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Publication : Oxidation of KCNB1 potassium channels triggers apoptotic integrin signaling in the brain.

First Author  Yu W Year  2017
Journal  Cell Death Dis Volume  8
Issue  4 Pages  e2737
PubMed ID  28383553 Mgi Jnum  J:260051
Mgi Id  MGI:6150137 Doi  10.1038/cddis.2017.160
Citation  Yu W, et al. (2017) Oxidation of KCNB1 potassium channels triggers apoptotic integrin signaling in the brain. Cell Death Dis 8(4):e2737
abstractText  Oxidative modification of the voltage-gated potassium (K(+)) channel KCNB1 promotes apoptosis in the neurons of cortex and hippocampus through a signaling pathway mediated by Src tyrosine kinases. How oxidation of the channel is transduced into Src recruitment and activation, however, was not known. Here we show that the apoptotic signal originates from integrins, which form macromolecular complexes with KCNB1 channels. The initial stimulus is transduced to Fyn and possibly other Src family members by focal adhesion kinase (FAK). Thus KCNB1 and integrin alpha chain V (integrin-alpha5) coimmunoprecipitated in the mouse brain and these interactions were retained upon channel''s oxidation. Pharmacological inhibition of integrin signaling or FAK suppressed apoptosis induced by oxidation of KCNB1, as well as FAK and Src/Fyn activation. Most importantly, the activation of the integrin-FAK-Src/Fyn cascade was negligible in the presence of non-oxidizable C73A KCNB1 mutant channels, even though they normally interacted with integrin-alpha5. This leads us to conclude that the transition between the non-oxidized and oxidized state of KCNB1 activates integrin signaling. KCNB1 oxidation may favor integrin clustering, thereby facilitating the recruitment and activation of FAK and Src/Fyn kinases.
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