Publication | Open Access
Intracellular traffic of the K<sup>+</sup> channels TASK‐1 and TASK‐3: role of N‐ and C‐terminal sorting signals and interaction with 14‐3‐3 proteins
78
Citations
49
References
2009
Year
Protein SecretionC‐terminal Sorting SignalsIntracellular TrafficSurface Membrane14-3-3 ProteinsNeurotransmissionCellular PhysiologySocial SciencesHyperpolarization (Biology)Channel ProteinsPotassium CurrentsMolecular SortingIntercellular CommunicationSecretory PathwayCell SignalingMolecular PhysiologyMolecular NeuroscienceIon ChannelsCell BiologySignal TransductionPhysiologyNeuroscienceMolecular NeurobiologyCellular BiochemistryMedicine
The two-pore-domain potassium channels TASK-1 (KCNK3) and TASK-3 (KCNK9) modulate the electrical activity of neurons and many other cell types. We expressed TASK-1, TASK-3 and related reporter constructs in Xenopus oocytes, mammalian cell lines and various yeast strains to study the mechanisms controlling their transport to the surface membrane and the role of 14-3-3 proteins. We measured potassium currents with the voltage-clamp technique and fused N- and C-terminal fragments of the channels to various reporter proteins to study changes in subcellular localisation and surface expression. Mutational analysis showed that binding of 14-3-3 proteins to the extreme C-terminus of TASK-1 and TASK-3 masks a tri-basic motif, KRR, which differs in several important aspects from canonical arginine-based (RxR) or lysine-based (KKxx) retention signals. Pulldown experiments with GST fusion proteins showed that the KRR motif in the C-terminus of TASK-3 channels was able to bind to COPI coatomer. Disabling the binding of 14-3-3, which exposes the KRR motif, caused localisation of the GFP-tagged channel protein mainly to the Golgi complex. TASK-1 and TASK-3 also possess a di-basic N-terminal retention signal, KR, whose function was found to be independent of the binding of 14-3-3. Suppression of channel surface expression with dominant-negative channel mutants revealed that interaction with 14-3-3 has no significant effect on the dimeric assembly of the channels. Our results give a comprehensive description of the mechanisms by which 14-3-3 proteins, together with N- and C-terminal sorting signals, control the intracellular traffic of TASK-1 and TASK-3.
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