Abstract
The large conductance calcium- and voltage-activated potassium channel (BKCa) is widely expressed at the plasma membrane. This channel is involved in a variety of fundamental cellular functions including excitability, smooth muscle contractility, and Ca2+ homeostasis, as well as in pathological situations like proinflammatory responses in rheumatoid arthritis, and cancer cell proliferation. Immunochemical, biochemical and pharmacological studies from over a decade have intermittently shown the presence of BKCa in intracellular organelles. To date, intracellular BKCa (iBKCa) has been localized in the mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, nucleus and Golgi apparatus but its functional role remains largely unknown except for the mitochondrial BKCa whose opening is thought to play a role in protecting the heart from ischaemic injury. In the nucleus, pharmacology suggests a role in regulating nuclear Ca2+, membrane potential and eNOS expression. Establishing the molecular correlates of iBKCa, the mechanisms defining iBKCa organelle-specific targeting, and their modulation are challenging questions. This review summarizes iBKCa channels, their possible functions, and efforts to identify their molecular correlates.
Harpreet Singh (left) is Research Assistant Professor at UCLA. He obtained his PhD from the University of Edinburgh with Dr Richard Ashley and Prof. Michael Cousin, and pursued his postdoctoral training at UCLA on intracellular BKCa channels with Prof. Toro. His research focuses on the cell biology of intracellular ion channels and their role in cardiac function. He developed an interest in superresolution microscopy while working with Prof. Stefani. In 2011, Harpreet was awarded the National Scientist Development Grant by the American Heart Association. Enrico Stefani (middle) obtained his MD from University of Buenos Aires and a PhD from University College, London. He is Distinguished Professor of Anesthesiology and Physiology at UCLA, and John Bartley Dillon Endowed Chair in Anesthesiology. With 254 publications, chapters and reviews in the biophysics field, he is now developing superresolution fluorescence microscopy that can reach a resolution of 20–40 nm in biological samples. His custom-built state-of-the-art microscope is shared with the academic community facilitating its reproduction (http://www.anes.ucla.edu/sted/index.html). Ligia Toro (right) received her PhD in Physiology and Biophysics from the Centro de Investigación y Estudios Avanzados del IPN, Mexico, and postdoctoral training at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA. She is Professor of Anesthesiology and of Molecular & Medical Pharmacology at UCLA, and has 126 publications, reviews and book chapters with the main focus on the biology of BKCa channels. Her current interests include mitochondrial BKCa channels in the healthy and failing heart, and BKCa channel interactions with angiotensin II receptors in the kidney.
Introduction
Ion channels are present at the plasma membrane and in all intracellular organelles including mitochondria (O’Rourke, 2007), nucleus (Mazzanti et al. 1990; Singh, 2010), Golgi complex (Thompson et al. 2002) and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (Osman et al. 2003; Ashrafpour et al. 2008). In intracellular organelles, they modulate the concentration of ions and play important roles in physiological events such as the voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) in apoptosis (Chacko et al. 2010), Ca2+-release-activated Ca2+ channels (CRACs) in Ca2+ signalling (Yeromin et al. 2006), and mitochondrial K+ channels in cardioprotection (Xu et al. 2002). In this review, we will particularly address the large conductance calcium- and voltage-activated K+ channel (BKCa) found intracellularly but will first discuss some general properties that may define its intracellular targeting.
BKCa channels are ubiquitously expressed at the plasma membrane of nervous and non-nervous cells including smooth muscle, sensory and epithelial cells where they couple membrane potential and intracellular calcium concentration. An interesting exception is the adult cardiomyocyte which lacks BKCa at the cell surface but expresses intracellular BKCa (iBKCa) particularly in the mitochondria.
