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1.
Both wild-type (WT) and nonconducting W472F mutant (NCM) Kv1.5 channels are able to conduct Na(+) in their inactivated states when K(+) is absent. Replacement of K(+) with Na(+) or NMG(+) allows rapid and complete inactivation in both WT and W472F mutant channels upon depolarization, and on return to negative potentials, transition of inactivated channels to closed-inactivated states is the first step in the recovery of the channels from inactivation. The time constant for immobilized gating charge recovery at -100 mV was 11.1 +/- 0.4 ms (n = 10) and increased to 19.0 +/- 1.6 ms (n = 3) when NMG(+)(o) was replaced by Na(+)(o). However, the decay of the Na(+) tail currents through inactivated channels at -100 mV had a time constant of 129 +/- 26 ms (n = 18), much slower than the time required for gating charge recovery. Further experiments revealed that the voltage-dependence of gating charge recovery and of the decay of Na(+) tail currents did not match over a 60 mV range of repolarization potentials. A faster recovery of gating charge than pore closure was also observed in WT Kv1.5 channels. These results provide evidence that the recovery of the gating elements is uncoupled from that of the pore in Na(+)-conducting inactivated channels. The dissociation of the gating charge movements and the pore closure could also be observed in the presence of symmetrical Na(+) but not symmetrical Cs(+). This difference probably stems from the difference in the respective abilities of the two ions to limit inactivation to the P-type state or prevent it altogether.  相似文献   

2.
The alpha subunit of voltage-gated Na(+) channels of brain, skeletal muscle, and cardiomyocytes is functionally modulated by the accessory beta(1), but not the beta(2) subunit. In the present study, we used beta(1)/beta(2) chimeras to identify molecular regions within the beta(1) subunit that are responsible for both the increase of the current density and the acceleration of recovery from inactivation of the human heart Na(+) channel (hH1). The channels were expressed in Xenopus oocytes. As a control, we coexpressed the beta(1)/beta(2) chimeras with rat brain IIA channels. In agreement with previous studies, the beta(1) extracellular domain sufficed to modulate IIA channel function. In contrast to this, the extracellular domain of the beta(1) subunit alone was ineffective to modulate hH1. Instead, the putative membrane anchor plus either the intracellular or the extracellular domain of the beta(1) subunit was required. An exchange of the beta(1) membrane anchor by the corresponding beta(2) subunit region almost completely abolished the effects of the beta(1) subunit on hH1, suggesting that the beta(1) membrane anchor plays a crucial role for the modulation of the cardiac Na(+) channel isoform. It is concluded that the beta(1) subunit modulates the cardiac and the neuronal channel isoforms by different molecular interactions: hH1 channels via the membrane anchor plus additional intracellular or extracellular regions, and IIA channels via the extracellular region only.  相似文献   

3.
Batrachotoxin (BTX) not only keeps the voltage-gated Na(+) channel open persistently but also reduces its single-channel conductance. Although a BTX receptor has been delimited within the inner cavity of Na(+) channels, how Na(+) ions flow through the BTX-bound permeation pathway remains unclear. In this report we tested a hypothesis that Na(+) ions traverse a narrow gap between bound BTX and residue N927 at D2S6 of cardiac hNa(v)1.5 Na(+) channels. We found that BTX at 5 microM indeed elicited a strong block of hNa(v)1.5-N927K currents (approximately 70%) after 1000 repetitive pulses (+50 mV/20 ms at 2 Hz) without any effects on Na(+) channel gating. Once occurred, this unique use-dependent block of hNa(v)1.5-N927K Na(+) channels recovered little at holding potential (-140 mV), demonstrating that BTX block is irreversible under our experimental conditions. Such an irreversible effect likewise developed in fast inactivation-deficient hNa(v)1.5-N927K Na(+) channels albeit with a faster on-rate; approximately 90% of peak Na(+) currents were abolished by BTX after 200 repetitive pulses (+50 mV/20 ms). This use-dependent block of fast inactivation-deficient hNa(v)1.5-N927K Na(+) channels by BTX was duration dependent. The longer the pulse duration the larger the block developed. Among N927K/W/R/H/D/S/Q/G/E substitutions in fast inactivation-deficient hNa(v)1.5 Na(+) channels, only N927K/R Na(+) currents were highly sensitive to BTX block. We conclude that (a) BTX binds within the inner cavity and partly occludes the permeation pathway and (b) residue hNa(v)1.5-N927 is critical for ion permeation between bound BTX and D2S6, probably because the side-chain of N927 helps coordinate permeating Na(+) ions.  相似文献   

