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Dive into the research topics where Steve A. N. Goldstein is active.

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Featured researches published by Steve A. N. Goldstein.


Cell | 1999

MiRP1 forms IKr potassium channels with HERG and is associated with cardiac arrhythmia

Geoffrey W. Abbott; Federico Sesti; Igor Splawski; Marianne E. Buck; Michael H. Lehmann; Katherine W. Timothy; Mark T. Keating; Steve A. N. Goldstein

A novel potassium channel gene has been cloned, characterized, and associated with cardiac arrhythmia. The gene encodes MinK-related peptide 1 (MiRP1), a small integral membrane subunit that assembles with HERG, a pore-forming protein, to alter its function. Unlike channels formed only with HERG, mixed complexes resemble native cardiac IKr channels in their gating, unitary conductance, regulation by potassium, and distinctive biphasic inhibition by the class III antiarrhythmic E-4031. Three missense mutations associated with long QT syndrome and ventricular fibrillation are identified in the gene for MiRP1. Mutants form channels that open slowly and close rapidly, thereby diminishing potassium currents. One variant, associated with clarithromycin-induced arrhythmia, increases channel blockade by the antibiotic. A mechanism for acquired arrhythmia is revealed: genetically based reduction in potassium currents that remains clinically silent until combined with additional stressors.


Nature Reviews Neuroscience | 2001

Potassium leak channels and the KCNK family of two-p-domain subunits

Steve A. N. Goldstein; Detlef Bockenhauer; Ita O'Kelly; Noam Zilberberg

With a bang, a new family of potassium channels has exploded into view. Although KCNK channels were discovered only five years ago, they already outnumber other channel types. KCNK channels are easy to identify because of their unique structure — they possess two pore-forming domains in each subunit. The new channels function in a most remarkable fashion: they are highly regulated, potassium-selective leak channels. Although leak currents are fundamental to the function of nerves and muscles, the molecular basis for this type of conductance had been a mystery. Here we review the discovery of KCNK channels, what has been learned about them and what lies ahead. Even though two-P-domain channels are widespread and essential, they were hidden from sight in plain view — our most basic questions remain to be answered.


Nature | 1997

A minK-HERG complex regulates the cardiac potassium current I(Kr).

Thomas V. McDonald; Zhihui Yu; Zhen Ming; Eugen C. Palma; Marian B. Meyers; Ke Wei Wang; Steve A. N. Goldstein; Glenn I. Fishman

MinK is a widely expressed protein of relative molecular mass ∼15K that forms potassium channels by aggregation with other membrane proteins. MinK governs ion channel activation, regulation by second messengers,, and the function and structure of the ion conduction pathway,. Association of minK with a channel protein known as KvLQT1 produces a voltage-gated outward K+ current (IsK) resembling the slow cardiac repolarization current (IKs),. HERG, a human homologue of the ether-a-go-go gene of the fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster, encodes a protein that produces the rapidly activating cardiac delayed rectifier (IKr),. These two potassium currents, IKs and IKr, provide the principal repolarizing currents in cardiac myocytes for the termination of action potentials,. Although heterologously expressed HERG channels are largely indistinguishable from native cardiac IKr, a role for minK in this current is suggested by the diminished IKr in an atrial tumour line subjected to minK antisense suppression. Here we show that HERG and minK form a stable complex, and that this heteromultimerization regulates IKr activity. MinK, through the formation of heteromeric channel complexes, is thus central to the control of the heart rate and rhythm.


Cell | 2001

MiRP2 Forms Potassium Channels in Skeletal Muscle with Kv3.4 and Is Associated with Periodic Paralysis

Geoffrey W. Abbott; Margaret H. Butler; Saïd Bendahhou; Marinos C. Dalakas; Louis J. Ptáček; Steve A. N. Goldstein

The subthreshold, voltage-gated potassium channel of skeletal muscle is shown to contain MinK-related peptide 2 (MiRP2) and the pore-forming subunit Kv3.4. MiRP2-Kv3.4 channels differ from Kv3.4 channels in unitary conductance, voltage-dependent activation, recovery from inactivation, steady-state open probability, and block by a peptide toxin. Thus, MiRP2-Kv3.4 channels set resting membrane potential (RMP) and do not produce afterhyperpolarization or cumulative inactivation to limit action potential frequency. A missense mutation is identified in the gene for MiRP2 (KCNE3) in two families with periodic paralysis and found to segregate with the disease. Mutant MiRP2-Kv3.4 complexes exhibit reduced current density and diminished capacity to set RMP. Thus, MiRP2 operates with a classical potassium channel subunit to govern skeletal muscle function and pathophysiology.