The α-subunit of BKCa channel is encoded by a single gene Kcnma1 or Slo1 that undergoes extensive pre-mRNA splicing (Butler et al. 1993). Four α-subunits assemble to form a functional ion channel pore (Fig. 1). BKCa channels can be in complex with several modulatory subunits with one or two transmembrane domains (Fig. 1B) that greatly modify the channel kinetics and voltage/Ca2+ sensitivities. β1–β4 have two transmembrane domains and also affect channel pharmacology and its response to lipids (Knaus et al. 1994; Wallner et al. 1999; Xia et al. 1999; Brenner et al. 2000; Meera et al. 2000; Uebele et al. 2000; Vaithianathan et al. 2008), while leucine-rich repeat-containing proteins (LRRC) 26, LRRC38, LRRC52 and LRRC55 are single pass membrane proteins with LRRC26 being the most potent activator producing a negative shift of ∼140 mV of the voltage dependence of activation (Yan & Aldrich, 2010, 2012).
Increasing evidence suggests that splicing of BKCaα or β-subunits can govern the ‘normal’ traffic of the channel to the plasma membrane, consequently defining its subcellular distribution at a given time. BKCa variants originating from N- and C-terminal alternative splicing as well as C-terminal exon skipping are retained in the ER serving as repressors of BKCa channel expression at the plasmalemma (Zarei et al. 2004; Chen et al. 2005; Ma et al. 2007). On the other hand, β1– and β2-subunits can increase removal from the plasma membrane via endocytosis to a prelysosomal compartment (Toro et al. 2006; Zarei et al. 2007), while β4-subunits retain BKCa channels in the ER reducing its plasmalemmal localization (Shruti et al. 2012). Consistent with these findings, in hair cells, β1 and β4 expression reduce BKCa channels at the cell surface (Bai et al. 2011). Post-translational modifications can also affect the targeting of BKCa channels to the plasma membrane. Palmitoylation of intracellular loop 1 promotes cell surface expression (Jeffries et al. 2010), whereas internal myristoylation of loops 1 or 3 has the opposite effect (Alioua et al. 2011). Palmitoylation favours the exit of the channel from the ER and the trans-Golgi network (Tian et al. 2012) while myristoylation seems to favour endocytosis via clathrin-rich compartments (Alioua et al. 2011).
Most of the above studies have been performed in heterologous expression systems, which have been valuable in allowing the dissection of molecular mechanisms regulating the targeting of BKCa channels to the plasma membrane but only a few have been carried out in native cells. In astrocytes, transportation to the plasma membrane involves the microtubule network as fully assembled BKCa was found to be intracellularly associated with this cytoskeletal structure. When the Ca2+ concentration of the cytosol was elevated either pharmacologically or with thromboxane A2, iBKCa was translocated to the plasma membrane implying that microtubule-associated iBKCa was a readily available pool for astrocytes (Ou et al. 2009). In smooth muscle cells from pregnant mouse myometrium, iBKCa was found in the perinuclear region resulting in diminished plasma membrane expression. Possible explanations for this phenomenon are that retention in the perinuclear region and decreased plasma membrane expression is a mechanism preparing the uterine muscle for effective contractions during delivery (Eghbali et al. 2003), or that in addition, iBKCa within the perinuclear region serves an unknown functional role. In fibroblast-like synoviocytes from patients with rheumatoid arthritis, BKCa is observed at the plasma membrane but also in the nucleus (Hu et al. 2012) opening the intriguing question of whether BKCa localized to the nucleus may play a role in diseased states. In line with the view that iBKCa channels are also targeted to intracellular organelles for a specific function – unrelated to the overall regulation of cell surface expression – in neonatal cardiomyocytes, iBKCa has been visualized in the mitochondria (mitoBKCa) coincident with VDAC1 signals (Redel et al. 2008), and pharmacological evidence supports its role in protecting the heart from ischaemic insult as will be discussed in the following section.
Thus, it appears that there are at least three types of iBKCa channels present inside the cells: (1) a pool related to the normal traffic to the plasma membrane and its regulation, (2) a pool awaiting to be translocated to the plasma membrane, and (3) another set specifically targeted to organelles. In this regard, several groups have shown the functional activity of iBKCa channels in the mitochondria and nucleus (Table 1). Mechanisms that may define iBKCa localization could include splice variation, β-subunit association, and/or cell-specific mechanisms.