4.
Resurgent tail Na(+) currents were first discovered in cerebellar Purkinje neurons. A recent study showed that a 14-mer fragment of a mouse beta4 subunit, beta4(154-167), acts as an intracellular open-channel blocker and elicits resurgent currents in Purkinje neurons (Grieco, T.M., J.D. Malhotra, C. Chen, L.L. Isom, and I.M. Raman. 2005. Neuron. 45:233-244). To explore these phenotypes in vitro, we characterized beta4(154-167) actions in inactivation-deficient cardiac hNav1.5 Na(+) channels expressed in human embryonic kidney 293t cells. Intracellular beta4(154-167) from 25-250 microM elicited a conspicuous time-dependent block of inactivation-deficient Na(+) currents at 50 mV in a concentration-dependent manner. On and off rates for beta4(154-167) binding were estimated at 10.1 microM(-1)s(-1) and 49.1 s(-1), respectively. Upon repolarization, large tail currents emerged with a slight delay at -140 mV, probably as a result of the rapid unblocking of beta4(154-167). Near the activation threshold (approximately -70 mV), resurgent tail currents were robust and long lasting. Likewise, beta4(154-167) induces resurgent currents in wild-type hNav1.5 Na(+) channels, although to a lesser extent. The inactivation peptide acetyl-KIFMK-amide not only restored the fast inactivation phenotype in hNav1.5 inactivation-deficient Na(+) channels but also elicited robust resurgent currents. When modified by batrachotoxin (BTX), wild-type hNav1.5 Na(+) channels opened persistently but became resistant to beta4(154-167) and acetyl-KIFMK-amide block. Finally, a lysine substitution of a phenylalanine residue at D4S6, F1760, which forms a part of receptors for local anesthetics and BTX, rendered cardiac Na(+) channels resistant to beta4(154-167). Together, our in vitro studies identify a putative S6-binding site for beta4(154-167) within the inner cavity of hNav1.5 Na(+) channels. Such an S6 receptor readily explains (1) why beta4(154-167) gains access to its receptor as an open-channel blocker, (2), why bound beta4(154-167) briefly prevents the activation gate from closing by a "foot-in-the-door" mechanism during deactivation, (3) why BTX inhibits beta4(154-167) binding by physical exclusion, and (4) why a lysine substitution of residue F1760 eliminates beta4(154-167) binding.  相似文献   

5.
In the present study, we identified a novel splice variant of the human cardiac Na(+) channel Na(v)1.5 (Na(v)1.5d), in which a 40-amino acid sequence of the DII/DIII intracellular linker is missing due to a partial deletion of exon 17. Expression of Na(v)1.5d occurred in embryonic and adult hearts of either sex, indicating that the respective alternative splicing is neither age-dependent nor gender-specific. In contrast, Na(v)1.5d was not detected in the mouse heart, indicating that alternative splicing of Na(v)1.5 is species-dependent. In HEK293 cells, splice variant Na(v)1.5d generated voltage-dependent Na(+) currents that were markedly reduced compared with wild-type Na(v)1.5. Experiments with mexiletine and 8-bromo-cyclic AMP suggested that the trafficking of Na(v)1.5d channels was not impaired. However, single-channel recordings showed that the whole-cell current reduction was largely due to a significantly reduced open probability. Additionally, steady-state activation and inactivation were shifted to depolarized potentials by 15.9 and 5.1 mV, respectively. Systematic mutagenesis analysis of the spliced region provided evidence that a short amphiphilic region in the DII/DIII linker resembling an S4 voltage sensor of voltage-gated ion channels is an important determinant of Na(v)1.5 channel gating. Moreover, the present study identified novel short sequence motifs within this amphiphilic region that specifically affect the voltage dependence of steady-state activation and inactivation and current amplitude of human Na(v)1.5.  相似文献   

