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1.
During sustained depolarization, voltage-gated Ca2+ channels progressively undergo a transition to a nonconducting, inactivated state, preventing Ca2+ overload of the cell. This transition can be triggered either by the membrane potential (voltage-dependent inactivation) or by the consecutive entry of Ca2+ (Ca2+-dependent inactivation), depending on the type of Ca2+ channel. These two types of inactivation are suspected to arise from distinct underlying mechanisms, relying on specific molecular sequences of the different pore-forming Ca2+ channel subunits. Here we report that the voltage-dependent inactivation (of the alpha1A Ca2+ channel) and the Ca2+-dependent inactivation (of the alpha1C Ca2+ channel) are similarly influenced by Ca2+ channel beta subunits. The same molecular determinants of the beta subunit, and therefore the same subunit interactions, influence both types of inactivation. These results strongly suggest that the voltage and the Ca2+-dependent transitions leading to channel inactivation use homologous structures of the different alpha1 subunits and occur through the same molecular process. A model of inactivation taking into account these new data is presented.  相似文献   

2.
L-type (alpha(1C)) calcium channels inactivate rapidly in response to localized elevation of intracellular Ca(2+), providing negative Ca(2+) feedback in a diverse array of biological contexts. The dominant Ca(2+) sensor for such Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation has recently been identified as calmodulin, which appears to be constitutively tethered to the channel complex. This Ca(2+) sensor induces channel inactivation by Ca(2+)-dependent CaM binding to an IQ-like motif situated on the carboxyl tail of alpha(1C). Apart from the IQ region, another crucial site for Ca(2+) inactivation appears to be a consensus Ca(2+)-binding, EF-hand motif, located approximately 100 amino acids upstream on the carboxyl terminus. However, the importance of this EF-hand motif for channel inactivation has become controversial since the original report from our lab implicating a critical role for this domain. Here, we demonstrate not only that the consensus EF hand is essential for Ca(2+) inactivation, but that a four-amino acid cluster (VVTL) within the F helix of the EF-hand motif is itself essential for Ca(2+) inactivation. Mutating these amino acids to their counterparts in non-inactivating alpha(1E) calcium channels (MYEM) almost completely ablates Ca(2+) inactivation. In fact, only a single amino acid change of the second valine within this cluster to tyrosine (V1548Y) supports much of the functional knockout. However, mutations of presumed Ca(2+)-coordinating residues in the consensus EF hand reduce Ca(2+) inactivation by only approximately 2-fold, fitting poorly with the EF hand serving as a contributory inactivation Ca(2+) sensor, in which Ca(2+) binds according to a classic mechanism. We therefore suggest that while CaM serves as Ca(2+) sensor for inactivation, the EF-hand motif of alpha(1C) may support the transduction of Ca(2+)-CaM binding into channel inactivation. The proposed transduction role for the consensus EF hand is compatible with the detailed Ca(2+)-inactivation properties of wild-type and mutant V1548Y channels, as gauged by a novel inactivation model incorporating multivalent Ca(2+) binding of CaM.  相似文献   

3.
Sun HS  Hui K  Lee DW  Feng ZP 《Biophysical journal》2007,93(4):1175-1183
The essential cation zinc (Zn2+) blocks voltage-dependent calcium channels in several cell types, which exhibit different sensitivities to Zn2+. The specificity of the Zn2+ effect on voltage-dependent calcium channel subtypes has not been systematically investigated. In this study, we used a transient protein expression system to determine the Zn2+ effect on low- and high-voltage activated channels. We found that in Ba2+, the IC50 value of Zn2+ was alpha1-subunit-dependent with lowest value for CaV1.2, and highest for CaV3.1; the sensitivity of the channels to Zn2+ was approximately ranked as CaV1.2>CaV3.2>CaV2.3>CaV2.2=CaV 2.1>or=CaV3.3=CaV3.1. Although the CaV2.2 and CaV3.1 channels had similar IC50 for Zn2+ in Ba2+, the CaV2.2, but not CaV3.1 channels, had approximately 10-fold higher IC50 to Zn2+ in Ca2+. The reduced sensitivity of CaV2.2 channels to Zn2+ in Ca2+ was partially reversed by disrupting a putative EF-hand motif located external to the selectivity filter EEEE locus. Thus, our findings support the notion that the Zn2+ block, mediated by multiple mechanisms, may depend on conformational changes surrounding the alpha1 pore regions. These findings provide fundamental insights into the mechanism underlying the inhibitory effect of zinc on various Ca2+ channel subtypes.  相似文献   

