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1.
Increased expression of low voltage-activated, T-type Ca(2+) channels has been correlated with a variety of cellular events including cell proliferation and cell cycle kinetics. The recent cloning of three genes encoding T-type alpha(1) subunits, alpha(1G), alpha(1H) and alpha(1I), now allows direct assessment of their involvement in mediating cellular proliferation. By overexpressing the human alpha(1G) and alpha(1H) subunits in human embryonic kidney (HEK-293) cells, we describe here that, although T-type channels mediate increases in intracellular Ca(2+) concentrations, there is no significant change in bromodeoxyuridine incorporation and flow cytometric analysis. These results demonstrate that expressions of T-type Ca(2+) channels are not sufficient to modulate cellular proliferation of HEK-293 cells.  相似文献   

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We describe here several novel properties of the human alpha(1G) subunit that forms T-type calcium channels. The partial intron/exon structure of the corresponding gene CACNA1G was defined and several alpha(1G) isoforms were identified, especially two isoforms that exhibit a distinct III-IV loop: alpha(1G-a) and alpha(1G-b). Northern blot and dot blot analyses indicated that alpha(1G) mRNA is predominantly expressed in the brain, especially in thalamus, cerebellum, and substantia nigra. Additional experiments have also provided evidence that alpha(1G) mRNA is expressed at a higher level during fetal life in nonneuronal tissues (i.e. kidney, heart, and lung). Functional expression in HEK 293 cells of a full-length cDNA encoding the shortest alpha(1G) isoform identified to date, alpha(1G-b), resulted in transient, low threshold activated Ca(2+) currents with the expected permeability ratio (I(Sr) > I(Ca) >/= I(Ba)) and channel conductance ( approximately 7 pS). These properties, together with slowly deactivating tail currents, are typical of those of native T-type Ca(2+) channels. This alpha(1G)-related current was inhibited by mibefradil (IC(50) = 2 microM) and weakly blocked by Ni(2+) ions (IC(50) = 148 microM) and amiloride (IC(50) > 1 mM). We showed that steady state activation and inactivation properties of this current can generate a "window current" in the range of -65 to -55 mV. Using neuronal action potential waveforms, we show that alpha(1G) channels produce a massive and sustained Ca(2+) influx due to their slow deactivation properties. These latter properties would account for the specificity of Ca(2+) influx via T-type channels that occurs in the range of physiological resting membrane potentials, differing considerably from the behavior of other Ca(2+) channels.  相似文献   

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T-type calcium channels play critical roles in controlling neuronal excitability, including the generation of complex spiking patterns and the modulation of synaptic plasticity, although the mechanisms and extent to which T-type Ca(2+) channels are modulated by G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) remain largely unexplored. To examine specific interactions between T-type Ca(2+) channel subtypes and muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRS), the Cav3.1 (alpha(1G)), Cav3.2 (alpha(1H)), and Cav3.3 (alpha) T-type Ca(2+)(1I)channels were co-expressed with the M1 Galpha(q/11)-coupled mAChR. Perforated patch recordings demonstrate that activation of M1 receptors has a strong inhibitory effect on Cav3.3 T-type Ca(2+) currents but either no effect or a moderate stimulating effect on Cav3.1 and Cav3.2 peak current amplitudes. This differential modulation was observed for both rat and human T-type Ca(2+) channel variants. The inhibition of Cav3.3 channels by M1 receptors is reversible, use-independent, and associated with a concomitant increase in inactivation kinetics. Loss-of-function experiments with genetically encoded antagonists of Galpha and Gbetagamma proteins and gain-of-function experiments with genetically encoded Galpha subtypes indicate that M1 receptor-mediated inhibition of Cav3.3 occurs through Galpha(q/11). This is supported by experiments showing that activation of the M3 and M5 Galpha(q/11)-coupled mAChRs also causes inhibition of Cav3.3 currents, although Galpha(i)-coupled mAChRs (M2 and M4) have no effect. Examining Cav3.1-Cav3.3 chimeric channels demonstrates that two distinct regions of the Cav3.3 channel are necessary and sufficient for complete M1 receptor-mediated channel inhibition and represent novel sites not previously implicated in T-type channel modulation.  相似文献   

