analyses were carried out using the pClamp 6.0 software package (Axon Instruments). Voltage dependence of the FV channel was fitted to a three-state model with two open states connected via closed state as described by Tikhonova et al. (1997)
with a modification:
![]() | (1) |
![]() | (2) |
) is "true" midpoint potential (in mV) at infinite cation concentration;
i(C) (in mV) is potential at zero distance from the surface as a function of concentration; and X = 1.36*
*C-1/2,
is surface charge (in e-/nm2), and C is concentration (moles/liter).
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| RESULTS |
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The change of the macroscopic current (I) may be produced either by a change of single-channel current amplitude (i), or by a variation of the mean number of open channels (NPo, where N is number of channels and Po is open probability), or by a combination of both factors, following the relation I = i x NPo. To clarify this issue, we have tested the effect of the variation of cytosolic (Fig. 2) and vacuolar (Fig. 3) K+ on smaller patches with limited number of FV channel copies, where single-channel openings can be resolved. As it can be seen from Fig. 2, the decrease of cytosolic K+ from 100 to 10 mM caused a decrease of the mean number of open channels at positive potentials (+100 mV) and an increase of the probability of opening at negative ones (-75 mV). The latter effect of K+ was unspecific, because the introduction of 90 mM of NMDG+ on the background of 10 mM K+ reversed the channel open probability at negative potentials to the level observed in symmetrical 100 mM K+. However, NMDG+ strongly inhibited the channel activity at positive potentials. Both effects of NMDG+ on the single-channel activity are fairly comparable with those on the macroscopic FV currents (Fig. 1 a). The effects of cation variation at the cytosolic side on the channel gating have been reproduced on three additional small cytosolic side-out patches. Taking mean number of open channels in control (symmetrical 100 mM K+) as a reference, the decrease of cytosolic K+ to 10 mM caused the decrease of open probability at +100 mV by almost two-thirds (0.36 ± 0.05, n = 4), whereas the open probability at -75 mV was increased 3.71 times (±0.18, n = 4). At the same time, the application of 10 mM K+ supplemented by 90 mM NMDG+ at the cytosolic side restored the open probability at -75 mV to the value of 0.97 ± 0.15 (n = 4) of that in control, whereas open probability at positive potentials was strongly (to the level <0.05 of that in control) reduced. Inspecting tiny vacuolar side-out patches then, it was found that the decrease of vacuolar K+ from 100 to 10 mM hardly affected single channel activity at positive potentials (Fig. 3, +50), whereas at negative potentials (-150) the probability of the FV channel opening has been strongly reduced. Averaging data obtained on three separate vacuolar side-out patches yielded the open probability values (taken relative to control ones) of 1.17 ± 0.07 and 0.14 ± 0.02 at +50 mV and -150 mV, respectively. The decrease of the open probability at negative potentials and low K+ could be reversed only partly by the addition of 90 mM NMDG+ (0.43 ± 0.10 of the mean open channel number in control at -150 mV, n = 2) to the vacuolar side, which argued for some specificity of the monovalent cation (K+ or NMDG+) interaction with the channel gate.
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| DISCUSSION |
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46 mV per a 10-fold increment of [K+] of both V1 and V2 (Fig. 7 a). The effect of the cytosolic K+ increase from 10 to 100 mM on the V1 and V2 values could be mimicked by an equivalent increase of the ionic strength due to the addition of 90 mM NMDG+ (asterisk, Fig. 7 a). These observations argue for a substantial negative surface potential at the cytosolic face of the channel. Fitting the dependence of V1 and V2 on cytosolic [K+] to a simple Gouy-Chapman model (Eq. 17, Latorre et al., 1992
0.25 e-/nm2 (Fig. 7 a), which at 100 mM cytosolic [K+] will generate a surface potential of
-45 mV. The estimated negative charge density is somewhat higher than that at the internal surface of voltage-dependent channels in animal cells and is in the range of the values reported for the external surface (Hille, 1992The increase of vacuolar K+ from 10 to 400 mM caused a drastic (>120 mV) positive shift of the midpoint potential V1 for the equilibrium between open state occupied at negative potentials and the closed state (Fig. 7 b). At the same time, the second voltage-gating process, taking place at positive potentials, was hardly altered. The mean value of V2 even slightly decreased. Such an asymmetric effect on the two voltage-dependent gating processes in the FV channel cannot be explained solely by screening of the surface charge, which could only cause an equivalent shift of all voltage-dependent processes in the same direction. The simplest explanation of the vacuolar K+ effect is that K+ binding to an allosteric site overstabilized the open state occupied at cytosol-negative potentials (this might be, for instance, due to the voltage-dependent binding to this site) with respect to the closed and other open states. Alternatively, the effect of vacuolar K+ increase might be also the combination of the surface charge screening (shifting the voltage dependence more positive) and a voltage-independent stabilization of both open states with respect to the closed state, so that the two effects on the open probability will sum up or cancel each other at negative or positive potentials, respectively.
