Pe. Light et al., REGULATION OF ADENOSINE TRIPHOSPHATE-SENSITIVE POTASSIUM CHANNELS FROM RABBIT VENTRICULAR MYOCYTES BY PROTEIN-KINASE-C AND TYPE 2A PROTEIN PHOSPHATASE, Biochemistry, 34(21), 1995, pp. 7252-7257
Myocytes from rabbit ventricle were enzymatically dissociated and the
effects of protein kinase C (PKC) on the properties of single ATP-sens
itive (K-ATP) channels were studied using excised inside-out membrane
patches. Application of a purified, constitutively active form of PKC
(20 nM) to the intracellular surface of inside-out patches caused a 48
% +/- 4% (n = 18) reduction in the open probability of single K-ATP ch
annels. In the presence of the PKC inhibitors peptide PKC(19-31) or ch
elerythrine chloride, PKC had no effect on K-ATP channel properties. H
eat-inactivated PKC had no effect on channel properties. K-ATP channel
activity returned spontaneously after removal of PKC. However, applic
ation of okadaic acid, at a concentration (5 nM) appropriate for speci
fic inhibition of type 2A protein phosphatase (PP-2A), after removal o
f PKC, prevented spontaneous recovery of channel activity. Treatment w
ith purified PP-2A during the PKC-mediated inhibition of K-ATP channel
activity caused a partial or full restoration of activity. The Hill c
oefficient for ATP binding was reduced from 2.2 (control) to 1.2 in th
e presence of PKC. The apparent inhibition constant (K-i) for ATP was
unaffected by PKC [K-i(control) = 21 mu M; K-i(PKC) = 20 mu M]. PKC is
, therefore, capable of inhibiting cardiac K-ATP channel activity, and
the extent to which the channels remain phosphorylated appears to be
dependent on membrane-associated PP-2A activity. These enzymes may, th
erefore, be involved in signal transduction mechanisms which serve to
regulate the activity of cardiac K-ATP channels.