Study of the functions and activities of neuronal K-Cl co-transporter KCC2 using western blotting
Josiah, SS; Meor Azlan, NF; Oguro-Ando, A; et al.Zhang, J
Date: 9 December 2022
Article
Journal
Journal of Visualized Experiments
Publisher
MyJove Corporation
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Potassium chloride cotransporters 2 (KCC2) is a member of the solute carrier family
12 (SLC12) of cation-chloride-cotransporters (CCCs), found exclusively in the neuron
and is essential for the proper functioning of Cl-
homeostasis and consequently
functional GABAergic inhibition. Failure in proper regulation of KCC2 is deleterious ...
Potassium chloride cotransporters 2 (KCC2) is a member of the solute carrier family
12 (SLC12) of cation-chloride-cotransporters (CCCs), found exclusively in the neuron
and is essential for the proper functioning of Cl-
homeostasis and consequently
functional GABAergic inhibition. Failure in proper regulation of KCC2 is deleterious and
has been associated with the prevalence of several neurological diseases, including
epilepsy. There has been considerable progress with regard to understanding the
mechanisms involved in the regulation of KCC2, accredited to the development
of techniques that enable researchers to study its functions and activities; either
via direct (assessing kinase regulatory sites phosphorylation) or indirect (observing
and monitoring GABA activity) investigations. Here, the protocol highlights how to
investigate KCC2 phosphorylation at kinase regulatory sites - Thr906 and Thr1007-
using western blotting technique. There are other classic methods used to directly
measure KCC2 activity, such as rubidium ion and thallium ion uptake assay. Further
techniques such as patch-clamp-electrophysiology are used to measure GABA
activity; hence, indirectly reflecting activated and/or inactivated KCC2 as informed by
the assessment of intracellular chloride ion homeostasis. A few of these additional
techniques will be briefly discussed in this manuscript.
Clinical and Biomedical Sciences
Faculty of Health and Life Sciences
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