Although surface charge theory considerations so far provided the most economic explanation of the effect of cytosolic K+ on the FV channel voltage dependence, and an allosteric K+ binding seemed to be a cause of the vacuolar K+ effect, alternative (or complementary) mechanisms, where binding of a K+ ion inside the pore affects the distribution between conducting and nonconducting conformations, could not be ruled out. Such models are receiving increased support inasmuch as new facts on the control of K+ channels' gating by permeable or blocking cations bound within the pore are unraveled. There is mounting evidence that K+ bound within the selectivity filter in the voltage-dependent K+ channels acts as an open structure stabilizer, preventing their collapse to the C-type inactivated and defunct states (Kiss and Korn, 1998
; Melishchuk et al., 1998
). Recent x-ray crystallographic study revealed marked changes of the ion coordination structure in the selectivity filter of the KcsA K+ channel in low K+ solutions, so that the filter operation may be coupled to the channel's gating via local changes of K+ concentration (Zhou et al., 2001
). K+ modulation of the instantaneous activation of an outwardly rectifying TOK1 channel in the yeast plasma membrane is another example of a gating-permeation coupling. The voltage dependence of the TOK1 was a function of the ratio of internal to external K+ irrespective to the absolute K+ concentrations, cf. the dependence of the onset of the FV channel voltage activation on EK+ (Fig. 8 a). It was speculated that K+ binding to the external end of the selectivity filter locks the TOK1 channel in the closed state, and K+ binding to the inner side is coupled to the channel opening, either via repelling the external K+ ion or by inducing the permissive filter conformation, allowing K+ conductance in either direction (Loukin and Saimi, 1999
). The effect of K+ can be fairly mimicked by its closest analogs, Rb+ and Cs+, but hardly by impermeable Na+ or NMDG+ (Bertl et al., 1998
; Vergani et al., 1998
; Loukin and Saimi, 1999
). Interestingly, the variation of the cation species at the cytosolic side had a pronounced effect on the open probability of the weakly selective FV channelthe lesser was the relative permeability, the lower was the open probability. Substitution of K+ for less-permeable cations (Li+ and Na+) at the cytosolic side caused more destabilization of the open state occupied at negative membrane potentials than that occupied at positive ones (Brüggemann et al., 1999
). In contrast to this, the substitution of K+ by NMDG+ at the cytosolic side selectively destabilized the open state occupied at positive potentials without any effect on closed-open transitions at negative potentials (Figs. 1 a and 2). None of these effects matched the effect of lowering the K+ concentration. However, the effect of K+NMDG+ substitution at the vacuolar side could be roughly mimicked by lowering of K+ from 100 mM to 30 mM (Fig. 6 b); both these changes caused an equivalent shift of the reversal potential for the single-channel current (Fig. 4 c), i.e., the effect of NMDG+ on the voltage dependence of the FV channel in this case was consistent with the relative permeability for this cation. Obviously, to account for the cation-specific interactions in the FV channel, the diverse effects of monovalent cations other than K+ on gating and permeation need to be studied in depth.
