The adenosine triphosphate-sensitive K
+ (K
ATP) channels are gated by several metabolites, whereas the gating mechanism remains unclear. Kir6.2, a pore-forming subunit
of the K
ATP channels, has all machineries for ligand binding and channel gating. In Kir6.2, His175 is the protonation site and Thr71
and Cys166 are involved in channel gating. Here, we show how individual subunits act in proton binding and channel gating
by selectively disrupting functional subunits using these residues. All homomeric dimers and tetramers showed pH sensitivity
similar to the monomeric channels. Concatenated construction of wild type with disrupted subunits revealed that none of these
residues had a dominant-negative effect on the proton-dependent channel gating. Subunit action in proton binding was almost
identical to that for channel gating involving Cys166, suggesting a one-to-one coupling from the C terminus to the M2 helix.
This was significantly different from the effect of T71Y heteromultimers, suggesting distinct contributions of M1 and M2 helices
to channel gating. Subunits underwent concerted rather than independent action. Two wild-type subunits appeared to act as
a functional dimer in both
cis and
trans configurations. The understanding of K
ATP channel gating by intracellular pH has a profound impact on cellular responses to metabolic stress as a significant drop
in intracellular pH is more frequently seen under a number of physiological and pathophysiological conditions than a sole
decrease in intracellular ATP levels.
Keywords Ion channel - Gating - Proton - Cooperativity - Ligand binding
Runping Wang, Junda Su contributed equally to this work.