Table 1.
Organelle and method used | Cell type/ organ | Conductance and pharmacology | Recording solution [K+] (mm),[Ca2+] (μm) | V1/2 or open probability (Po) | EC50 for Ca2+ | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mitochondria Patch clamp (mitoplast) | Human glioma cell line (LN229) | 295 pS ChTx-sensitive | Pipette/bath 150 K+/150 K+ Nominal or no Ca2+/variable Ca2+ | V1/2=−33 ± 19 mV at 8.7 μm Ca2+; V1/2= 41 ± 23 mV at 1 μm Ca2+ | 6.9 μm at −20 mV | Siemen et al. (1999) |
Mitochondria Patch clamp (mitoplast) | Guinea-pig ventricular myocytes | 307 pS ChTx-sensitive | 150 K+/150 K+ 0.512 Ca2+/0.512 and 40 Ca2+ | Po∼0.9 at +60 mV and 0.512 μm Ca2+* | N/A | Xu et al. (2002) |
Mitochondria Patch clamp (mitoplast) | Rat ventricular myocytes | 270 pS Paxilline-sensitive | 140 K+/140 K+ 0.5 Ca2+/0.5 Ca2+ | Po= 0.0087 at +40 mV and 0.5 μm Ca2+ | N/A | Ohya et al. (2005) |
Mitochondria Patch clamp (mitoplast) | Human glioma cell line (LN229 and LN405) | 276 pS ChTx-sensitive | 150 K+/150 K+ 0 Ca2+/100–400 Ca2+ | V1/2∼−42 mV at 200 μm Ca2+* | N/A | Gu et al. (2007) |
Mitochondria Patch clamp (mitoplast) | Rat astrocytes | 295–296 pS IbTx-sensitive; Bax-sensitive | 150 K+/150 K+ 200 Ca2+/200 Ca2+ | V1/2∼−50 mV at 200 μm Ca2+* | N/A | Cheng et al. (2008, 2011) |
Mitochondria Lipid bilayers | Rat whole brain | 265 pS ChTx sensitive | (cis/trans) 50 K+/450 K+ 300–500 Ca2+/300–500 Ca2+ | Po= 0.50 at 0 Ca2+ Po= 0.77 at +70 mV and 300 μm Ca2+ | N/A | Skalska et al. (2009) |
Mitochondria Lipid bilayers | Rat whole brain | 211 pS IbTx-, 4-AP-sensitive; ChTx-insensitive | 200 K+/50 K+‘Contaminant’ Ca2+ | Po= 0.9 ± 0.01 at +40 mV V1/2= 11 ± 1 mV | N/A | Fahanik-Babaei et al. (2011a) |
Mitochondria Lipid bilayers | Rat whole brain | 565 pS ChTx-, IbTx-, 4-AP-sensitive | 200 K+/50 K+ 100 Ca2+/100 Ca2+ 10 Ca2+/10 Ca2+‘Ca2+-free’/‘Ca2+-free’ | At 100 μm Ca2+, Po= 0.9 ± 0.05 at −40 to +40 mV At 0 Ca2+, Po= 0.8 at +20 mV and Po= 0.07 at −40 mV | N/A | Fahanik-Babaei et al. (2011b) |
Nucleus Patch clamp | Rat pancreatic acinar cells | 200 pS | Pipette/bath 148 K+/148 K+ 200 Ca2+/0.1, 200 Ca2+ | Po=∼0.5 at +40 mV* at 200 μm Ca2+ | N/A | Maruyama et al. (1995) |
Calculated from published figure. Abbreviations: V1/2, half-activation potential or potential where an open probability of 0.5 is achieved; EC50, concentration of half-maximal effect; ChTx, charybdotoxin; IbTx, iberiotoxin; 4-AP, 4-aminopyridine; N/A, not available.