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50 mV below EK+ (Fig. 8 a). The effect of the cytosolic K+ reported here is in a good agreement with previous reports on the tonoplast of Vicia faba guard cells and of barley mesophyll vacuoles (Allen and Sanders, 1996
In the physiological range of K+ concentrations, the conductance of single FV channel in red beet vacuoles is almost constant (Fig. 4, bd). Thus, the amplitude of the whole vacuole FV current depends mainly on the open probability of the channel and the offset of the membrane voltage from EK+, (Vm - EK+). In plant cells, potential difference across the tonoplast, reported by microelectrodes, ranged between 0 and -25 mV, which, in conjunction with K+ gradients existing across the vacuolar membrane, implies moderate or negligible K+-driving force directed from the vacuole to the cytosol (Bethmann et al., 1995
; Allen and Sanders, 1997
). We hypothesized that the tonoplast potential is normally defined by a compromise between the activity of H+-pumps, making it more negative and the shunt conductance through the K+-permeable FV channel, shifting it toward EK+ (cf. Davies and Sanders, 1995
). Thus, the upper limit may be defined by EK+. And the lower limit would be situated close to the potential of the FV channel activity minimum. Indeed, further hyperpolarization will be reversed, because the pump-generated outward current, whose reversal is very negative (Gambale et al., 1994
), will decrease, whereas the inward current through FV channels will steeply increase, causing a repolarization of the membrane voltage. Although the considerations made above delineate perhaps too broad (>50 mV width, Fig. 8 a) voltage range for possible values of tonoplast potentials, it can be shown that the open probability in this range undergoes only moderate variation. We have evaluated the FV open probability at EK+ and at the minimum of the voltage dependence and plotted resulting values (Fig. 8 b) as a function of the vacuolar and cytosolic K+. It can be immediately seen that within the selected potential range, the open probability of the FV channel weakly depends on voltage or cytosolic K+, and strongly on the vacuolar K+. Therefore, a simple conclusion may be drawn: a higher vacuolar K+ implies a higher activity of the FV channels, and vice versa, the loss of vacuolar K+ content induces the FV channel closure.
Feedback control of the vacuolar 86Rb+ tracer release has been detected experimentally during ABA-induced stomatal closure (MacRobbie, 1995
). The cessation of the release was achieved due to a solute content-sensitive behavior of vacuolar or plasma membrane ion channels. It was hypothesized then that some stretch-activated channels are involved (MacRobbie, 1998
). Although our data do not rule out this possibility, they obviously provide another suitable explanation. The FV channel is highly permeable to Rb+ (Brüggemann et al., 1999
) and proposed to contribute significantly to the vacuolar solute loss in the course of ABA-induced stomatal closure (Allen et al., 1998
). Therefore, the solute release may be regulated in a feedback manner viaK+-sensing mechanism of the FV channel. Interestingly, the activating voltage for plant plasma membrane K+ channels is also changed in parallel with EK+, thus, they function as K+-sensing valves. This property ensures that inwardly rectifying K+ channels mediate K+ uptake only, even at very low external K+ (Maathuis et al., 1997
). Similarly, activation threshold of outwardly rectifying K+ channels in guard cells is always above EK+, which prevents K+ reuptake at elevated external K+, engaging solute loss and stomatal closure (Blatt and Gradmann, 1997
).
In K+-starved barley roots, K+ in the cytosol was maintained at
75 mM level, whereas the vacuolar K+ activity dropped from 100 mM to <10 mM (Leigh and Wyn Jones, 1984
; Walker et al., 1996
). At the same time, membrane potential hardly changed, thus, electrochemical gradient for K+ across the tonoplast was reversed (Walker et al., 1996
). Obviously, the tonoplast passive conductance for K+ needs to be minimized to prevent the reuptake of cytosolic K+ into the vacuole. This may be partly achieved due to the downregulation of FV channels by reduced K+ (Fig. 8 b). There are two additional factors contributing in the long-term scale to the maintenance of a low FV channel activity at K+ starving conditions: the acidification of the cytosol (Walker et al., 1996
) and drastic (up to 10 mM) increase of the putrescine level (Murty et al. 1971
; Watson and Malmberg, 1996
). Both factors were proved to inhibit the FV channel activity (Allen et al., 1998
; Brüggemann et al., 1998
; Dobrovinskaya et al., 1999
).
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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This work was funded by CONACyT grants 29473-N and 38181-N to I.I.P. and a fellowship from the grant 29473-N to M.M.
Submitted on April 23, 2002; accepted for publication October 21, 2002.
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