6.
The type IIA voltage-gated sodium Na(+) channel from rat brain is composed of a large, pore-forming alpha subunit and the auxiliary subunits beta1 and beta2. When expressed in Xenopus oocytes, the beta1 subunit modulates the gating properties of the type IIA alpha subunit, resulting in acceleration of both inactivation and recovery from inactivation and in a negative shift in the voltage dependence of fast inactivation. The beta1 subunit is composed of an extracellular domain with a single immunoglobulin-like fold, a single transmembrane segment, and a small intracellular domain. A series of chimeras with exchanges of domains between the Na(+) channel beta1 and beta2 subunits and between beta1 and the structurally related protein myelin P0 were constructed and analyzed by two-microelectrode voltage clamp in Xenopus oocytes. Only chimeras containing the beta1 extracellular domain were capable of beta1-like modulation of Na(+) channel gating. Neither the transmembrane segment nor the intracellular domain was required for modulation, although mutation of Glu(158) within the transmembrane domain altered the voltage dependence of steady-state inactivation. A truncated beta1 subunit was engineered in which the beta1 extracellular domain was fused to a recognition sequence for attachment of a glycosylphosphatidylinositol membrane anchor. The beta1(ec)-glycosylphosphatidylinositol protein fully reproduced modulation of Na(+) channel inactivation and recovery from inactivation by wild-type beta1. Our findings demonstrate that extracellular domain of the beta1 subunit is both necessary and sufficient for the modulation of Na(+) channel gating.  相似文献   

7.
Native cardiac and skeletal muscle Na channels are complexes of alpha and beta 1 subunits. While structural correlates for activation, inactivation, and permeation have been identified in the alpha subunit and the expression of alpha alone produces functional channels, beta 1- deficient rat skeletal muscle (mu 1) and brain Na channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes do not gate normally. In contrast, the requirement of a beta 1 subunit for normal function of Na channels cloned from rat heart or human heart (hH1) has been disputed. Coinjection of rat brain beta 1 subunit cRNA with hH1 (or mu 1) alpha subunit cRNA into oocytes increased peak Na currents recorded 2 d after injection by 240% (225%) without altering the voltage dependence of activation. In mu 1 channels, steady state inactivation was shifted to more negative potentials (by 6 mV, p < 0.01), but the shift of 2 mV was not significant for hH1 channels. Nevertheless, coexpression with beta 1 subunit speeded the decay of macroscopic current of both isoforms. Ensemble average hH1 currents from cell-attached patches revealed that coexpression of beta 1 increases the rate of inactivation (quantified by time to 75% decay of current; p < 0.01 at -30, -40, and -50 mV). Use- dependent decay of hH1 Na current during repeated pulsing to -20 mV (1 s, 0.5 Hz) after a long rest was reduced to 16 +/- 2% of the first pulse current in oocytes coexpressing alpha and beta 1 subunits compared to 35 +/- 8% use-dependent decay for oocytes expressing the alpha subunit alone. Recovery from inactivation of mu 1 and hH1 Na currents after 1-s pulses to -20 mV is multiexponential with three time constants; coexpression of beta 1 subunit decreased all three recovery time constants. We conclude that the beta 1 subunit importantly influences the function of Na channels produced by coexpression with either the hH1 or mu 1 alpha subunits.  相似文献   

