PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

ATP-sensitive potassium channels exhibit variance in the number of open channels below the limit predicted for identical and independent gating.

  • Kee-Hyun Choi,
  • Stuart Licht

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0037399
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 5
p. e37399

Abstract

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In small cells containing small numbers of ion channels, noise due to stochastic channel opening and closing can introduce a substantial level of variability into the cell's membrane potential. Negatively cooperative interactions that couple a channel's gating conformational change to the conformation of its neighbor(s) provide a potential mechanism for mitigating this variability, but such interactions have not previously been directly observed. Here we show that heterologously expressed ATP-sensitive potassium channels generate noise (i.e., variance in the number of open channels) below the level possible for identical and independent channels. Kinetic analysis with single-molecule resolution supports the interpretation that interchannel negative cooperativity (specifically, the presence of an open channel making a closed channel less likely to open) contributes to the decrease in noise. Functional coupling between channels may be important in modulating stochastic fluctuations in cellular signaling pathways.