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Structural and biophysical determinants of single CaV3.1 and CaV3.2 T-type calcium channel inhibition by N2O
Authors:Peter Bartels  Kerstin Behnke  Guido Michels  Ferdi Groner  Toni Schneider  Margit Henry  Paula Q Barrett  Ho-Won Kang  Jung-Ha Lee  Martin HJ Wiesen  Jan Matthes  Stefan Herzig  
Institution:aDepartment of Pharmacology, University of Cologne, Germany;bCenter for Molecular Medicine, University of Cologne, Germany;cDepartment of Internal Medicine III, University of Cologne, Germany;dInstitute of Neurophysiology, University of Cologne, Germany;eDepartment of Pharmacology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA;fDepartment of Life Science, Sogang University, Seoul 121-742, Republic of Korea
Abstract:We investigated the biophysical mechanism of inhibition of recombinant T-type calcium channels CaV3.1 and CaV3.2 by nitrous oxide (N2O). To identify functionally important channel structures, chimeras with reciprocal exchange of the N-terminal domains I and II and C-terminal domains III and IV were examined. In whole-cell recordings N2O significantly inhibited CaV3.2, and – less pronounced – CaV3.1. A CaV3.2-prevalent inhibition of peak currents was also detected in cell-attached multi-channel patches. In cell-attached patches containing ≤3 channels N2O reduced average peak current of CaV3.2 by decreasing open probability and open time duration. Effects on CaV3.1 were smaller and mediated by a reduced fraction of sweeps containing channel activity. Without drug, single CaV3.1 channels were significantly less active than CaV3.2. Chimeras revealed that domains III and IV control basal gating properties. Domains I and II, in particular a histidine residue within CaV3.2 (H191), are responsible for the subtype-prevalent N2O inhibition. Our study demonstrates the biophysical (open times, open probability) and structural (domains I and II) basis of action of N2O on CaV3.2. Such a fingerprint of single channels can help identifying the molecular nature of native channels. This is exemplified by a characterization of single channels expressed in human hMTC cells as functional homologues of recombinant CaV3.1.
Keywords:Single-channel analysis  CaV3  1  CaV3  2  T-type calcium channel  Nitrous oxide
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