4.
Voltage-gated Ca(v)1.2 channels are composed of the pore-forming alpha1C and auxiliary beta and alpha2delta subunits. Voltage-dependent conformational rearrangements of the alpha1C subunit C-tail have been implicated in Ca2+ signal transduction. In contrast, the alpha1C N-tail demonstrates limited voltage-gated mobility. We have asked whether these properties are critical for the channel function. Here we report that transient anchoring of the alpha1C subunit C-tail in the plasma membrane inhibits Ca2+-dependent and slow voltage-dependent inactivation. Both alpha2delta and beta subunits remain essential for the functional channel. In contrast, if alpha1C subunits with are expressed alpha2delta but in the absence of a beta subunit, plasma membrane anchoring of the alpha1C N terminus or its deletion inhibit both voltage- and Ca2+-dependent inactivation of the current. The following findings all corroborate the importance of the alpha1C N-tail/beta interaction: (i) co-expression of beta restores inactivation properties, (ii) release of the alpha1C N terminus inhibits the beta-deficient channel, and (iii) voltage-gated mobility of the alpha1C N-tail vis a vis the plasma membrane is increased in the beta-deficient (silent) channel. Together, these data argue that both the alpha1C N- and C-tails have important but different roles in the voltage- and Ca2+-dependent inactivation, as well as beta subunit modulation of the channel. The alpha1C N-tail may have a role in the channel trafficking and is a target of the beta subunit modulation. The beta subunit facilitates voltage gating by competing with the N-tail and constraining its voltage-dependent rearrangements. Thus, cross-talk between the alpha1C C and N termini, beta subunit, and the cytoplasmic pore region confers the multifactorial regulation of Ca(v)1.2 channels.  相似文献   

5.
Calcium-dependent potassium (BK-type) Ca2+ and voltage-dependent K+ channels in chromaffin cells exhibit an inactivation that probably arises from coassembly of Slo1 alpha subunits with auxiliary beta subunits. One goal of this work was to determine whether the Ca2+ dependence of inactivation arises from any mechanism other than coupling of inactivation to the Ca2+ dependence of activation. Steady-state inactivation and the onset of inactivation were studied in inside-out patches and whole-cell recordings from rat adrenal chromaffin cells with parallel experiments on inactivating BK channels resulting from cloned alpha + beta2 subunits. In both cases, steady-state inactivation was shifted to more negative potentials by increases in submembrane [Ca2+] from 1 to 60 microM. At 10 and 60 microM Ca2+, the maximal channel availability at negative potentials was similar despite a shift in the voltage of half availability, suggesting there is no strictly Ca2+-dependent inactivation. In contrast, in the absence of Ca2+, depolarization to potentials positive to +20 mV induces channel inactivation. Thus, voltage-dependent, but not solely Ca2+-dependent, kinetic steps are required for inactivation to occur. Finally, under some conditions, BK channels are shown to inactivate as readily from closed states as from open states, indicative that a key conformational change required for inactivation precedes channel opening.  相似文献   

6.
Peterson BZ  DeMaria CD  Adelman JP  Yue DT 《Neuron》1999,22(3):549-558
Elevated intracellular Ca2+ triggers inactivation of L-type calcium channels, providing negative Ca2+ feedback in many cells. Ca2+ binding to the main alpha1c channel subunit has been widely proposed to initiate such Ca2+ -dependent inactivation. Here, we find that overexpression of mutant, Ca2+ -insensitive calmodulin (CaM) ablates Ca2+ -dependent inactivation in a "dominant-negative" manner. This result demonstrates that CaM is the actual Ca2+ sensor for inactivation and suggests that CaM is constitutively tethered to the channel complex. Inactivation is likely to occur via Ca2+ -dependent interaction of tethered CaM with an IQ-like motif on the carboxyl tail of alpha1c. CaM also binds to analogous IQ regions of N-, P/Q-, and R-type calcium channels, suggesting that CaM-mediated effects may be widespread in the calcium channel family.  相似文献   

