Ultrasound activates mechanosensitive TRAAK K+ channels directly through the lipid membrane

Published: Oct. 25, 2020, 12:02 p.m.

Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.10.24.349738v1?rss=1 Authors: Sorum, B., Rietmeijer, R. A., Gopakumar, K., Adesnik, H., Brohawn, S. G. Abstract: Ultrasound modulates the electrical activity of excitable cells and offers advantages over other neuromodulatory techniques; for example, it can be non-invasively transmitted through skull and focused to deep brain regions. However, the fundamental cellular, molecular, and mechanistic bases of ultrasonic neuromodulation are largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate ultrasound activation of the mechanosensitive K+ channel TRAAK with sub-millisecond kinetics to an extent comparable to canonical mechanical activation. Single channel recordings reveal a common basis for ultrasonic and mechanical activation with stimulus-graded destabilization of longduration closures and promotion of full conductance openings. Ultrasonic energy is transduced to TRAAK directly through the membrane in the absence of other cellular components, likely increasing membrane tension to promote channel opening. We further demonstrate ultrasonic modulation of neuronally expressed TRAAK. These results suggest mechanosensitive channels underlie physiological responses to ultrasound and provides a framework for developing channel-based sonogentic actuators for acoustic neuromodulation of genetically targeted cells. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info