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T-type Ca(2+) channels have been suggested to play a role in cardiac automaticity, cell growth, and cardiovascular remodeling. Although three genes encoding for a T-type Ca(2+) channel have been identified, the nature of the isoform(s) supporting the cardiac T-type Ca(2+) current (I(Ca,T)) has not yet been determined. We describe the postnatal evolution of I(Ca,T) density in freshly dissociated rat atrial and ventricular myocytes and its functional properties at peak current density in young atrial myocytes. I(Ca,T) displays a classical low activation threshold, rapid inactivation kinetics, negative steady-state inactivation, slow deactivation, and the presence of a window current. Interestingly, I(Ca,T) is poorly sensitive to Ni(2+) and insensitive to R-type current toxin SNX-482. RT-PCR experiments and comparison of functional properties with recombinant Ca(2+) channel subtypes suggest that neonatal I(Ca,T) is related to the alpha(1G)-subunit. Atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) secretion was measured using peptide radioimmunoassays in atrial tissue. Pharmacological dissection of ANF secretion indicates an important contribution of I(Ca,T) to Ca(2+) signaling during the neonatal period.  相似文献   

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Kim D  Song I  Keum S  Lee T  Jeong MJ  Kim SS  McEnery MW  Shin HS 《Neuron》2001,31(1):35-45
T-type Ca(2+) currents have been proposed to be involved in the genesis of spike-and-wave discharges, a sign of absence seizures, but direct evidence in vivo to support this hypothesis has been lacking. To address this question, we generated a null mutation of the alpha(1G) subunit of T-type Ca(2+) channels. The thalamocortical relay neurons of the alpha(1G)-deficient mice lacked the burst mode firing of action potentials, whereas they showed the normal pattern of tonic mode firing. The alpha(1G)-deficient thalamus was specifically resistant to the generation of spike-and-wave discharges in response to GABA(B) receptor activation. Thus, the modulation of the intrinsic firing pattern mediated by alpha(1G) T-type Ca(2+) channels plays a critical role in the genesis of absence seizures in the thalamocortical pathway.  相似文献   

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Lu F  Chen H  Zhou C  Liu S  Guo M  Chen P  Zhuang H  Xie D  Wu S 《Cell calcium》2008,43(1):49-58
In the present study the role of T-type Ca(2+) channels in cancer cell proliferation was examined. Seventeen human esophageal cancer cell lines were screened for T-type channels using RT-PCR and voltage-clamp recordings. mRNAs for all three T-type channel alpha(1)-subunits (alpha(1G), alpha(1H), and alpha(1I)) were detected in all 17 cell lines: either alpha(1H) alone, alpha(1H) and alpha(1G), or all three T-type alpha(1)-subunits. Eleven cell lines were further subjected to voltage-clamp recordings: one, i.e. the TE8 cell line, was found to exhibit a typical T-type current while others exhibited a minimal or no T-type current. Cell proliferation assays were performed in the presence or absence of T-type channel blocker mibefradil in KYSE150, KYSE180 and TE1 cells expressing mRNA for T-type channel alpha(1)-subunits but lacking T-type current, and TE8 cells exhibiting T-type current. Only TE8 cell proliferation was reduced by mibefradil. Silencing the alpha(1G)-gene that encodes functional T-type Ca(2+) channels in TE8 cells with type-specific shRNA transduction also significantly decreased TE8 cell proliferation. The reduction of cell proliferation in TE8 cells was found to be associated with an up-regulation of p21(CIP1). Moreover, p53 silencing nearly abolished the up-regulation of p21(CIP1) resulting from mibefradil T-type channel blockade. Together, these findings suggest a functional role of T-type channels in certain esophageal carcinomas, and that inhibition of T-type channels reduces cell proliferation via a p53-dependent p21(CIP1) pathway.  相似文献   

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Molecular cloning and expression studies established the existence of three T-type Ca(2+) channel (Ca(v)3) alpha(1) subunits: Ca(v)3.1 (alpha(1G)), Ca(v)3.2 (alpha(1H)), and Ca(v)3.3 (alpha(1I)). Although all three channels are low voltage-activated, they display considerable differences in their kinetics, with Ca(v)3.1 and Ca(v)3.2 channels activating and inactivating much faster than Ca(v)3.3 channels. The goal of the present study was to determine the structural elements that confer the distinctively slow kinetics of Ca(v)3.3 channels. To address this question, a series of chimeric channels between Ca(v)3.1 and Ca(v)3.3 channels were constructed and expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Kinetic analysis showed that the slow activation and inactivation kinetics of the Ca(v)3.3 channel were not completely abolished by substitution with any one portion of the Ca(v)3.1 channel. Likewise, the Ca(v)3.1 channel failed to acquire the slow kinetics by simply adopting one portion of the Ca(v)3.3 channel. These findings suggest that multiple structural elements contribute to the slow kinetics of Ca(v)3.3 channels.  相似文献   