Mitochondrial BKCa channels (mitoBKCa)
mitoBKCa channels were first identified by patch clamping of mitoplasts prepared from human glioma cells LN229 (Siemen et al. 1999) and later they were shown by several groups to be involved in cardioprotection against ischaemic injury by using pharmacological agents to open and block the channel. Preconditioning hearts with BKCa openers like NS1619 or NS11021 reduced myocardial infarction or heart function and these beneficial effects could be antagonized by coadministration with paxilline, a commonly used BKCa inhibitor (Xu et al. 2002; Wang et al. 2004; Stowe et al. 2006; Bentzen et al. 2009, 2010). Also, stimulating mitoBKCa activity with β-oestradiol resulted in decreased cardiomyocyte death due to ischaemic insult (Ohya et al. 2005). mitoBKCa has also been proposed to mediate the cardioprotective effects of the anaesthetic desflurane, the peptide adrenomedullin, and the tumour necrosis factor-α (Gao et al. 2005; Nishida et al. 2008; Redel et al. 2008). However, recent studies using BKCa knockout (Slo1−/− or Kcnma1−/−) mice have challenged the role of mitoBKCa in isoflurane-mediated cardioprotection from ischaemia/reperfusion injury, and proposed a role for a large conductance K+ channel that is activated by Na+ (Slo2). Importantly, the reduction in infarct size by isoflurane preconditioning was abolished by paxilline in wild-type as well as in Slo1−/− hearts (Wojtovich et al. 2011) raising serious concerns about the usage of this drug as a specific blocker of BKCa. It would be interesting to test whether different anaesthetics use distinct cardioprotective pathways.
Mechanisms triggered by the putative opening of mitoBKCa by NS1619 include regulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and calcium retention capacity (CRC). In isolated mitochondria from brain and heart, mitoBKCa is known to reduce ROS production on activation with NS1619 and CGS7184 (Heinen et al. 2007; Kulawiak et al. 2008), while in brain mitochondria the opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) by Ca2+ (indirectly measured as mitochondrial depolarization in response to Ca2+ pulses) is accelerated by blocking mitoBKCa with iberiotoxin (Cheng et al. 2008). Moreover, in isolated hearts, preconditioning with NS1619 reduces ROS and mitochondrial Ca2+ (Stowe et al. 2006). Thus, it is tempting to hypothesize that reduced mitoBKCa channel activity favours the opening of mPTP and vice versa. Consistent with this idea, the putative inhibition of mitoBKCa with paxilline, induced the release of cytochrome c, a signature of mPTP opening and initiation of apoptosis. That inhibition of mitoBKCa favours mPTP opening and apoptosis is further substantiated by the fact that the proapoptopic protein Bax can directly inhibit mitoBKCa single channel activity recorded in astrocyte mitoplasts (Cheng et al. 2011). Conversely, the opening of mitoBKCa with NS11021 improves cardiac mitochondria function by enhancing K+ uptake without a significant change in mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm) and improving its energetic performance (Aon et al. 2010).
In addition to pharmacological evidence, immunochemistry and immunogold electron microscopy have also placed BKCa in the mitochondria. Western blot analysis using antibodies raised against the C-terminus of BKCa channel showed a signal at ∼55 kDa (Xu et al. 2002) or at ∼125 kDa (Shi et al. 2007) in isolated cardiac mitochondria. Double immunostaining and confocal microscopy showed that in the cerebellum, neuronal BKCa signals coincide with signals of mitochondrial proteins, OP4–1, ANT, IMM, the heat shock protein 60 (hsp60) and TIM23 (Douglas et al. 2006). mitoBKCa signals have also been reported in rat neonatal cardiomyocytes together with VDAC1 (Redel et al. 2008), and data from our lab shows that it colocalizes with mitotracker in the rat embryonic heart cell line H9c2 (Fig. 2). Note that in this embryonic cell line, the majority of BKCa signals are localized to mitochondria and fewer but clear signals are also observed at the cell periphery.