8.
Wang Z  Fedida D 《Biophysical journal》2001,81(5):2614-2627
Sustained Na(+) or Li(+) conductance is a feature of the inactivated state in wild-type (WT) and nonconducting Shaker and Kv1.5 channels, and has been used here to investigate the cause of off-gating charge immobilization in WT and Kv1.5-W472F nonconducting mutant channels. Off-gating immobilization in response to brief pulses in cells perfused with NMG/NMG is the result of a more negative voltage dependence of charge recovery (V(1/2) is -96 mV) compared with on-gating charge movement (V(1/2) is -6.3 mV). This shift is known to be associated with slow inactivation in Shaker channels and the disparity is reduced by 40 mV, or approximately 50% in the presence of 135 mM Cs. Off-gating charge immobilization is voltage-dependent with a V(1/2) of -12 mV, and correlates well with the development of Na(+) conductance on repolarization through C-type inactivated channels (V(1/2) is -11 mV). As well, the time-dependent development of the inward Na(+) tail current and gating charge immobilization after depolarizing pulses of different durations has the same time constant (tau = 2.7 ms). These results indicate that in Kv1.5 channels the transition to a stable C-type inactivated state takes only 2-3 ms and results in strong charge immobilization in the absence of Group IA metal cations, or even in the presence of Na. Inclusion of low concentrations of Cs delays the appearance of Na(+) tail currents in WT channels, prevents transition to inactivated states in Kv1.5-W472F nonconducting mutant channels, and removes charge immobilization. Higher concentrations of Cs are able to modulate the deactivating transition in Kv1.5 channels and prevent the residual slowing of charge return.  相似文献   

9.
When lidocaine is given systemically, cardiac Na channels are blocked preferentially over those in skeletal muscle and nerve. This apparent increased affinity is commonly assumed to arise solely from the fact that cardiac Na channels spend a large fraction of their time in the inactivated state, which exhibits a high affinity for local anesthetics. The oocyte expression system was used to compare systematically the sensitivities of skeletal (mu 1-beta 1) and cardiac (hH1-beta 1) Na channels to block by lidocaine, under conditions in which the only difference was the choice of alpha subunit. To check for differences in tonic block, Na currents were elicited after 3 min of exposure to various lidocaine concentrations at -100 mV, a potential at which both hH1-beta 1 and mu 1-beta 1 channels were fully reprimed. Surprisingly, hH1-beta 1 Na channels were threefold more sensitive to rested-state block by lidocaine (402 +/- 36 microM, n = 4-22) than were mu 1-beta 1 Na channels (1,168 +/- 34 microM, n = 7-19). In contrast, the inactivated state binding affinities determined at partially depolarized holding potentials (h infinity approximately 0.2) were similar (Kd = 16 +/- 1 microM, n = 3-9 for hH1-beta 1 and 12 +/- 2 microM, n = 4-11 for mu 1-beta 1). Lidocaine produced more use- dependent block of peak hH1-beta 1 Na current elicited by trains of short-(10 ms) or long- (1 s) duration step depolarizations (0.5 Hz, -20 mV) than of mu 1-beta 1 Na current. During exposure to lidocaine, hH1- beta 1 channels recover from inactivation at -100 mV after a prolonged delay (20 ms), while mu 1-beta 1 channels begin repriming immediately. The overall time course of recovery from inactivation in the presence of lidocaine is much slower in hH1-beta 1 than in mu 1-beta 1 channels. These unexpected findings suggest that structural differences in the alpha subunits impart intrinsically different lidocaine sensitivities to the two isoforms. The differences in steady state affinities and in repriming kinetics are both in the correct direction to help explain the increased potency of cardiac Na channel block by local anesthetics.  相似文献   

