Channel name | K2P2.1 |
Description | Two-pore domain potassium channel subunit1; open rectifier or voltage-dependent |
Other names | KCNK2, TREK-1, TPKC1 |
Molecular information | Human: 426aa, NM_014217, chr. 1q41, KCNK2,2 GeneID: 3776, PMID: 90037613 |
Rat: 426aa, AF325671, chr. 5 | |
Mouse: 411aa, XM_123605, chr. 1, kcnk23 | |
Associated subunits | Not established |
Functional assays | Electrophysiological |
Current | Open or voltage-dependent4,5 (see “Comments”) |
Conductance | 90pS (see “Comments”) |
Ion selectivity | Not established |
Activation | See “Comments” |
Inactivation | See “Comments” |
Activators | Arachidonic acid (10 mM) and unsaturated fatty acids,10 lysophospholipids,7 volatile anesthetics,6,11 mechanical stress,7,11 internal acidification12 |
Gating inhibitors | None |
Blockers | Ba2+ (1 mM), quinidine (100 mM), PKA, PKC |
Radioligands | None |
Channel distribution | Brain,2 heart |
Physiological functions | Not established |
Mutations and pathophysiology | Characterization of K2P2 knockout mice suggests a loss of sensitivity to general anesthetics and increased vulnerability to ischemia and reperfusion injury8,9 |
Pharmacological significance | Not established |
Comments | Phosphorylation of serine 348 regulates reversible interconversion between leak and voltage-dependent phenotypes5; “activation” and “deactivation” with voltage steps seem to be instantaneous; the mouse variant may have a smaller conductance |
aa, amino acids; chr., chromosome; PKA, protein kinase A; PKC, protein kinase C.
↵1. Goldstein SAN, Wang KW, Ilan N, and Pausch M (1998) Sequence and function of the two P domain potassium channels: implications of an emerging superfamily. J Mol Med 76:13-20
↵2. Meadows HJ, Benham CD, Cairns W, Gloger I, Jennings C, Medhurst AD, Murdock P, and Chapman CG (2000) Cloning, localisation and functional expression of the human orthologue of the TREK-1 potassium channel. Pflueg Arch Eur J Physiol 439:714-722
↵3. Fink M, Duprat F, Lesage F, Reyes R, Romey G, Heurteaux C, and Lazdunski M (1996) Cloning, functional expression and brain localization of a novel unconventional outward rectifier K+ channel. EMBO J 15:6854-6862
↵4. Maingret F, Lauritzen I, Patel AJ, Heurteaux C, Reyes R, Lesage F, Lazdunski M, and Honoré E (2000) TREK-1 is a heat-activated background K(+) channel. EMBO J 19:2483-2491
↵5. Bockenhauer D, Zilberberg N, and Goldstein SAN (2001) KCNK2: reversible conversion of a hippocampal potassium leak into a voltage-dependent channel. Nat Neurosci 4:486-491
↵6. Terrenoire C, Lauritzen I, Lesage F, Romey G, and Lazdunski M (2001) A TREK-1-like potassium channel in atrial cells inhibited by beta-adrenergic stimulation and activated by volatile anesthetics. Circ Res 89:336-342
↵7. Maingret F, Patel AJ, Lesage F, Lazdunski M, and Honoré E (2000). Lysophospholipids open the two-pore domain mechano-gated K(+) channels TREK-1 and TRAAK. J Biol Chem 275:10128-10133
↵8. Buckler KJ and Honoré E (2004) The lipid-activated K2P channel TREK-1 is resistant to hypoxia: implication for ischemic neuroprotection. J Physiol 562:213-222
↵9. Heurteaux C, Guy N, Laigle C, Blondeau N, Duprat F, Mazzuca M, Lang-Lazdunski L, Widmann C, Zanzouri M, Romey G, et al. (2004) TREK-1, a K+ channel involved in neuroprotection and general anesthesia. EMBO J 23:2684-2695
↵10. Patel AJ, Honoré E, Lesage F, Fink M, Romey G, and Lazdunski M (1999) Inhalational anesthetics activate two-pore-domain background K+ channels. Nat Neurosci 2:422-426
↵11. Maingret F, Patel AJ, Lesage F, Lazdunski M, and Honoré E (1999) Mechano- or acid stimulation, two interactive modes of activation of the TREK-1 potassium channel. J Biol Chem 274:26691-26696