Large conductance Ca²+-activated potassium channels localisation and dynamics in living cells
Abstract
Large conductance Ca2+-activated K+
(BK) channels are expressed in a wide range of
human tissues such as brain, thymus, muscle, adrenal gland, heart, lung or pancreas,
where they regulate insulin secretion by closing N-type calcium channels. The study of
BK channels activity, localisation and dynamics, would be useful not only for the
achievement of a further understanding of BK channels properties in physiological
conditions, but also in disease. Indeed, BK channel activity has been reported to be
disrupted in a wide range of disorders, such as diabetes. Therefore, our study aims to
determine whether components of the secretory machinery and BK-channels are
localised in close proximity at the plasma membrane, as well as how the secretory
machinery influences both BK channel localisation and activity. To carry out these
experiments I was using super-resolution microscopy and electrophysiology.
Previous electrophysiological studies have suggested that BK channels and components
of secretory machinery must be in close proximity in the plasma membrane. Thus, we
observed the dynamics and distribution of BK channels at the level of single molecules
in cell membranes using super-resolution microscopy. We observed BK channel cluster
organization of ~120 nm in diameter in cells expressing BKα-EGFP using gated-stimulated emission depletion (g-STED) microscopy. Moreover, to further examine
these clusters we expressed a cDNA construct that encodes the BKα fused to a
photoactivatable fluorescent protein mutant of mCherry (PAmCherry) and localised
single channel molecules using photoactivatable localisation microscopy (PALM),
which can localise where each single particle is within each cluster, and the distance
respect to their closest secretory vesicles using Nearest Neighbour analysis. Further
experiments in live cells using single particle tracking PALM (sptPALM) enabled us to
track these single molecules over time showing different speeds of BK channels with
and without the presence of the secretory machinery components. Additionally, the
electrophysiological experiments with cells co-expressing BK channels and components
of the secretory machinery suggest that BK channels current is not affected in the
presence of these proteins. Moreover, to study the proximity of BK channels with the
secretory machinery cells were transfected with our BKα-EGFP construct and Syntaxin-1A-mCherry, a plasma membrane protein involved in vesicle fusion, and analysed using
Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) and Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging
(FLIM). Results suggested that both BKα and Syntaxin-1A interact in the plasma
membrane.