10.
Na channels open upon depolarization but then enter inactivated states from which they cannot readily reopen. After brief depolarizations, native channels enter a fast-inactivated state from which recovery at hyperpolarized potentials is rapid (< 20 ms). Prolonged depolarization induces a slow-inactivated state that requires much longer periods for recovery (> 1 s). The slow-inactivated state therefore assumes particular importance in pathological conditions, such as ischemia, in which tissues are depolarized for prolonged periods. While use- dependent block of Na channels by local anesthetics has been explained on the basis of delayed recovery of fast-inactivated Na channels, the potential contribution of slow-inactivated channels has been ignored. The principal (alpha) subunits from skeletal muscle or brain Na channels display anomalous gating behavior when expressed in Xenopus oocytes, with a high percentage entering slow-inactivated states after brief depolarizations. This enhanced slow inactivation is eliminated by coexpressing the alpha subunit with the subsidiary beta 1 subunit. We compared the lidocaine sensitivity of alpha subunits expressed in the presence and absence of the beta 1 subunit to determine the relative contributions of fast-inactivated and slow-inactivated channel block. Coexpression of beta 1 inhibited the use-dependent accumulation of lidocaine block during repetitive (1-Hz) depolarizations from -100 to - 20 mV. Therefore, the time required for recovery from inactivated channel block was measured at -100 mV. Fast-inactivated (alpha + beta 1) channels were mostly unblocked within 1 s of repolarization; however, slow-inactivated (alpha alone) channels remained blocked for much longer repriming intervals (> 5 s). The affinity of the slow- inactivated state for lidocaine was estimated to be 15-25 microM, versus 24 microM for the fast-inactivated state. We conclude that slow- inactivated Na channels are blocked by lidocaine with an affinity comparable to that of fast-inactivated channels. A prominent functional consequence is potentiation of use-dependent block through a delay in repriming of lidocaine-bound slow-inactivated channels.  相似文献   

11.
Voltage-gated Na(+) channels display rapid activation gating (opening) as well as fast and slow inactivation gating (closing) during depolarization. We substituted residue S1759 (serine), a putative D4S6 gating hinge of human cardiac hNav1.5 Na(+) channels with A (alanine), D (aspartate), K (lysine), L (leucine), P (proline), and W (tryptophan). Significant shifts in gating parameters for activation and steady-state fast inactivation were observed in A-, D-, K-, and W-substituted mutant Na(+) channels. No gating shifts occurred in the L-substituted mutant, whereas the P-substituted mutant did not yield sufficient Na(+) currents. Wild-type, A-, D-, and L-substituted mutant Na(+) channels showed little or no slow inactivation with a 10-s conditioning pulse ranging from -180 to 0 mV. Unexpectedly, W- and K-substituted mutant Na(+) channels displayed profound maximal slow inactivation around -100 mV ( approximately 85% and approximately 70%, respectively). However, slow inactivation was progressively reversed in magnitude from -70 to 0 mV. This regression was minimized in inactivation-deficient hNav1.5-S1759W/L409C/A410W Na(+) channels, indicating that the intracellular fast-inactivation gate caused such a reversal. Our data suggest that the hNav1.5-S1759 residue plays a critical role in slow inactivation. Possible mechanisms for S1759 involvement in slow inactivation and for antagonism between fast and slow inactivation are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Batrachotoxin (BTX)-modified Na+ currents were characterized in GH3 cells with a reversed Na+ gradient under whole-cell voltage clamp conditions. BTX shifts the threshold of Na+ channel activation by approximately 40 mV in the hyperpolarizing direction and nearly eliminates the declining phase of Na+ currents at all voltages, suggesting that Na+ channel inactivation is removed. Paradoxically, the steady-state inactivation (h infinity) of BTX-modified Na+ channels as determined by a two-pulse protocol shows that inactivation is still present and occurs maximally near -70 mV. About 45% of BTX-modified Na+ channels are inactivated at this voltage. The development of inactivation follows a sum of two exponential functions with tau d(fast) = 10 ms and tau d(slow) = 125 ms at -70 mV. Recovery from inactivation can be achieved after hyperpolarizing the membrane to voltages more negative than -120 mV. The time course of recovery is best described by a sum of two exponentials with tau r(fast) = 6.0 ms and tau r(slow) = 240 ms at -170 mV. After reaching a minimum at -70 mV, the h infinity curve of BTX-modified Na+ channels turns upward to reach a constant plateau value of approximately 0.9 at voltages above 0 mV. Evidently, the inactivated, BTX-modified Na+ channels can be forced open at more positive potentials. The reopening kinetics of the inactivated channels follows a single exponential with a time constant of 160 ms at +50 mV. Both chloramine-T (at 0.5 mM) and alpha-scorpion toxin (at 200 nM) diminish the inactivation of BTX-modified Na+ channels. In contrast, benzocaine at 1 mM drastically enhances the inactivation of BTX-modified Na+ channels. The h infinity curve reaches minimum of less than 0.1 at -70 mV, indicating that benzocaine binds preferentially with inactivated, BTX-modified Na+ channels. Together, these results imply that BTX-modified Na+ channels are governed by an inactivation process.  相似文献   

