The alpha-KTx peptide toxins inhibit different types of potassium channels by occluding the outer channel pore composed of four identical alpha subunits. The large-conductance, calcium-activated (BK or Slo1) and voltage-dependent (KV) potassium channels differ in their specificity for the different alpha-KTx subfamilies. While many different alpha-KTx subfamilies of different sizes inhibit KV1 channels with high affinity, only one subfamily, alpha-KTx 1.x, inhibits BK channels with high affinity. Two solvent-exposed regions of the outer pore that influence alpha-KTx binding, the turret and loop, display high sequence variability among different potassium channels and may contribute to differences in alpha-KTx specificity. While these alpha-KTx domains have been studied in KV1 channels, little is known about the corresponding BK alpha-KTx domains. To define alpha-KTx sites in the BK outer pore, we examined the effect of 19 outer pore mutations on specific binding of 125I-labeled iberiotoxion (IbTX or alpha-KTx 1.3) and on their cell-surface expression. Similar to alpha-KTx sites in the Shaker KV1 loop, site-directed mutations in the BK loop disrupted specific IbTX binding. In contrast, mutations in the BK turret region revealed three novel alpha-KTx sites, Q267, N268, and L272, which are distinct from alpha-KTx sites in the KV1 turret. The BK turret region shows no sequence identity with KV1 and MthK turrets of known 3D structure. To define the BK turret, we used secondary structure prediction methods that incorporated information from sequence alignment of 30 different Slo1 and Slo3 turret sequences from 5 of the 7 major animal phyla representing 27 different species. Results of this analysis suggest that the BK turret contains 18 amino acids and is defined by a cluster of strictly conserved polar residues at the N-terminal side of the turret. Thus, the BK turret is predicted to have six more amino acids than the KV1 turret. Results of this work suggest that BK and KV1 outer pores have a similar alpha-KTx domain in the loop preceding the inner helix, but that the BK turret comprises a unique alpha-KTx interaction surface that likely contributes to the exclusive selectivity of BK channels for alpha-KTx1.x toxins.
Potassium channel dysfunction underlies diseases such as epilepsy, hypertension, cardiac arrhythmias, and multiple sclerosis. Neurotoxins that selectively inhibit potassium channels, alpha-KTx, have provided invaluable information for dissecting the contribution of different potassium channels to neurotransmission, vasoconstriction, and lymphocyte proliferation. Thus, alpha-KTx specificity comprises an important first step in potassium channel-directed drug discovery for these diseases. Despite extensive functional and structural studies of alpha-KTx-potassium channel complexes, none have predicted the molecular basis of alpha-KTx specificity. Here we show that by minimizing the differences in binding free energy between selective and nonselective alpha-KTx we are able to identify all of the determinants of alpha-KTx specificity for calcium-activated versus voltage-dependent potassium channels. Because these determinants correspond to unique features of the two types of channels, they provide a way to develop more accurate models of alpha-KTx-potassium channel complexes that can be used to design novel selective alpha-KTx inhibitors.
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