CLONING, TISSUE EXPRESSION, AND CHROMOSOMAL LOCALIZATION OF SUR2, THEPUTATIVE DRUG-BINDING SUBUNIT OF CARDIAC, SKELETAL-MUSCLE, AND VASCULAR K-ATP CHANNELS

Citation
Wa. Chutkow et al., CLONING, TISSUE EXPRESSION, AND CHROMOSOMAL LOCALIZATION OF SUR2, THEPUTATIVE DRUG-BINDING SUBUNIT OF CARDIAC, SKELETAL-MUSCLE, AND VASCULAR K-ATP CHANNELS, Diabetes, 45(10), 1996, pp. 1439-1445
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Endocrynology & Metabolism","Medicine, General & Internal
Journal title
ISSN journal
00121797
Volume
45
Issue
10
Year of publication
1996
Pages
1439 - 1445
Database
ISI
SICI code
0012-1797(1996)45:10<1439:CTEACL>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
ATP-sensitive inwardly rectifying potassium channels are expressed in a variety of tissues, including heart, skeletal, and smooth muscle, an d pancreatic beta-cens. Physiological and pharmacological studies sugg est the presence of distinct K-ATP channels in these tissues. Recently , the K-ATP channel of beta-cens has been reconstituted in functional form by coexpression of SUR, the sulfonylurea-binding protein, and the inwardly rectifying K+ channel subunit, K1R6.2. In this article, we d escribe the isolation of cDNAs encoding SUR-like proteins from mouse, SUR2A and SUR2B. Northern blotting showed that the highest expression of the SURE isoforms is in the heart and skeletal muscle, with lower l evels in all other tissues. By reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, SUR2B is ubiquitously expressed, while the apparently altern atively spliced variant, SUR2A, is expressed exclusively in heart. In situ hybridization shows that the SUR2 isoforms are expressed in the p arenchyma of the heart and skeletal muscle and in the vascular structu res of other tissues. Human SURE was localized to chromosome 12, p12.1 by fluorescent in situ hybridization. The structure of the predicted protein and expression pattern of SUR2 suggests that it is the drug-bi nding channel-modulating subunit of the extrapancreatic K-ATP channel. Differences in sequence between SUR and between SUR2 isoforms may und erlie the tissue-specific pharmacology of the K-ATP channel.