7.
Inactivation of slow Ca2+ channels was studied in intact twitch skeletal muscle fibers of the frog by using the three-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique. Hypertonic sucrose solutions were used to abolish contraction. The rate constant of decay of the slow Ca2+ current (ICa) remained practically unchanged when the recording solution containing 10 mM Ca2+ was replaced by a Ca2+-buffered solution (126 mM Ca-maleate). The rate constant of decay of ICa monotonically increased with depolarization although the corresponding time integral of ICa followed a bell-shaped function. The replacement of Ca2+ by Ba2+ did not result in a slowing of the rate of decay of the inward current nor did it reduce the degree of steady-state inactivation. The voltage dependence of the steady-state inactivation curve was steeper in the presence of Ba2+. In two-pulse experiments with large conditioning depolarizations ICa inactivation remained unchanged although Ca2+ influx during the prepulse greatly decreased. Dantrolene (12 microM) increased mechanical threshold at all pulse durations tested, the effect being more prominent for short pulses. Dantrolene did not significantly modify ICa decay and the voltage dependence of inactivation. These results indicate that in intact muscle fibers Ca2+ channels inactivate in a voltage-dependent manner through a mechanism that does not require Ca2+ entry into the cell.  相似文献   

8.
Voltage-dependent inactivation of CaV2.3 channels was investigated using point mutations in the beta-subunit-binding site (AID) of the I-II linker. The quintuple mutant alpha1E N381K + R384L + A385D + D388T + K389Q (NRADK-KLDTQ) inactivated like the wild-type alpha1E. In contrast, mutations of alpha1E at position R378 (position 5 of AID) into negatively charged residues Glu (E) or Asp (D) significantly slowed inactivation kinetics and shifted the voltage dependence of inactivation to more positive voltages. When co-injected with beta3, R378E inactivated with tau(inact) = 538 +/- 54 ms (n = 14) as compared with 74 +/- 4 ms (n = 21) for alpha1E (p < 0.001) with a mid-potential of inactivation E(0.5) = -44 +/- 2 mV (n = 10) for R378E as compared with E(0.5) = -64 +/- 3 mV (n = 9) for alpha1E. A series of mutations at position R378 suggest that positively charged residues could promote voltage-dependent inactivation. R378K behaved like the wild-type alpha1E whereas R378Q displayed intermediate inactivation kinetics. The reverse mutation E462R in the L-type alpha1C (CaV1.2) produced channels with inactivation properties comparable to alpha1E R378E. Hence, position 5 of the AID motif in the I-II linker could play a significant role in the inactivation of Ca(V)1.2 and CaV2.3 channels.  相似文献   

9.
Ba(2+) current through the L-type Ca(2+) channel inactivates essentially by voltage-dependent mechanisms with fast and slow kinetics. Here we found that slow inactivation is mediated by an annular determinant composed of hydrophobic amino acids located near the cytoplasmic ends of transmembrane segments S6 of each repeat of the alpha(1C) subunit. We have determined the molecular requirements that completely obstruct slow inactivation. Critical interventions include simultaneous substitution of A752T in IIS6, V1165T in IIIS6, and I1475T in IVS6, each preventing in additive manner a considerable fraction of Ba(2+) current from inactivation. In addition, it requires the S405I mutation in segment IS6. The fractional inhibition of slow inactivation in tested mutants caused an acceleration of fast inactivation, suggesting that fast and slow inactivation mechanisms are linked. The channel lacking slow inactivation showed approximately 45% of the sustained Ba(2+) or Ca(2+) current with no indication of decay. The remaining fraction of the current was inactivated with a single-exponential decay (pi(f) approximately 10 ms), completely recovered from inactivation within 100 ms and did not exhibit Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation properties. No voltage-dependent characteristics were significantly changed, consistent with the C-type inactivation model suggesting constriction of the pore as the main mechanism possibly targeted by Ca(2+) sensors of inactivation.  相似文献   