Efforts to identify the molecular correlate of mitoBKCa have been carried out by several groups but with limited success. A full length mRNA was cloned from mouse cardiomyocytes but the protein failed to localize to the mitochondria (Ko et al. 2009). Since BKCa is coded by a single gene, it is possible that a splice variant is responsible for its mitochondrial localization. In fact, in mouse cochlea where BKCa was found in the mitochondria (in addition to the cytoplasm and plasma membrane), a BKCa isoform containing four splice sequences along the C-terminus was cloned (IYF, 27 amino acids, ATRMTRMGQ, which is upstream of 50 C-terminal amino acids ending in VEDEC) (GenBank accession no. FJ872117). This cochlea clone when expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells was observed in mitochondria with some expression at the plasma membrane (Kathiresan et al. 2009). However, it is not clear whether any of these splice inserts can target BKCa to the mitochondria. In silico analysis of the cochlea variant using MitoProt (Claros & Vincens, 1996) indicate a probability of 0.0175 for mitochondrial targeting. However, this engine searches for classical N-terminal mitochondrial signal peptides (‘presequences’). It is now known that mitochondrial targeted proteins may possess internal signals at multiple sites within the protein including the C-terminus and that inner membrane proteins may contain an internal ‘presequence-like’ signal. Scrutinizing the role of each of the cochlea BKCa splice sequences in their ability to target mitoBKCa to the mitochondria is an open topic of research.
From the functional point of view, mitoBKCa conductance ranges from ∼211 pS to 565 pS depending on the biological system and experimental conditions (Table 1). Typically mitoBKCa is inhibited by blockers iberiotoxin, charybdotoxin and paxilline. However, in brain mitochondrial inner membranes, mitoBKCa with distinct pharmacological profiles have been detected after reconstitution into lipid bilayers, a voltage-dependent 211 pS channel that is insensitive to charybdotoxin but sensitive to iberiotoxin, and a 565 pS channel that is sensitive to both toxins. Notably, both conductances were sensitive to 10 mm 4-aminopyridine (Fahanik-Babaei et al. 2011a,b), a drug that does not affect cloned BKCa channels (Wallner et al. 1995). At a high Ca2+ concentration (100 μm Ca2+), the open probability of the channel is maintained near ∼0.9 from −40 to +40 mV; however, under Ca2+-free solutions the voltage dependency of the channel becomes evident as the channel open probability changes from 0.8 at 0 mV to 0.07 at −40 mV. It is known that splice variation as well as β-subunits can confer different voltage/Ca2+ sensitivities to the BKCa channel. For example, in the presence of the β1-subunit and Ca2+ near 25 μm, the open probability of the channel is around 0.9 from −50 mV onwards with a half-activation potential, V1/2, around −100 mV (Meera et al. 1996). Also, β-subunits can change BKCa pharmacology, for example the β4-subunit that makes BKCa channels resistant to iberiotoxin (Meera et al. 2000). These factors could explain the variability in the single channel properties of the reported mitoBKCa. Whether mitoBKCa isoforms with different pore properties, pharmacology and voltage sensitivities originate from splice variation and/or association with known or unknown β-subunits are relevant problems to solve.
An important question is how does K+ flux via mitoBKCa affect mitochondrial function? In other words what is the physiological role of mitoBKCa? Attempts to answer this question have been carried out with BKCa openers like NS1619 and the higher affinity analogue NS11021 using isolated cardiac mitochondria. Low doses of NS11021 (e.g. 50 nm) increase charybdotoxin-sensitive K+ influx and swelling in the presence of permeable anions like acetate (passively diffused) and dihydrogen phosphate (carrier-mediated transport) but with very limited change (5–10 mV) in mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm). Moreover, this K+ influx is accompanied by a better mitochondrial respiratory control due to a decrease in state 4 respiration without a change in state 3 respiration (Aon et al. 2010). These properties may explain how the specific opening of mitoBKCa may promote cardioprotection. Paradoxically, micromolar concentrations of NS11021 that protect the heart from ischemia and reperfusion (Bentzen et al. 2009) cause non-specific deleterious effects on mitochondria such as decreased respiratory control that is insensitive to charybdotoxin and a large drop in membrane potential of near 30 mV even in the absence of K+ (Aon et al. 2010). Similarly, concentrations of NS1619 that cause cardioprotection (∼10 μm) (Shi et al. 2007) have been reported to decrease light scattering in K+-free medium accompanied by respiration uncoupling in liver mitochondria (Bednarczyk et al. 2008). One possible explanation is that in whole heart experiments the effective concentration of NS1619 is actually lower due to limited diffusion of the drug to its site of action, and thus, it promotes cardioprotection instead of mitochondrial damage and heart stress. Experiments using BKCa knockout animals should shed some light on these questions.
