On Resolution of the Selectivity/Conductivity Paradox for the Potassium Ion Channel

Luchinsky, Dmitry G. and Gibby, William A. T. and Kaufman, Igor Kh. and Timucin, Dogan A. and McClintock, Peter V.E. (2017) On Resolution of the Selectivity/Conductivity Paradox for the Potassium Ion Channel. Biophysical Journal, 112 (3, Sup). 543a. ISSN 0006-3495

[thumbnail of On resolution of the selectivity/conductivity paradox for the potassium ion channel]
Preview
PDF (On resolution of the selectivity/conductivity paradox for the potassium ion channel)
KChannelAbstract2.pdf - Accepted Version

Download (55kB)
[thumbnail of On Resolution of the Selectivity/Conductivity Paradox for the Potassium Ion Channel]
Preview
PDF (On Resolution of the Selectivity/Conductivity Paradox for the Potassium Ion Channel)
KChannelAbstract2.pdf - Published Version
Available under License GNU General Public License.

Download (55kB)

Abstract

The ability of the potassium channel to conduct K+ at almost the rate of free diffusion, while discriminating strongly against the (smaller) Na+ ion, is of enormous biological importance [1]. Yet its function remains at the center of a “many-voiced debate” [2,3]. In this presentation, a first-principles explanation is provided for the seemingly paradoxical coexistence of high conductivity with high selectivity between monovalent ions within the channel. It is shown that the conductivity of the selectivity filter is described by the generalized Einstein relation. A novel analytic approach to the analysis of the conductivity is proposed, based on the derivation of an effective grand canonical ensemble for ions within the filter. The conditions for barrier-less diffusion-limited conduction through the KcsA filter are introduced, and the relationships between system parameters required to satisfy these conditions are derived. It is shown that the Eisenman selectivity equation is one of these, and that it follows directly from the condition for barrier-less conduction. The proposed theory provides analytical insight into the “knock-on” [1] and Coulomb blockade [4] mechanisms of K+ conduction through the KcsA filter. It confirms and illuminates an earlier argument [3] that the “snug-fit" model cannot describe the fast diffusion-limited conduction seen in experiments. Numerical examples are provided illustrating agreement of the theory with experimentally-measured I-V curves. The results are not restricted to biological systems, but also carry implications for the design of artificial nanopores.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Biophysical Journal
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1300/1304
Subjects:
?? biophysicsdiscipline-based research ??
ID Code:
84579
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
24 Feb 2017 08:46
Refereed?:
No
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
31 Dec 2023 00:47