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The full-length human Ca(v)3.3 (alpha(1I)) T-type channel was cloned, and found to be longer than previously reported. Comparison of the cDNA sequence to the human genomic sequence indicates the presence of an additional 4-kb exon that adds 214 amino acids to the carboxyl terminus and encodes the 3' untranslated region. The electrophysiological properties of the full-length channel were studied after transient transfection into 293 human embryonic kidney cells using 5 mM Ca(2+) as charge carrier. From a holding potential of -100 mV, step depolarizations elicited inward currents with an apparent threshold of -70 mV, a peak of -30 mV, and reversed at +40 mV. The kinetics of channel activation, inactivation, deactivation, and recovery from inactivation were very similar to those reported previously for rat Ca(v)3.3. Similar voltage-dependent gating and kinetics were found for truncated versions of human Ca(v)3.3, which lack either 118 or 288 of the 490 amino acids that compose the carboxyl terminus. A major difference between these constructs was that the full-length isoform generated twofold more current. These results suggest that sequences in the distal portion of Ca(v)3.3 play a role in channel expression. Studies on the voltage-dependence of activation revealed that a fraction of channels did not gate as low voltage-activated channels, requiring stronger depolarizations to open. A strong depolarizing prepulse (+100 mV, 200 ms) increased the fraction of channels that gated at low voltages. In contrast, human Ca(v)3.3 isoforms with shorter carboxyl termini were less affected by a prepulse. Therefore, Ca(v)3.3 is similar to high voltage-activated Ca(2+) channels in that depolarizing prepulses can regulate their activity, and their carboxy termini play a role in modulating channel activity.  相似文献   

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In order to investigate the currently unknown cellular signaling pathways of T-type Ca(2+) channels, we decided to construct a new cell line which would stably express alpha(1G) and Kir2.1 subunits in HEK293 cells (HEK293/alpha(1G)/Kir2.1). Compared to cells which only expressed alpha(1G) (HEK293/alpha(1G)), HEK293/alpha(1G)/Kir2.1 cells produced an enormous inward rectifying current which was blocked by external Ba(2+) and Cs(+) in a concentration-dependent manner. The expression of Kir2.1 channels contributed significantly to the shift of membrane potential from -12.2+/-2.8 to -57.3+/-3.7mV. However, biophysical and pharmacological properties of alpha(1G)-mediated Ca(2+) channels remained unaffected by the expression of Kir2.1 subunits, except for the enlarging of the window current region. Biochemical activation of alpha(1G) channels using 150mM KCl brought about an increase in [Ca(2+)](i), which was blocked by mibefradil, the T-type Ca(2+) channel blocker. These data suggest that the HEK293/alpha(1G)/Kir2.1 cell line would have potential uses in the study of T-type Ca(2)(+) channel-mediated signaling pathways and possibly useful in the development of new therapeutic drugs associated with T-type Ca(2)(+) channels.  相似文献   

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We have positionally cloned and characterized a new calcium channel auxiliary subunit, alpha(2)delta-2 (CACNA2D2), which shares 56% amino acid identity with the known alpha(2)delta-1 subunit. The gene maps to the critical human tumor suppressor gene region in chromosome 3p21.3, showing very frequent allele loss and occasional homozygous deletions in lung, breast, and other cancers. The tissue distribution of alpha(2)delta-2 expression is different from alpha(2)delta-1, and alpha(2)delta-2 mRNA is most abundantly expressed in lung and testis and well expressed in brain, heart, and pancreas. In contrast, alpha(2)delta-1 is expressed predominantly in brain, heart, and skeletal muscle. When co-expressed (via cRNA injections) with alpha(1B) and beta(3) subunits in Xenopus oocytes, alpha(2)delta-2 increased peak size of the N-type Ca(2+) currents 9-fold, and when co-expressed with alpha(1C) or alpha(1G) subunits in Xenopus oocytes increased peak size of L-type channels 2-fold and T-type channels 1.8-fold, respectively. Anti-peptide antibodies detect the expression of a 129-kDa alpha(2)delta-2 polypeptide in some but not all lung tumor cells. We conclude that the alpha(2)delta-2 gene encodes a functional auxiliary subunit of voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels. Because of its chromosomal location and expression patterns, CACNA2D2 needs to be explored as a potential tumor suppressor gene linking Ca(2+) signaling and lung, breast, and other cancer pathogenesis. The homologous location on mouse chromosome 9 is also the site of the mouse neurologic mutant ducky (du), and thus, CACNA2D2 is also a candidate gene for this inherited idiopathic generalized epilepsy syndrome.  相似文献   

