Identification and characterisation of functional Kir6.1‐containing ATP‐sensitive potassium channels in the cardiac ventricular sarcolemmal membrane

Background and Purpose The canonical Kir6.2/SUR2A ventricular KATP channel is highly ATP‐sensitive and remains closed under normal physiological conditions. These channels activate only when prolonged metabolic compromise causes significant ATP depletion and then shortens the action potential to red...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inBritish journal of pharmacology Vol. 181; no. 18; pp. 3380 - 3400
Main Authors Brennan, Sean, Chen, Shen, Makwana, Samir, Esposito, Simona, McGuinness, Lauren R., Alnaimi, Abrar I. M., Sims, Mark W., Patel, Manish, Aziz, Qadeer, Ojake, Leona, Roberts, James A., Sharma, Parveen, Lodwick, David, Tinker, Andrew, Barrett‐Jolley, Richard, Dart, Caroline, Rainbow, Richard D.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.09.2024
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Background and Purpose The canonical Kir6.2/SUR2A ventricular KATP channel is highly ATP‐sensitive and remains closed under normal physiological conditions. These channels activate only when prolonged metabolic compromise causes significant ATP depletion and then shortens the action potential to reduce contractile activity. Pharmacological activation of KATP channels is cardioprotective, but physiologically, it is difficult to understand how these channels protect the heart if they only open under extreme metabolic stress. The presence of a second KATP channel population could help explain this. Here, we characterise the biophysical and pharmacological behaviours of a constitutively active Kir6.1‐containing KATP channel in ventricular cardiomyocytes. Experimental Approach Patch‐clamp recordings from rat ventricular myocytes in combination with well‐defined pharmacological modulators was used to characterise these newly identified K+ channels. Action potential recording, calcium (Fluo‐4) fluorescence measurements and video edge detection of contractile function were used to assess functional consequences of channel modulation. Key Results Our data show a ventricular K+ conductance whose biophysical characteristics and response to pharmacological modulation were consistent with Kir6.1‐containing channels. These Kir6.1‐containing channels lack the ATP‐sensitivity of the canonical channels and are constitutively active. Conclusion and Implications We conclude there are two functionally distinct populations of ventricular KATP channels: constitutively active Kir6.1‐containing channels that play an important role in fine‐tuning the action potential and Kir6.2/SUR2A channels that activate with prolonged ischaemia to impart late‐stage protection against catastrophic ATP depletion. Further research is required to determine whether Kir6.1 is an overlooked target in Comprehensive in vitro Proarrhythmia Assay (CiPA) cardiac safety screens.
Bibliography:Sean Brennan and Shen Chen contributed equally to this work.
ISSN:0007-1188
1476-5381
DOI:10.1111/bph.16390