Inward rectifier K+ channel from human heart and brain: cloning and stable expression in a human cell line

MD Ashen, B O'Rourke, KA Kluge… - American Journal …, 1995 - journals.physiology.org
MD Ashen, B O'Rourke, KA Kluge, DC Johns, GF Tomaselli
American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 1995journals.physiology.org
We have cloned the human homologue of the inward rectifier K+ channel from both heart
and brain tissue (HHBIRK1). The human clones were identical to each other in their coding
regions and were highly homologous to the mouse macrophage (IRK1) channel. The inward
rectifier currents from human and mouse clones were characterized using a novel strategy
for stable ion channel expression in a human cell line. The permeability of the expressed
inwardly rectifying channels was greater for K+ than for Rb+, whereas no current was …
We have cloned the human homologue of the inward rectifier K+ channel from both heart and brain tissue (HHBIRK1). The human clones were identical to each other in their coding regions and were highly homologous to the mouse macrophage (IRK1) channel. The inward rectifier currents from human and mouse clones were characterized using a novel strategy for stable ion channel expression in a human cell line. The permeability of the expressed inwardly rectifying channels was greater for K+ than for Rb+, whereas no current was observed when K+ was replaced by Na+. A prominent time- and voltage-dependent block was observed in the presence of Ba2+, whereas a small decay in the steady-state current was observed with millimolar concentrations of Na+. Single-channel conductances of 49.1 +/- 3.3 pS (n = 6) and 40.2 +/- 2.5 pS (n = 3) (P = 0.005) were obtained for the HHBIRK1 and IRK1 clones, respectively. These results indicate that sequence dissimilarities between human and mouse inward rectifier K+ channels may have significant functional consequences.
American Physiological Society