BKCa channels in the nucleus
The nuclear genome and the molecular machinery required for DNA replication as well as transcription are present in the nucleus, which is sheathed by a nuclear envelope. There are two membranes in the nuclear envelope: the inner nuclear membrane (INM) interacting with the nuclear skeleton, and the outer nuclear membrane (ONM), continuous with the ER and also studded with ribosomes. The perinuclear space between ONM and in INM is continuous with the ER lumen, so it is likely to be rich in Ca2+ ions. Proteins made in the ER and in the perinuclear space are transported to the lumen of ER for further trafficking in the cell. INM and ONM fuse together to form large nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) which allow bidirectional flow of large molecules. Several fundamental processes such as cell replication and differentiation, ageing, regeneration, cell cycles, and enzyme activity are governed by nuclear ionic concentrations.
K+ channels with conductances of 55 pS and 200 pS were first recorded on the nuclear envelope from murine zygotes (Mazzanti et al. 1990). BKCa currents were recorded later in the ONM of rat pancreatic acinar cells (Maruyama et al. 1995) and observed with immunocytochemistry in chick retinal nuclei (Yamashita et al. 2006), the perinuclear region of isolated nuclei of brain endothelial cells (Gobeil et al. 2002), and in nuclei of fibroblast-like synoviocytes from patients with rheumatoid arthritis (Hu et al. 2012). Consistent with the electrophysiological recordings, analysis of the plasma membrane BKCa constitutive sequence by ‘Nucleo’, a nuclear protein localization predictor (Hawkins et al. 2007), yielded a score of 0.72 (1 being the perfect signal), while NucPred gave a score of 0.65 (Brameier et al. 2007). These in silico analyses suggest that BKCa might carry an intrinsic nuclear localization signal, which can target it to the nuclear membrane. However, since the same BKCa gene is present in all cells, there must be additional mechanisms targeting it to the nucleus that are cell-type specific or cell physiological-status specific.
Experiments in the nuclei of brain endothelial cells utilizing 100 nm NS1619 as BKCa opener and 100 nm iberiotoxin as a specific channel blocker indicate that nuclear iBKCa is coupled to the activity of perinuclear prostaglandin receptors (EP3) regulating nuclear Ca2+, membrane potential and eNOS expression. Specifically in isolated nuclei, Ca2+ transients, K+-dependent membrane potential changes and eNOS transcript expression induced by the activation of EP3 agonist M&B28767 were all abolished by iberiotoxin; while NS1619 produced Ca2+ transients and changes in membrane potential in 100 mm K+ but not in 1 mm K+ that were iberiotoxin sensitive. Further, the EP3 agonist-induced increase of eNOS expression was completely abolished by iberiotoxin mimicking the effect of Ca2+ chelators (Gobeil et al. 2002). Whether nuclear voltage-dependent R-type Ca2+ channels (Bkaily et al. 2012) are functionally coupled to iBKCa, whether iBKCa plays a role in regulating nuclear Ca2+ transients that occur in other cell types such as contracting chick embryonic cardiomyocytes (Bkaily et al. 2009), or what is the orientation and molecular nature of iBKCa in the nucleus, are open questions.
iBKCa channels in other organelles
Endoplasmic reticulum
Proteins present in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) are involved in protein synthesis, protein processing, protein folding, and ionic homeostasis. Enzymes working in protein synthesis and processing also require ionic homeostasis which is maintained by ion channels and transporters. Disruption in homeostasis results in accumulation of misfolded or unfolded proteins in the ER lumen. This results in ER stress which can be restored by the unfolded protein response but when this mechanism fails to remove unfolded or misfolded proteins it can result in apoptosis (Kaufman, 1999; Jing et al. 2012).