10.
Inactivation of a dihydropyridine-sensitive calcium current was studied in a cell line (A7r5) derived from smooth muscle of the rat thoracic aorta. Inactivation is faster with extracellular Ca2+ than with Ba2+. In Ba2+, inactivation increases monotonically with depolarization. In Ca2+, inactivation is related to the amount of inward current, so that little inactivation is seen in Ca2+ for brief depolarizations approaching the reversal potential. Longer depolarizations in Ca2+ reveal two components of inactivation, the slower component behaving like that observed in Ba2+. Furthermore, lowering extracellular Ca2+ slows inactivation. These results are consistent with the coexistence of two inactivation processes, a slow voltage-dependent inactivation, and a more rapid current-dependent inactivation which is observable only with Ca2+. Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation is decreased but not eliminated when intracellular Ca2+ is buffered by 10 mM BAPTA, suggesting that Ca2+ acts at a site on or near the channel. We also studied recovery from inactivation after either a short pulse (able to produce significant inactivation only in Ca2+) or a long pulse (giving similar inactivation with either cation). Surprisingly, recovery from Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation was voltage dependent. This suggests that the pathways for recovery from inactivation are similar regardless of how inactivation is generated. We propose a model where Ca(2+)- and voltage-dependent inactivation occur independently.  相似文献   

11.
Planar lipid bilayer recordings were used to study Ca channels from bovine cardiac sarcolemmal membranes. Ca channel activity was recorded in the absence of nucleotides or soluble enzymes, over a range of membrane potentials and ionic conditions that cannot be achieved in intact cells. The dihydropyridine-sensitive L-type Ca channel, studied in the presence of Bay K 8644, was identified by a detailed comparison of its properties in artificial membranes and in intact cells. L-type Ca channels in bilayers showed voltage dependence of channel activation and inactivation, open and closed times, and single-channel conductances in Ba2+ and Ca2+ very similar to those found in cell-attached patch recordings. Open channels were blocked by micromolar concentrations of external Cd2+. In this cell-free system, channel activity tended to decrease during the course of an experiment, reminiscent of Ca2+ channel "rundown" in whole-cell and excised-patch recordings. A purely voltage-dependent component of inactivation was observed in the absence of Ca2+ stores or changes in intracellular Ca2+. Millimolar internal Ca2+ reduced unitary Ba2+ influx but did not greatly increase the rate or extent of inactivation or the rate of channel rundown. In symmetrical Ba2+ solutions, unitary conductance saturated as the Ba2+ concentration was increased up to 500 mM. The bilayer recordings also revealed activity of a novel Ca2+-permeable channel, termed "B-type" because it may contribute a steady background current at negative membrane potentials, which is distinct from L-type or T-type Ca channels previously reported. Unlike L-type channels, B-type channels have a small unitary Ba2+ conductance (7 pS), but do not discriminate between Ba2+ and Ca2+, show no obvious sensitivity to Bay K 8644, and do not run down. Unlike either L- or T-type channels, B-type channels did not require a depolarization for activation and displayed mean open times of greater than 100 ms.  相似文献   

12.
Bakowski D  Parekh AB 《Cell calcium》2007,42(3):333-339
Store-operated Ca2+ entry through CRAC channels is a major route for Ca2+ influx in non-excitable cells. Studies on store-operated channel selectivity using fluorescent dyes have found that the channels are impermeable to Ba2+. Furthermore, in such studies, agonists have been reported to increase Ba2+ influx, leading to the conclusion that additional Ca2+ entry pathways (permeable to Ba2+) co-exist with the Ba2+-impermeable store-operated channels. However, patch clamp experiments demonstrate that CRAC channels are permeable to Ba2+. We have addressed this paradox using fluorescence measurements and whole cell patch clamp recordings of ICRAC. In store-depleted cells loaded with fura 2, Ba2+ application results in a slower and smaller rise in fluorescence than is the case with Ca2+. Ba2+, unlike Ca2+, depolarises the membrane potential by approximately 40 mV, due to rapid block of an inwardly rectifying K+ current. Although Ba2+ permeates CRAC channels at very negative potentials in patch clamp recordings, Ba2+ permeation is steeply voltage-dependent. This combination of Ba2+-dependent depolarisation and voltage-dependent Ba2+ permeation accounts for the apparent lack of Ba2+ permeation through store-operated channels seen in fluorescence experiments. Our findings identify major limitations with the use of Ba2+ as a surrogate for Ca2+ in probing Ca2+ entry pathways and raise the possibility that some of the previous reports proposing multiple Ca2+ entry pathways based on Ba2+ entry into fura 2-loaded cells could be explained by voltage-dependent Ba2+ permeation through CRAC channels.  相似文献   

