Scott K. Adney
Virginia Commonwealth University
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Featured researches published by Scott K. Adney.
Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2010
Diomedes E. Logothetis; Vasileios I. Petrou; Scott K. Adney; Rahul Mahajan
The plasma membrane phosphoinositide phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) controls the activity of most ion channels tested thus far through direct electrostatic interactions. Mutations in channel proteins that change their apparent affinity to PIP2 can lead to channelopathies. Given the fundamental role that membrane phosphoinositides play in regulating channel activity, it is surprising that only a small number of channelopathies have been linked to phosphoinositides. This review proposes that for channels whose activity is PIP2-dependent and for which mutations can lead to channelopathies, the possibility that the mutations alter channel-PIP2 interactions ought to be tested. Similarly, diseases that are linked to disorders of the phosphoinositide pathway result in altered PIP2 levels. In such cases, it is proposed that the possibility for a concomitant dysregulation of channel activity also ought to be tested. The ever-growing list of ion channels whose activity depends on interactions with PIP2 promises to provide a mechanism by which defects on either the channel protein or the phosphoinositide levels can lead to disease.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Aldo A. Rodríguez-Menchaca; Scott K. Adney; Qiong Yao Tang; Xuan Yu Meng; Avia Rosenhouse-Dantsker; Meng Cui; Diomedes E. Logothetis
Voltage-gated K+ (Kv) channels couple the movement of a voltage sensor to the channel gate(s) via a helical intracellular region, the S4–S5 linker. A number of studies link voltage sensitivity to interactions of S4 charges with membrane phospholipids in the outer leaflet of the bilayer. Although the phospholipid phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) in the inner membrane leaflet has emerged as a universal activator of ion channels, no such role has been established for mammalian Kv channels. Here we show that PIP2 depletion induced two kinetically distinct effects on Kv channels: an increase in voltage sensitivity and a concomitant decrease in current amplitude. These effects are reversible, exhibiting distinct molecular determinants and sensitivities to PIP2. Gating current measurements revealed that PIP2 constrains the movement of the sensor through interactions with the S4–S5 linker. Thus, PIP2 controls both the movement of the voltage sensor and the stability of the open pore through interactions with the linker that connects them.
Annual Review of Physiology | 2015
Diomedes E. Logothetis; Vasileios I. Petrou; Miao Zhang; Rahul Mahajan; Xuan-Yu Meng; Scott K. Adney; Meng Cui; Lia Baki
Anionic phospholipids are critical constituents of the inner leaflet of the plasma membrane, ensuring appropriate membrane topology of transmembrane proteins. Additionally, in eukaryotes, the negatively charged phosphoinositides serve as key signals not only through their hydrolysis products but also through direct control of transmembrane protein function. Direct phosphoinositide control of the activity of ion channels and transporters has been the most convincing case of the critical importance of phospholipid-protein interactions in the functional control of membrane proteins. Furthermore, second messengers, such as [Ca(2+)]i, or posttranslational modifications, such as phosphorylation, can directly or allosterically fine-tune phospholipid-protein interactions and modulate activity. Recent advances in structure determination of membrane proteins have allowed investigators to obtain complexes of ion channels with phosphoinositides and to use computational and experimental approaches to probe the dynamic mechanisms by which lipid-protein interactions control active and inactive protein states.