13.
Human heart (hH1), human skeletal muscle (hSkM1), and rat brain (rIIA) Na channels were expressed in cultured cells and the activation and inactivation of the whole-cell Na currents measured using the patch clamp technique. hH1 Na channels were found to activate and inactivate at more hyperpolarized voltages than hSkM1 and rIIA. The conductance versus voltage and steady state inactivation relationships have midpoints of -48 and -92 mV (hH1), -28 and -72 mV (hSkM1), and -22 and -61 mV (rIIA). At depolarized voltages, where Na channels predominately inactivate from the open state, the inactivation of hH1 is 2-fold slower than that of hSkM1 and rIIA. The recovery from fast inactivation of all three isoforms is well described by a single rapid component with time constants at -100 mV of 44 ms (hH1), 4.7 ms (hSkM1), and 7.6 ms (rIIA). After accounting for differences in voltage dependence, the kinetics of activation, inactivation, and recovery of hH1 were found to be generally slower than those of hSkM1 and rIIA. Modeling of Na channel gating at hyperpolarized voltages where the channel does not open suggests that the slow rate of recovery from inactivation of hH1 accounts for most of the differences in the steady-state inactivation of these Na channels.  相似文献   

14.
Voltage-gated cardiac Na(+) channels are composed of alpha- and beta(1)-subunits. In this study beta(1)-subunit was cotransfected with the alpha-subunit of the human cardiac Na(+) channel (hH1(alpha)) in human embryonic kidney (HEK293t) cells. The effects of this coexpression on the kinetics and fatty acid-induced suppression of Na(+) currents were assessed. Current density was significantly greater in HEK293t cells coexpressing alpha- and beta(1)-subunits (I(Na,alpha beta)) than in HEK293t cells expressing alpha-subunit alone (I(Na,alpha)). Compared with I(Na,alpha), the voltage-dependent inactivation and activation of I(Na,alpha beta) were significantly shifted in the depolarizing direction. In addition, coexpression with beta(1)-subunit prolonged the duration of recovery from inactivation. Eicosapentaenoic acid [EPA, C20:5(n-3)] significantly reduced I(Na,alpha beta) in a concentration-dependent manner and at 5 microM shifted the midpoint voltage of the steady-state inactivation by -22 +/- 1 mV. EPA also significantly accelerated channel transition from the resting state to the inactivated state and prolonged the recovery time from inactivation. Docosahexaenoic acid [C22:6(n-3)], alpha-linolenic acid [C18:3(n-3)], and conjugated linoleic acid [C18:2(n-6)] at 5 microM significantly inhibited both I(Na,alpha beta) and I(Na,alpha.) In contrast, saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids had no effects on I(Na,alpha beta). This finding differs from the results for I(Na,alpha), which was significantly inhibited by both saturated and unsaturated fatty acids. Our data demonstrate that functional association of beta(1)-subunit with hH1(alpha) modifies the kinetics and fatty acid block of the Na(+) channel.  相似文献   