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The structural determinant of the permeation and selectivity properties of high voltage-activated (HVA) Ca(2+) channels is a locus formed by four glutamate residues (EEEE), one in each P-region of the domains I-IV of the alpha(1) subunit. We tested whether the divergent aspartate residues of the EEDD locus of low voltage-activated (LVA or T-type) Ca(2+) channels account for the distinctive permeation and selectivity features of these channels. Using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique in the HEK293 expression system, we studied the properties of the alpha(1G) T-type, the alpha(1C) L-type Ca(2+) channel subunits, and alpha(1G) pore mutants, containing aspartate-to-glutamate conversions in domain III, domain IV, or both. Three characteristic features of HVA Ca(2+) channel permeation, i.e. (a) Ba(2+) over Ca(2+) permeability, (b) Ca(2+)/Ba(2+) anomalous mole fraction effect (AMFE), and (c) high Cd(2+) sensitivity, were conferred on the domain III mutant (EEED) of alpha(1G). In contrast, the relative Ca(2+)/Ba(2+) permeability and the lack of AMFE of the alpha(1G) wild type channel were retained in the domain IV mutant (EEDE). The double mutant (EEEE) displayed AMFE and a Cd(2+) sensitivity similar to that of alpha(1C), but currents were larger in Ca(2+)- than in Ba(2+)-containing solutions. The mutation in domain III, but not that in domain IV, consistently displayed outward fluxes of monovalent cations. H(+) blocked Ca(2+) currents in all mutants more efficiently than in alpha(1G). In addition, activation curves of all mutants were displaced to more positive voltages and had a larger slope factor than in alpha(1G) wild type. We conclude that the aspartate residues of the EEDD locus of the alpha(1G) Ca(2+) channel subunit not only control its permeation properties, but also affect its activation curve. The mutation of both divergent aspartates only partially confers HVA channel permeation properties to the alpha(1G) Ca(2+) channel subunit.  相似文献   

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Mechanosensitivity in voltage-gated calcium channels could be an asset to calcium signaling in healthy cells or a liability during trauma. Recombinant N-type channels expressed in HEK cells revealed a spectrum of mechano-responses. When hydrostatic pressure inflated cells under whole-cell clamp, capacitance was unchanged, but peak current reversibly increased ~1.5-fold, correlating with inflation, not applied pressure. Additionally, stretch transiently increased the open-state inactivation rate, irreversibly increased the closed-state inactivation rate, and left-shifted inactivation without affecting the activation curve or rate. Irreversible mechano-responses proved to be mechanically accelerated components of run-down; they were not evident in cell-attached recordings where, however, reversible stretch-induced increases in peak current persisted. T-type channels (alpha(1I) subunit only) were mechano-insensitive when expressed alone or when coexpressed with N-type channels (alpha(1B) and two auxiliary subunits) and costimulated with stretch that augmented N-type current. Along with the cell-attached results, this differential effect indicates that N-type mechanosensitivity did not depend on the recording situation. The insensitivity of T-type currents to stretch suggested that N-type mechano-responses might arise from primary/auxiliary subunit interactions. However, in single-channel recordings, N-type currents exhibited reversible stretch-induced increases in NP(o) whether the alpha(1B) subunit was expressed alone or with auxiliary subunits. These findings set the stage for the molecular dissection of calcium current mechanosensitivity.  相似文献   

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Arachidonic acid (AA) modulates T-type Ca(2+) channels and is therefore a potential regulator of diverse cell functions, including neuronal and cardiac excitability. The underlying mechanism of modulation is unknown. Here we analyze the effects of AA on the T-type Ca(2+) channel alpha(1G) heterologously expressed in HEK-293 cells. AA inhibited alpha(1G) currents within a few minutes, regardless of preceding exposure to inhibitors of AA metabolism (ETYA and 17-ODYA). Current inhibition was also observed in cell-free inside-out patches, indicating a membrane-delimited interaction of AA with the channel. AA action was consistent with a decrease of the open probability without changes in the size of unitary currents. AA shifted the inactivation curve to more negative potentials, increased the speed of macroscopic inactivation, and decreased the extent of recovery from inactivation at -80 mV but not at -110 mV. AA induced a slight increase of activation near the threshold and did not significantly change the deactivation kinetics or the rectification pattern. We observed a tonic current inhibition, regardless of whether the channels were held in resting or inactivated states during AA perfusion, suggesting a state-independent interaction with the channel. Model simulations indicate that AA inhibits T-type currents by switching the channels into a nonavailable conformation and by affecting transitions between inactivated states, which results in the negative shift of the inactivation curve. Slow-inactivating alpha(1G) mutants showed an increased affinity for AA with respect to the wild type, indicating that the structural determinants of fast inactivation are involved in the AA-channel interaction.  相似文献   

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