Frontiers in Pharmacology | 2012
Aldo A. Rodríguez-Menchaca; Scott K. Adney; Lei Zhou; Diomedes E. Logothetis
Over the past 16 years, there has been an impressive number of ion channels shown to be sensitive to the major phosphoinositide in the plasma membrane, phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2). Among them are voltage-gated channels, which are crucial for both neuronal and cardiac excitability. Voltage-gated calcium (Cav) channels were shown to be regulated bidirectionally by PIP2. On one hand, PIP2 stabilized their activity by reducing current rundown but on the other hand it produced a voltage-dependent inhibition by shifting the activation curve to more positive voltages. For voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channels PIP2 was first shown to prevent N-type inactivation regardless of whether the fast inactivation gate was part of the pore-forming α subunit or of an accessory β subunit. Careful examination of the effects of PIP2 on the activation mechanism of Kv1.2 has shown a similar bidirectional regulation as in the Cav channels. The two effects could be distinguished kinetically, in terms of their sensitivities to PIP2 and by distinct molecular determinants. The rightward shift of the Kv1.2 voltage dependence implicated basic residues in the S4–S5 linker and was consistent with stabilization of the inactive state of the voltage sensor. A third type of a voltage-gated ion channel modulated by PIP2 is the hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) channel. PIP2 has been shown to enhance the opening of HCN channels by shifting their voltage-dependent activation toward depolarized potentials. The sea urchin HCN channel, SpIH, showed again a PIP2-mediated bidirectional effect but in reverse order than the depolarization-activated Cav and Kv channels: a voltage-dependent potentiation, like the mammalian HCN channels, but also an inhibition of the cGMP-induced current activation. Just like the Kv1.2 channels, distinct molecular determinants underlied the PIP2 dual effects on SpIH, with the proximal C-terminus implicated in the inhibitory effect. The dual regulation of these very different ion channels, all of which are voltage-dependent, points to conserved mechanisms of regulation of these channels by PIP2.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Avia Rosenhouse-Dantsker; Sergei Y. Noskov; Huazhi Han; Scott K. Adney; Qiong Yao Tang; Aldo A. Rodríguez-Menchaca; Gregory B. Kowalsky; Vasileios I. Petrou; Catherine V. Osborn; Diomedes E. Logothetis; Irena Levitan
Background: Cholesterol modulates inwardly rectifying potassium (Kir) channels. Results: A two-way molecular cytosolic switch controls channel modulation by cholesterol and PI(4,5)P2. Conclusion: Cholesterol and PI(4,5)P2 induce a common gating pathway of Kir2.1 despite their opposite impact on channel function. Significance: These findings provide insights into structure-function relationship of ion channels and contribute to understanding of the mechanisms underlying their regulation by lipids. Inwardly rectifying potassium (Kir) channels play an important role in setting the resting membrane potential and modulating membrane excitability. An emerging feature of several Kir channels is that they are regulated by cholesterol. However, the mechanism by which cholesterol affects channel function is unclear. Here we show that mutations of two distant Kir2.1 cytosolic residues, Leu-222 and Asn-251, form a two-way molecular switch that controls channel modulation by cholesterol and affects critical hydrogen bonding. Notably, these two residues are linked by a residue chain that continues from Asn-251 to connect adjacent subunits. Furthermore, our data indicate that the same switch also regulates the sensitivity of the channels to phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate, a phosphoinositide that is required for activation of Kir channels. Thus, although cholesterol and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate do not interact with the same region of Kir2.1, these different modulators induce a common gating pathway of the channel.
International Review of Neurobiology | 2015
Diomedes E. Logothetis; Rahul Mahajan; Scott K. Adney; Junghoon Ha; Takeharu Kawano; Xuan-Yu Meng; Meng Cui
The question that started with the pioneering work of Otto Loewi in the 1920s, to identify how stimulation of the vagus nerve decreased heart rate, is approaching its 100th year anniversary. In the meantime, we have learned that the neurotransmitter acetylcholine acting through muscarinic M2 receptors activates cardiac potassium (Kir3) channels via the βγ subunits of G proteins, an important effect that contributes to slowing atrial pacemaker activity. Concurrent stimulation of M1 or M3 receptors hydrolyzes PIP2, a signaling phospholipid essential to maintaining Kir3 channel activity, thus causing desensitization of channel activity and protecting the heart from overinhibition of pacemaker activity. Four mammalian members of the Kir3 subfamily, expressed in heart, brain, endocrine organs, etc., are modulated by a plethora of stimuli to regulate cellular excitability. With the recent great advances in ion channel structural biology, three-dimensional structures of Kir3 channels with PIP2 and the Gβγ subunits are now available. Mechanistic insights have emerged that explain how modulatory control of activity feeds into a core mechanism of channel-PIP2 interactions to regulate the conformation of channel gates. This complex but beautiful system continues to surprise us for almost 100 years with an apparent wisdom in its intricate design.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2015