13.
Inactivation of Ca channels was examined in crab muscle fibres using the voltage-clamp method. A satisfactory suppression of outward currents was attempted by the use of K+ blocking agents: TEA, 4AP and Cs ions instead of K+ ions applied extracellularly. The inactivation of Ca current appeared as a bi-exponential process. The faster component had a mean value of the time constant of 50 ms while the second component inactivated at a tenfold slower rate. The extent of inactivation of the faster component increased as the Ca current itself increased in different experimental conditions. Inactivation decreased when ICa was reduced for large applied depolarizations. The time constant of the faster calcium component also depended on the calcium current. Thus the results suggested that Ca2+ entry leads to inactivation of one component of calcium current in crab muscle. Substitution of Ca2+ ions by Sr2+ or Ba2+ ruled out the hypothesis concerning an accumulation process which would explain the decrease of the inward current. The second slower component of Ca current was better described by a voltage-dependent mechanism and its rate was not modified in Ca2+ rich solution or when the inward current was carried by Sr2+ or Ba2+ ions. Thus in crab muscle fibres, inactivation is mediated by both calcium entry and a voltage-gated mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Voltage-gated Ca2+ channels undergo a negative feedback regulation by Ca2+ ions, Ca2+-dependent inactivation, which is important for restricting Ca2+ signals in nerve and muscle. Although the molecular details underlying Ca2+-dependent inactivation have been characterized, little is known about how this process might be modulated in excitable cells. Based on previous findings that Ca2+-dependent inactivation of Ca(v)2.1 (P/Q-type) Ca2+ channels is suppressed by strong cytoplasmic Ca2+ buffering, we investigated how factors that regulate cellular Ca2+ levels affect inactivation of Ca(v)2.1 Ca2+ currents in transfected 293T cells. We found that inactivation of Ca(v)2.1 Ca2+ currents increased exponentially with current amplitude with low intracellular concentrations of the slow buffer EGTA (0.5 mm), but not with high concentrations of the fast Ca2+ buffer BAPTA (10 mm). However, when the concentration of BAPTA was reduced to 0.5 mm, inactivation of Ca2+ currents was significantly greater than with an equivalent concentration of EGTA, indicating the importance of buffer kinetics in modulating Ca2+-dependent inactivation of Ca(v)2.1. Cotransfection of Ca(v)2.1 with the EF-hand Ca2+-binding proteins, parvalbumin and calbindin, significantly altered the relationship between Ca2+ current amplitude and inactivation in ways that were unexpected from behavior as passive Ca2+ buffers. We conclude that Ca2+-dependent inactivation of Ca(v)2.1 depends on a subplasmalemmal Ca2+ microdomain that is affected by the amplitude of the Ca2+ current and differentially modulated by distinct Ca2+ buffers.  相似文献   

15.
Kim J  Ghosh S  Nunziato DA  Pitt GS 《Neuron》2004,41(5):745-754
Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation (CDI) of L-type voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels limits Ca(2+) entry into neurons, thereby regulating numerous cellular events. Here we present the isolation and purification of the Ca(2+)-sensor complex, consisting of calmodulin (CaM) and part of the channel's pore-forming alpha(1C) subunit, and demonstrate the Ca(2+)-dependent conformational shift that underlies inactivation. Dominant-negative CaM mutants that prevent CDI block the sensor's Ca(2+)-dependent conformational change. We show how Ile1654 in the CaM binding IQ motif of alpha(1C) forms the link between the Ca(2+) sensor and the downstream inactivation machinery, using the alpha(1C) EF hand motif as a signal transducer to activate the putative pore-occluder, the alpha(1C) I-II intracellular linker.  相似文献   

