Temperature dependence of human ether-à-go-go-related gene K+ currents

JI Vandenberg, A Varghese, Y Lu… - … of Physiology-Cell …, 2006 - journals.physiology.org
JI Vandenberg, A Varghese, Y Lu, JA Bursill, MP Mahaut-Smith, CLH Huang
American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology, 2006journals.physiology.org
The function of voltage-gated human ether-à-go-go related gene (hERG) K+ channels is
critical for both normal cardiac repolarization and suppression of arrhythmias initiated by
premature excitation. These important functions are facilitated by their unusual kinetics that
combine relatively slow activation and deactivation with rapid and voltage-dependent
inactivation and recovery from inactivation. The thermodynamics of these unusual features
were examined by exploring the effect of temperature on the activation and inactivation …
The function of voltage-gated human ether-à-go-gorelated gene (hERG) K+ channels is critical for both normal cardiac repolarization and suppression of arrhythmias initiated by premature excitation. These important functions are facilitated by their unusual kinetics that combine relatively slow activation and deactivation with rapid and voltage-dependent inactivation and recovery from inactivation. The thermodynamics of these unusual features were examined by exploring the effect of temperature on the activation and inactivation processes of hERG channels expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Increased temperature shifted the voltage dependence of activation in the hyperpolarizing direction but that of inactivation in the depolarizing direction. This increases the relative occupancy of the open state and contributes to the marked temperature sensitivity of hERG current magnitude observed during action potential voltage clamps. The rates of activation and deactivation also increase with higher temperatures, but less markedly than do the rates of inactivation and recovery from inactivation. Our results also emphasize that one cannot extrapolate results obtained at room temperature to 37°C by using a single temperature scale factor.
American Physiological Society