Scott K. Adney; Junghoon Ha; Xuan-Yu Meng; Takeharu Kawano; Diomedes E. Logothetis
Inwardly rectifying potassium channels enforce tight control of resting membrane potential in excitable cells. The Kir3.2 channel, a member of the Kir3 subfamily of G-protein-activated potassium channels (GIRKs), plays several roles in the nervous system, including key responsibility in the GABAB pathway of inhibition, in pain perception pathways via opioid receptors, and is also involved in alcoholism. PKC phosphorylation acts on the channel to reduce activity, yet the mechanism is incompletely understood. Using the heterologous Xenopus oocyte system combined with molecular dynamics simulations, we show that PKC modulation of channel activity is dependent on Ser-196 in Kir3.2 such that, when this site is phosphorylated, the channel is less sensitive to PKC inhibition. This reduced inhibition is dependent on an interaction between phospho-Ser (SEP)-196 and Arg-201, reducing Arg-201 interaction with the sodium-binding site Asp-228. Neutralization of either SEP-196 or Arg-201 leads to a channel with reduced activity and increased sensitivity to PKC inhibition. This study clarifies the role of Ser-196 as an allosteric modulator of PKC inhibition and suggests that the SEP-196/Arg-201 interaction is critical for maintaining maximal channel activity. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The inwardly rectifying potassium 3.2 (Kir3.2) channel is found principally in neurons that regulate diverse brain functions, including pain perception, alcoholism, and substance addiction. Activation or inhibition of this channel leads to changes in neuronal firing and chemical message transmission. The Kir3.2 channel is subject to regulation by intracellular signals including sodium, G-proteins, ethanol, the phospholipid phosphatidylinositol bis-phosphate, and phosphorylation by protein kinases. Here, we take advantage of the recently published structure of Kir3.2 to provide an in-depth molecular view of how phosphorylation of a specific residue previously thought to be the target of PKC promotes channel gating and acts as an allosteric modulator of PKC-mediated inhibition.
Biophysical Journal | 2013
Scott K. Adney; Xuan-Yu Meng; Diomedes E. Logothetis
G-protein activated inward rectifier potassium channels (GIRKs) exhibit sensitivity to a diverse range of modulators, including G-proteins, sodium, PIP2, and phosphorylation by PKA and PKC. The residue Ser-196 in the GIRK2 subunit is implicated in PKC sensitivity in the homologous GIRK1 and GIRK4 subunits. It is located distal to the helix bundle crossing, and is situated to interact with both Phe-192 of the bundle crossing and Thr-317 of the G-loop gate. In the background of the highly active homomeric GIRK2 mutant E152D, we mutated Ser-196 to Ala and tested its PIP2 dependence, using the voltage-sensitive PIP phosphatase Ci-VSP. The S196A mutant was inhibited normally by activation of Ci-VSP, but upon recovery it displayed a unique behavior. Instead of a monophasic recovery, the S196A mutant exhibited a characteristic inhibition following recovery, which was not observed in the homomeric mutant alone. In addition, the S196A mutant current recovery depended on the initial level of PIP2 depletion. Mutant channels S196E and S196Q did not reproduce the unique pattern of S196A. Using the Gq-coupled hM1 assay, we tested the muscarinic sensitivity of S196A vs. homomeric mutant. While the homomeric mutant was inhibited normally, the S196A channel did not show appreciable inhibition. Taken together, these results indicate that the S196A mutant exhibits unique PIP2 sensitivity. Given the critical location of S196 to the channel gates we are pursuing the structural mechanism that could explain the unique behavior of the Ala mutant.
Cell | 2011
Miguel Fribourg; José L. Moreno; Terrell Holloway; Davide Provasi; Lia Baki; Rahul Mahajan; Gyu Park; Scott K. Adney; Candice N. Hatcher; Jose M. Eltit; Jeffrey D. Ruta; Laura Albizu; Zheng Li; Adrienne Umali; Jihyun Shim; Alexandre Fabiato; Alexander D. MacKerell; Vladimir Brezina; Stuart C. Sealfon; Marta Filizola; Javier González-Maeso; Diomedes E. Logothetis
Archive | 2015
Douglas K. Bowles; Cristine L. Heaps; James R. Turk; K. K. Maddali; Elmer M. Price; A. Payne; Zachary P. Neeb; Ian N. Bratz; Michael Sturek; Johnathan D. Tune; Léna Borbouse; Gregory M. Dick; Shinichi Asano; Shawn B. Bender; Diomedes E. Logothetis; Irena Levitan; Aldo A. Rodríguez-Menchaca; Gregory B. Kowalsky; Vasileios I. Petrou; Catherine V. Osborn; Avia Rosenhouse-Dantsker; Sergei Y. Noskov; Huazhi Han; Scott K. Adney; Qiong-Yao Tang