Characterization of a voltage-gated K+ channel beta subunit expressed in human heart.

SK England, VN Uebele, H Shear… - Proceedings of the …, 1995 - National Acad Sciences
SK England, VN Uebele, H Shear, J Kodali, PB Bennett, MM Tamkun
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1995National Acad Sciences
Voltage-gated K+ channels are important modulators of the cardiac action potential.
However, the correlation of endogenous myocyte currents with K+ channels cloned from
human heart is complicated by the possibility that heterotetrameric alpha-subunit
combinations and function-altering beta subunits exist in native tissue. Therefore, a variety of
subunit interactions may generate cardiac K+ channel diversity. We report here the cloning
of a voltage-gated K+ channel beta subunit, hKv beta 3, from adult human left ventricle that …
Voltage-gated K+ channels are important modulators of the cardiac action potential. However, the correlation of endogenous myocyte currents with K+ channels cloned from human heart is complicated by the possibility that heterotetrameric alpha-subunit combinations and function-altering beta subunits exist in native tissue. Therefore, a variety of subunit interactions may generate cardiac K+ channel diversity. We report here the cloning of a voltage-gated K+ channel beta subunit, hKv beta 3, from adult human left ventricle that shows 84% and 74% amino acid sequence identity with the previously cloned rat Kv beta 1 and Kv beta 2 subunits, respectively. Together these three Kv beta subunits share > 82% identity in the carboxyl-terminal 329 aa and show low identity in the amino-terminal 79 aa. RNA analysis indicated that hKv beta 3 message is 2-fold more abundant in human ventricle than in atrium and is expressed in both healthy and diseased human hearts. Coinjection of hKv beta 3 with a human cardiac delayed rectifier, hKv1.5, in Xenopus oocytes increased inactivation, induced an 18-mV hyperpolarizing shift in the activation curve, and slowed deactivation (tau = 8.0 msec vs. 35.4 msec at -50 mV). hKv beta 3 was localized to human chromosome 3 by using a human/rodent cell hybrid mapping panel. These data confirm the presence of functionally important K+ channel beta subunits in human heart and indicate that beta-subunit composition must be accounted for when comparing cloned channels with endogenous cardiac currents.
National Acad Sciences