Similar to other proteins encoded by nuclear DNA, BKCa channels are also synthesized in the ER. Whether the iBKCa channel is active in the ER is not yet established. However, the α-subunit protein can be retained in the ER if it includes splice sequences SV1 (Zarei et al. 2001, 2004) or DEC (Ma et al. 2007). SV1 contains the ER retention motif CVLF at its first intracellular loop. This motif found in rat myometrium retains/retrieves the channel in/to the ER and also prevents BKCa surface expression. The surface expression of the protein is controlled by multiple signals in the C-terminus including an acidic cluster-like motif present in the RCK1 and RCK2 linker region DDXXDXXXI that accelerates exit from the ER (Chen et al. 2010) as well as six amino acids DLIFCL located near the C-terminal end (Kwon & Guggino, 2004) (Fig. 1). However, the presence of these sequences cannot override the ER-retention signal CVLF (Zarei et al. 2004). Interestingly, a human splice variant (hSloΔ579–664) where the DDXXDXXXI motif is excluded is expressed in multiple tissues and in heterologous expression fails to form a functional ion channel at the surface and localizes the channel protein to the ER. These data strongly support the idea that one molecular mechanism defining iBKCa fate and localization to the ER (or any other organelle) is splice variation. Another mechanism contributing to BKCa localization to the ER is the presence of the β4-subunit that possesses the ER retention signal KKRKFS at its C-terminus (Shruti et al. 2012). Further work is needed to determine whether iBKCa localized to the ER plays a functional role.
Golgi apparatus
During protein synthesis, proteins refold and pass through the Golgi apparatus where they undergo post-translational modifications. Proteins and lipids are sorted as they exit the Golgi apparatus and are sent to their final destinations. The Golgi apparatus has an acidic environment inside the lumen which increases from the cis (entry face) to the trans (exit face) (Anderson & Pathak, 1985); the pH in the Golgi cisternae has been estimated at 6.45 and in the trans-Golgi at 5.91–5.95 (Demaurex et al. 1998; Paroutis et al. 2004). The acidic environment inside the Golgi apparatus is maintained by the vacuolar-type H+-ATPase (V-ATPase), and is essential for post-translational modifications of proteins and disruption in pH results in improperly glycosylated and unsorted proteins (Maeda & Kinoshita, 2010).
Although the V-ATPase is electrogenic in nature and would generate a positive potential inside the Golgi (Paroutis et al. 2004), experiments making the Golgi membrane mainly permeable to K+ (with valinomycin) revealed that the Golgi membrane potential must be near zero under physiological conditions. This conclusion was reached after finding that valinomycin failed to change Golgi pH indicating that the Golgi membrane potential was already near the potential expected by clamping the potential with valinomycin (equilibrium potential, EK=−59log[K+]cytosol/[K+]Golgi=−59log140/107 =−6.9 mV) (Schapiro & Grinstein, 2000). Thus, to neutralize the membrane potential generated by the V-ATPase, H+ or K+ ions would need to flow out of the lumen or Cl− ions to flow into the lumen (Paroutis et al. 2004). In fact, several Cl− channels have been shown to be active in the Golgi apparatus (Nordeen et al. 2000; Thompson et al. 2002; Maeda et al. 2008) but so far no functional K+ channel has been identified even though K+ channels pass through the Golgi apparatus en route to the plasma membrane.
BKCa also traffics to the plasma membrane via the cis- and trans-Golgi networks where it may undergo palmitoylation/depalmitoylation cycles with palmitoylation favouring forward traffic to the plasma membrane of HEK293 cells (Tian et al. 2012). In native systems, accumulation of iBKCa in perinuclear organelles (that might include the Golgi apparatus) can be observed in myometrial cells of pregnant mouse (Eghbali et al. 2003) where the channel may be localized until it is needed at the plasma membrane or else playing an unknown physiological role. It is known that lowering pH can block BKCa channel unitary currents (Brelidze & Magleby, 2004) and this could indicate that if iBKCa channels are present in the Golgi, they should be most active at the trans-Golgi as compared to the cis-Golgi.