15.
Single cardiac Na+ channels were investigated after intracellular proteolysis to remove the fast inactivation process in an attempt to elucidate the mechanisms of channel gating and the role of slow inactivation. Na+ channels were studied in inside-out patches excised from guinea-pig ventricular myocytes both before and after very brief exposure (2-4 min) to the endopeptidase, alpha-chymotrypsin. Enzyme exposure times were chosen to maximize removal of fast inactivation and to minimize potential nonspecific damage to the channel. After proteolysis, the single channel current-voltage relationship was approximately linear with a slope conductance of 18 +/- 2.5 pS. Na+ channel reversal potentials measured before and after proteolysis by alpha-chymotrypsin were not changed. The unitary current amplitude was not altered after channel modification suggesting little or no effect on channel conductance. Channel open times were increased after removal of fast inactivation and were voltage-dependent, ranging between 0.7 (-70 mV) and 3.2 (-10 mV) ms. Open times increased with membrane potential reaching a maximum at -10 mV; at more positive membrane potentials, open times decreased again. Fast inactivation appeared to be completely removed by alpha-chymotrypsin and slow inactivation became more apparent suggesting that fast and slow inactivation normally compete, and that fast inactivation dominates in unmodified channels. This finding is not consistent with a slow inactivated state that can only be entered through the fast inactivated state, since removal of fast inactivation does not eliminate slow inactivation. The data indicate that cardiac Na+ channels can enter the slow inactivated state by a pathway that bypasses the fast inactivated state and that the likelihood of entering the slow inactivated state increases after removal of fast inactivation.  相似文献   

16.
The Na(+) channel alpha-subunit contains an IFM motif that is critical for the fast inactivation process. In this study, we sought to determine whether an IFM-containing peptide, acetyl-KIFMK-amide, blocks open cardiac Na(+) channels via the inner cavity. Intracellular acetyl-KIFMK-amide at 2mM elicited a rapid time-dependent block (tau=0.24 ms) of inactivation-deficient human heart Na(+) channels (hNav1.5-L409C/A410W) at +50 mV. In addition, a peptide-induced tail current appeared conspicuously upon repolarization, suggesting that the activation gate cannot close until acetyl-KIFMK-amide is cleared from the open pore. Repetitive pulses (+50 mV for 20 ms at 1Hz) produced a substantial use-dependent block of both peak and tail currents by approximately 65%. A F1760K mutation (hNav1.5-L409C/A410W/F1760K) abolished the use-dependent block by acetyl-KIFMK-amide and hindered the time-dependent block. Competition experiments showed that acetyl-KIFMK-amide antagonized bupivacaine binding. These results are consistent with a model that two acetyl-KIFMK-amide receptors exist in proximity within the Na(+) channel inner cavity.  相似文献   

17.
Atrial-selective inhibition of cardiac Na(+) channel current (I(Na)) and I(Na)-dependent parameters has been shown to contribute to the safe and effective management of atrial fibrillation. The present study examined the basis for the atrial-selective actions of ranolazine. Whole cell I(Na) was recorded at 15°C in canine atrial and ventricular myocytes and in human embryonic kidney (HEK)-293 cells expressing SCN5A. Tonic block was negligible at holding potentials from -140 to -100 mV, suggesting minimal drug interactions with the closed state. Trains of 40 pulses were elicited over a range of holding potentials to determine use-dependent block. Guarded receptor formalism was used to analyze the development of block during pulse trains. Use-dependent block by ranolazine increased at more depolarized holding potentials, consistent with an interaction of the drug with either preopen or inactivated states, but was unaffected by longer pulse durations between 5 and 200 ms, suggesting a weak interaction with the inactivated state. Block was significantly increased at shorter diastolic intervals between 20 and 200 ms. Responses in atrial and ventricular myocytes and in HEK-293 cells displayed a similar pattern. Ranolazine is an open state blocker that unbinds from closed Na(+) channels unusually fast but is trapped in the inactivated state. Kinetic rates of ranolazine interactions with different states of atrial and ventricular Na(+) channels were similar. Our data suggest that the atrial selectivity of ranolazine is due to a more negative steady-state inactivation curve, less negative resting membrane potential, and shorter diastolic intervals in atrial cells compared with ventricular cells at rapid rates.  相似文献   