16.
Magnesium levels in cardiac myocytes change in cardiovascular diseases. Intracellular free magnesium (Mg(i)) inhibits L-type Ca(2+) currents through Ca(V)1.2 channels in cardiac myocytes, but the mechanism of this effect is unknown. We hypothesized that Mg(i) acts through the COOH-terminal EF-hand of Ca(V)1.2. EF-hand mutants were engineered to have either decreased (D1546A/N/S/K) or increased (K1543D and K1539D) Mg(2+) affinity. In whole-cell patch clamp experiments, increased Mg(i) reduced both Ba(2+) and Ca(2+) currents conducted by wild type (WT) Ca(V)1.2 channels expressed in tsA-201 cells with similar affinity. Exposure of WT Ca(V)1.2 to lower Mg(i) (0.26 mM) increased the amplitudes of Ba(2+) currents 2.6 +/- 0.4-fold without effects on the voltage dependence of activation and inactivation. In contrast, increasing Mg(i) to 2.4 or 7.2 mM reduced current amplitude to 0.5 +/- 0.1 and 0.26 +/- 0.05 of the control level at 0.8 mM Mg(i). The effects of Mg(i) on peak Ba(2+) currents were approximately fit by a single binding site model with an apparent K(d) of 0.65 mM. The apparent K(d) for this effect of Mg(i) was shifted approximately 3.3- to 16.5-fold to higher concentration in D1546A/N/S mutants, with only small effects on the voltage dependence of activation and inactivation. Moreover, mutant D1546K was insensitive to Mg(i) up to 7.2 mM. In contrast to these results, peak Ba(2+) currents through the K1543D mutant were inhibited by lower concentrations of Mg(i) compared with WT, consistent with approximately fourfold reduction in apparent K(d) for Mg(i), and inhibition of mutant K1539D by Mg(i) was also increased comparably. In addition to these effects, voltage-dependent inactivation of K1543D and K1539D was incomplete at positive membrane potentials when Mg(i) was reduced to 0.26 or 0.1 mM, respectively. These results support a novel mechanism linking the COOH-terminal EF-hand with modulation of Ca(V)1.2 channels by Mg(i). Our findings expand the repertoire of modulatory interactions taking place at the COOH terminus of Ca(V)1.2 channels, and reveal a potentially important role of Mg(i) binding to the COOH-terminal EF-hand in regulating Ca(2+) influx in physiological and pathophysiological states.  相似文献   

17.
Intracellular Ca2+ can inhibit the activity of voltage-gated Ca channels by modulating the rate of channel inactivation. Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation of these channels may be a common negative feedback process important for regulating Ca2+ entry under physiological and pathological conditions. This article demonstrates that the inactivation of cardiac L-type Ca channels, reconstituted into planar lipid bilayers and studied in the presence of a dihydropyridine agonist, is sensitive to Ca2+. The rates and extents of inactivation, determined from ensemble averages of unitary Ba2+ currents, decreased when the calcium concentration facing the intracellular surface of the channel ([Ca2+]i) was lowered from approximately 10 microM to 20 nM by the addition of Ca2+ chelators. The rates and extents of Ba2+ current inactivation could also be increased by subsequent addition of Ca2+ raising the [Ca2+]i to 15 microM, thus demonstrating that the Ca2+ dependence of inactivation could be reversibly regulated by changes in [Ca2+]i. In addition, reconstituted Ca channels inactivated more quickly when the inward current was carried by Ca2+ than when it was carried by Ba2+, suggesting that local increases in [Ca2+]i could activate Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation. These data support models in which Ca2+ binds to the channel itself or to closely associated regulatory proteins to control the rate of channel inactivation, and are inconsistent with purely enzymatic models for channel inactivation.  相似文献   