Role of iBKCa channels
In neurons, plasma membrane BKCa channels act as Ca2+ sensors participating in the regulation of cellular excitability and neurotransmitter release (Gribkoff et al. 2001). Similarly, we predict that iBKCa channels could also be working as Ca2+ sensors in intracellular organelles. Possibilities for iBKCa channels to get activated are either via an increase in Ca2+ ion concentration or by a positive shift in the membrane potential. Additionally and resembling plasma membrane channels, iBKCa could also be modulated by β-subunits (Piwonska et al. 2008) or G-protein-coupled receptors such as angiotensin II type 2 receptors which are present in mitochondria (Abadir et al. 2011) or the angiotensin II type 1 receptor present in nuclear membranes (Bkaily et al. 2012).
BKCa channels have a large conductance and can ideally transport ∼108 ions per second (assuming an open probability of 1, and 25 pA at 100 mV for a 250 pS channel). The electrochemical driving force for ion movement across membranes varies with intracellular organelles; according to the calculated Gibbs free energy it is high in mitochondria (see legend of Fig. 3). The K+ concentration in the nucleus is higher than in the cytoplasm but in all other organelles either it is equal (ER), or lower (mitochondria, Golgi) (Fig. 3). The flow of K+ via potassium channels like iBKCa is essential to maintain this ionic homeostasis for cellular functions. Since the opening of iBKCa can result in a significant change in [K+] within organelles, in organelles with a sizeable driving force for K+ they would be expected to be present in low abundance and/or not to fully open upon activation so organelle ionic homeostasis is not greatly disturbed during channel activation. On the other hand, if these channels were highly expressed and/or fully opened upon activation, to avoid damage they would need to be tightly modulated to bring them back to baseline or organelles would need to have alternative mechanisms to regulate their ionic homeostasis. For example in mitochondria, if BKCa were fully activated, K+ influx could depolarize its membrane potential unless the channel open probability is tightly regulated along with coupling to other ions. In fact, a recent report indicates that the opening of BKCa does not significantly modify mitochondrial membrane potential but improves mitochondria respiratory function depending on anion usage (KH2PO4 vs. KCl) (Aon et al. 2010). A more complete understanding of the direct relationship between iBKCa and the modulation of membrane potential is required. In addition, iBKCa could be playing a role as a signalling molecule. It is known that BKCa interacts directly or indirectly with other proteins which can either affect the channel activity or participate in cell signalling (Lu et al. 2006). In line with this view, several mitochondrial, nuclear, ER, Golgi, ribosomal and peroxisomal-related proteins were also reported to be interacting with BKCa (Kathiresan et al. 2009). These intracellular proteins associated with iBKCa channels may be participating in organelle signalling much like those associated with its membrane counterpart.
Concluding remarks
iBKCa channels have been functionally and pharmacologically characterized by several independent groups. The variability in electrophysiological properties (Table 1) of iBKCa indicates that these channels are either splice variant isoforms and/or they are associated with modulatory subunits which can alter their biophysical properties. The presence of BKCa channels in the mitochondria is best established amongst the iBKCa channels. They are involved in physiological cellular functions such as cardioprotection. If the protection mechanism against ischaemic injury is via the opening of mitoBKCa, it could also serve as a promising pharmacological target for transplant medicine where various transplantable organs are continuously susceptible to ischaemic injury. The main challenge now is to define the molecular identity of these iBKCa channels, and their regulation and functional roles in distinct cell types.
Acknowledgments
This work was supported by NIH grants HL107418, HL096740 (L.T., E.S.) and HL088640 (E.S.), and an American Heart Association National Scientist Development Grant 11SDG7230059 (H.S.). The authors thank Dr Riccardo Olcese for helpful discussion.
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