RESUMO
Voltage-gated ion channels allow ion flux across biological membranes in response to changes in the membrane potential. HCNL1 is a recently discovered voltage-gated ion channel that selectively conducts protons through its voltage-sensing domain (VSD), reminiscent of the well-studied depolarization-activated Hv1 proton channel. However, HCNL1 is activated by hyperpolarization, allowing the influx of protons, which leads to an intracellular acidification in zebrafish sperm. Zinc ions (Zn2+) are important cofactors in many proteins and essential for sperm physiology. Proton channels such as Hv1 and Otopetrin1 are inhibited by Zn2+. We investigated the effect of Zn2+ on heterologously expressed HCNL1 channels using electrophysiological and fluorometric techniques. Extracellular Zn2+ inhibits HCNL1 currents with an apparent half-maximal inhibition (IC50) of 26 µM. Zn2+ slows voltage-dependent current kinetics, shifts the voltage-dependent activation to more negative potentials, and alters hyperpolarization-induced conformational changes of the voltage sensor. Our data suggest that extracellular Zn2+ inhibits HCNL1 currents by multiple mechanisms, including modulation of channel gating. Two histidine residues located at the extracellular side of the VSD might weakly contribute to Zn2+ coordination: mutants with either histidine replaced with alanine show modest shifts of the IC50 values to higher concentrations. Interestingly, Zn2+ inhibits HCNL1 at even lower concentrations from the intracellular side (IC50 ≈ 0.5 µM). A histidine residue at the intracellular end of S1 (position 50) is important for Zn2+ binding: much higher Zn2+ concentrations are required to inhibit the mutant HCNL1-H50A (IC50 ≈ 106 µM). We anticipate that Zn2+ will be a useful ion to study the structure-function relationship of HCNL1 as well as the physiological role of HCNL1 in zebrafish sperm.
RESUMO
Popeye domain containing (POPDC) proteins are predominantly expressed in the heart and skeletal muscle, modulating the K2P potassium channel TREK-1 in a cAMP-dependent manner. POPDC1 and POPDC2 variants cause cardiac conduction disorders with or without muscular dystrophy. Searching for POPDC2-modulated ion channels using a functional co-expression screen in Xenopus oocytes, we found POPDC proteins to modulate the cardiac sodium channel Nav1.5. POPDC proteins downregulate Nav1.5 currents in a cAMP-dependent manner by reducing the surface expression of the channel. POPDC2 and Nav1.5 are both expressed in different regions of the murine heart and consistently POPDC2 co-immunoprecipitates with Nav1.5 from native cardiac tissue. Strikingly, the knock-down of popdc2 in embryonic zebrafish caused an increased upstroke velocity and overshoot of cardiac action potentials. The POPDC modulation of Nav1.5 provides a new mechanism to regulate cardiac sodium channel densities under sympathetic stimulation, which is likely to have a functional impact on cardiac physiology and inherited arrhythmias.