18.
L-type Ca(2+) channels are unusual in displaying two opposing forms of autoregulatory feedback, Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation and facilitation. Previous studies suggest that both involve direct interactions between calmodulin (CaM) and a consensus CaM-binding sequence (IQ motif) in the C terminus of the channel's alpha(1C) subunit. Here we report the functional effects of an extensive series of modifications of the IQ motif aimed at dissecting the structural determinants of the different forms of modulation. Although the combined substitution by alanine at five key positions (Ile(1624), Gln(1625), Phe(1628), Arg(1629), and Lys(1630)) abolished all Ca(2+) dependence, corresponding single alanine replacements behaved similarly to the wild-type channel (77wt) in four of five cases. The mutant I1624A stood out in displaying little or no Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation, but clear Ca(2+)- and frequency-dependent facilitation. An even more pronounced tilt in favor of facilitation was seen with the double mutant I1624A/Q1625A: overt facilitation was observed even during a single depolarizing pulse, as confirmed by two-pulse experiments. Replacement of Ile(1624) by 13 other amino acids produced graded and distinct patterns of change in the two forms of modulation. The extent of Ca(2+)-dependent facilitation was monotonically correlated with the affinity of CaM for the mutant IQ motif, determined in peptide binding experiments in vitro. Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation also depended on strong CaM binding to the IQ motif, but showed an additional requirement for a bulky, hydrophobic side chain at position 1624. Abolition of Ca(2+)-dependent modulation by IQ motif modifications mimicked and occluded the effects of overexpressing a dominant-negative CaM mutant.  相似文献   

19.
T Cens  S Restituito  P Charnet 《FEBS letters》1999,450(1-2):17-22
Ca2+ channel auxiliary beta subunits have been shown to modulate voltage-dependent inactivation of various types of Ca2+ channels. The beta1 and beta2 subunits, that are differentially expressed with the L-type alpha1 Ca2+ channel subunit in heart, muscle and brain, can specifically modulate the Ca2+-dependent inactivation kinetics. Their expression in Xenopus oocytes with the alpha1C subunit leads, in both cases, to biphasic Ca2+ current decays, the second phase being markedly slowed by expression of the beta2 subunit. Using a series of beta subunit deletion mutants and chimeric constructs of beta1 and beta2 subunits, we show that the inhibitory site located on the amino-terminal region of the beta2a subunit is the major element of this regulation. These results thus suggest that different splice variants of the beta2 subunit can modulate, in a specific way, the Ca2+ entry through L-type Ca2+ channels in different brain or heart regions.  相似文献   

20.
We have cloned two splice variants of the human homolog of the alpha1A subunit of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. The sequences of human alpha1A-1 and alpha1A-2 code for proteins of 2510 and 2662 amino acids, respectively. Human alpha1A-2alpha2bdeltabeta1b Ca2+ channels expressed in HEK293 cells activate rapidly (tau+10mV = 2.2 ms), deactivate rapidly (tau-90mV = 148 micros), inactivate slowly (tau+10mV = 690 ms), and have peak currents at a potential of +10 mV with 15 mM Ba2+ as charge carrier. In HEK293 cells transient expression of Ca2+ channels containing alpha1A/B(f), an alpha1A subunit containing a 112 amino acid segment of alpha1B-1 sequence in the IVS3-IVSS1 region, resulted in Ba2+ currents that were 30-fold larger compared to wild-type (wt) alpha1A-2-containing Ca2+ channels, and had inactivation kinetics similar to those of alpha1B-1-containing Ca2+ channels. Cells transiently transfected with alpha1A/B(f)alpha2bdeltabeta1b expressed higher levels of the alpha1, alpha2bdelta, and beta1b subunit polypeptides as detected by immunoblot analysis. By mutation analysis we identified two locations in domain IV within the extracellular loops S3-S4 (N1655P1656) and S5-SS1 (E1740) that influence the biophysical properties of alpha1A. alpha1AE1740R resulted in a threefold increase in current magnitude, a -10 mV shift in steady-state inactivation, and an altered Ba2+ current inactivation, but did not affect ion selectivity. The deletion mutant alpha1ADeltaNP shifted steady-state inactivation by -20 mV and increased the fast component of current inactivation twofold. The potency and rate of block by omega-Aga IVA was increased with alpha1ADeltaNP. These results demonstrate that the IVS3-S4 and IVS5-SS1 linkers play an essential role in determining multiple biophysical and pharmacological properties of alpha1A-containing Ca2+ channels.  相似文献   

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