18.
Transmembrane segment 6 is implicated in slow inactivation (SI) of voltage-gated Na(+) channels (Na(v)s). To further study its role and understand differences between SI phenotypes of different Na(v) isoforms, we analyzed several domain 2-segment 6 (D2-S6) mutants of the human cardiac hNa(v)1.5, which is relatively resistant to SI. Mutants were examined by transient HEK cell transfection and patch-clamp recording of whole cell Na(+) currents. Substitutions with lysine (K) included N927K, V930K, and L931K. We show recovery from short (100 ms) depolarization to 0 mV in N927K and L931K is comparable to wild type, whereas recovery in V930K is delayed and biexponential, suggesting rapid entry into a slow-inactivated state. SI protocols confirm enhanced SI phenotype (rapid development, hyperpolarized steady state, slowed recovery) for V930K, contrasting with the resistant phenotype of wild-type hNa(v)1.5. This enhancement, not found in N927K or L931K, suggests that the effect in V930K is site specific. Glutamine (Q) substituted at V930 also exhibits an enhanced SI phenotype similar to that of V930K. Therefore, K or Q substitution eliminates hNa(v)1.5 resistance to SI. Alanine (A) or cysteine (C) substitution at V930 shows no enhancement of SI, and in fact, V930A and V930C, as well as L931K, exhibit a resistance to SI, demonstrating that characteristics of specific amino acids (e.g., size, hydrophobicity) differentially affect SI gating. Thus V930 in D2-S6 appears to be an important structural determinant of SI gating in hNa(v)1.5. We suggest that conformational change involving D2-S6 is a critical component of SI in Na(v)s, which may be differentially regulated between isoforms by other isoform-specific determinants of SI phenotype.  相似文献   

19.
Zeng XH  Lou XL  Qu AL  Wu HX  Zhou Z 《生理学报》2000,52(2):98-102
实验以单个Wistar大鼠胰腺β细胞为对象,用穿孔膜片箝和细胞贴附式记录技术研究ATP敏感K^+通道(KATP)、延迟整流型K^+通道(KDR)、Ca^2+通道和Na^+通道的有关特性。结果表明:⑴KATP通道的内流电导约65pS,外流电导约31pS,反转电位在-60mV左右;⑵KDR通道在延迟20ms后达到最大激活,KDR电流约为KATP的1/3;⑶钙电流在0mV左右达到40-60pA的峰值,L  相似文献   

20.
Two types of the late Na channels, burst and background, were studied in Purkinje and ventricular cells. In the whole-cell configuration, steady-state Na currents were recorded at potentials (-70 to -80 mV) close to the normal cell resting potential. The question of the contribution of late Na channels to this background Na conductance was investigated. During depolarization, burst Na channels were active for periods (up to approximately 5 s), which exceeded the action potential duration. However, they eventually closed without reopening, indicating the presence of slow and complete inactivation. When, at the moment of burst channel opening, the potential was switched to -80 mV, the channel closed quickly without reopening. We conclude that the burst Na channels cannot contribute significantly to the background Na conductance. Background Na channels undergo incomplete inactivation. After a step depolarization, their activity decreased in time, approaching a steady-state level. Background Na channel openings could be recorded at constant potentials in the range from -120 to 0 mV. After step depolarizations to potentials near -70 mV and more negative, a significant fraction of Na current was carried by the background Na channels. Analysis of the background channel behavior revealed that their gating properties are qualitatively different from those of the early Na channels. We suggest that background Na channels represent a special type of Na channel that can play an important role in the initiation of cardiac action potential and in the TTX-sensitive background Na conductance.  相似文献   

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