Merck
CN

A novel high-affinity inhibitor for inward-rectifier K+ channels.

Biochemistry (1998-09-28)
W Jin, Z Lu
ABSTRACT

Inward-rectifier K+ channels are a group of highly specialized K+ channels that accomplish a variety of important biological tasks. Inward-rectifier K+ channels differ from voltage-activated K+ channels not only functionally but also structurally. Each of the four subunits of the inward-rectifier K+ channels has only two instead of six transmembrane segments compared to the voltage-activated K+ channels. Thus far, there are no high-affinity ligands that directly target any inward-rectifier K+ channel. In the present study, we identified, purified, and synthesized a protein inhibitor of the inward-rectifier K+ channels. The inhibitor, called tertiapin, blocks a G-protein-gated channel (GIRK1/4) and the ROMK1 channel with nanomolar affinities, but a closely related channel, IRK1, is insensitive to tertiapin. Mutagenesis studies show that teritapin inhibits the channel by binding to the external end of the ion conduction pore.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Tertiapin-Q trifluoroacetate salt, ≥97% (HPLC)