Pharmacological Reviews | 2005

International Union of Pharmacology. LV. Nomenclature and Molecular Relationships of Two-P Potassium Channels

Steve A. N. Goldstein; Douglas A. Bayliss; Donghee Kim; Florian Lesage; Leigh D. Plant; Sindhu Rajan

In less than a decade since their discovery, the study of K2P channels has revealed that background leak of potassium ions via dedicated pathways is a highly regulated mechanism to control cellular excitability. Potassium leak pathways, active at rest, stabilize membrane potential below firing


Cell | 2005

Sumoylation Silences the Plasma Membrane Leak K+ Channel K2P1

Sindhu Rajan; Leigh D. Plant; Michael L. Rabin; Margaret H. Butler; Steve A. N. Goldstein

Reversible, covalent modification with small ubiquitin-related modifier proteins (SUMOs) is known to mediate nuclear import/export and activity of transcription factors. Here, the SUMO pathway is shown to operate at the plasma membrane to control ion channel function. SUMO-conjugating enzyme is seen to be resident in plasma membrane, to assemble with K2P1, and to modify K2P1 lysine 274. K2P1 had not previously shown function despite mRNA expression in heart, brain, and kidney and sequence features like other two-P loop K+ leak (K2P) pores that control activity of excitable cells. Removal of the peptide adduct by SUMO protease reveals K2P1 to be a K+-selective, pH-sensitive, openly rectifying channel regulated by reversible peptide linkage.


Nature Neuroscience | 2001

KCNK2: reversible conversion of a hippocampal potassium leak into a voltage-dependent channel

Detlef Bockenhauer; Noam Zilberberg; Steve A. N. Goldstein

Potassium leak channels are essential to neurophysiological function. Leaks suppress excitability through maintenance of resting membrane potential below the threshold for action potential firing. Conversely, voltage-dependent potassium channels permit excitation because they do not interfere with rise to threshold, and they actively promote recovery and rapid re-firing. Previously attributed to distinct transport pathways, we demonstrate here that phosphorylation of single, native hippocampal and cloned KCNK2 potassium channels produces reversible interconversion between leak and voltage-dependent phenotypes. The findings reveal a pathway for dynamic regulation of excitability.


Neuron | 2003

Charybdotoxin binding in the IKs pore demonstrates two MinK subunits in each channel complex

Haijun Chen; Leo A. Kim; Sindhu Rajan; Shuhua Xu; Steve A. N. Goldstein

I(Ks) voltage-gated K(+) channels contain four pore-forming KCNQ1 subunits and MinK accessory subunits in a number that has been controversial. Here, I(Ks) channels assembled naturally by monomer subunits are compared to those with linked subunits that force defined stoichiometries. Two strategies that exploit charybdotoxin (CTX)-sensitive subunit variants are applied. First, CTX on rate, off rate, and equilibrium affinity are found to be the same for channels of monomers and those with a fixed 2:4 MinK:KCNQ1 valence. Second, 3H-CTX and an antibody are used to directly quantify channels and MinK subunits, respectively, showing 1.97 +/- 0.07 MinK per I(Ks) channel. Additional MinK subunits do not enter channels of monomeric subunits or those with fixed 2:4 valence. We conclude that two MinK subunits are necessary, sufficient, and the norm in I(Ks) channels. This stoichiometry is expected for other K(+) channels that contain MinK or MinK-related peptides (MiRPs).


Nature | 1998

The conduction pore of a cardiac potassium channel.

Kwok-Keung Tai; Steve A. N. Goldstein

Ion channels form transmembrane water-filled pores that allow ions to cross membranes in a rapid and selective fashion. The amino acid residues that line these pores have been sought to reveal the mechanisms of ion conduction and selectivity. The pore (P) loop is a stretch of residues that influences single-channel-current amplitude, selectivity among ions and open-channel blockade,, and is conserved in potassium-channel subunits previously recognized to contribute to pore formation,. To date, potassium-channel pores have been shown to form by symmetrical alignment of four P loops around a central conduction pathway. Here we show that the selectivity-determining pore region of the voltage-gated potassium channel of human heart through which the IKs current passes includes the transmembrane segment of the non-P-loop protein minK. Two adjacent residues in this segment of minK are exposed in the pore on either side of a short barrier that restricts the movement of sodium, cadmium and zinc ions across the membrane. Thus, potassium-selective pores are not restricted to P loops or a strict P-loop geometry.


Neuron | 1995

Subunit composition of mink potassium channels

Ke-Wei Wang; Steve A. N. Goldstein

Expression of minK protein in Xenopus oocytes induces a slowly activating, voltage-dependent, potassium-selective current. Point mutations in minK that alter current gating kinetics, ion selectivity, pharmacology, and response to protein kinase C all support the notion that minK is a structural protein for a channel-type transporter. Yet, minK has just 130 amino acids and a single transmembrane domain. Though larger cloned potassium channels form functional channels through tetrameric subunit association, the subunit composition of minK is unknown. Subunit stoichiometry was determined by coexpression of wild-type minK and a dominant lethal point mutant of minK, which reaches the plasma membrane but passes no current. The results support a model for complete minK potassium channels in which just two minK monomers are present, with other, as yet unidentified, non-minK subunits.

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