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1.
Voltage-gated ion channels respond to changes in the transmembrane voltage by opening or closing their ion conducting pore. The positively charged fourth transmembrane segment (S4) has been identified as the main voltage sensor, but the mechanisms of coupling between the voltage sensor and the gates are still unknown. Obtaining information about the location and the exact motion of S4 is an important step toward an understanding of these coupling mechanisms. In previous studies we have shown that the extracellular end of S4 is located close to segment 5 (S5). The purpose of the present study is to estimate the location of S4 charges in both resting and activated states. We measured the modification rates by differently charged methanethiosulfonate regents of two residues in the extracellular end of S5 in the Shaker K channel (418C and 419C). When S4 moves to its activated state, the modification rate by the negatively charged sodium (2-sulfonatoethyl) methanethiosulfonate (MTSES(-)) increases significantly more than the modification rate by the positively charged [2-(trimethylammonium)ethyl] methanethiosulfonate, bromide (MTSET(+)). This indicates that the positive S4 charges are moving close to 418C and 419C in S5 during activation. Neutralization of the most external charge of S4 (R362), shows that R362 in its activated state electrostatically affects the environment at 418C by 19 mV. In contrast, R362 in its resting state has no effect on 418C. This suggests that, during activation of the channel, R362 moves from a position far away (>20 A) to a position close (8 A) to 418C. Despite its close approach to E418, a residue shown to be important in slow inactivation, R362 has no effect on slow inactivation or the recovery from slow inactivation. This refutes previous models for slow inactivation with an electrostatic S4-to-gate coupling. Instead, we propose a model with an allosteric mechanism for the S4-to-gate coupling.  相似文献   

2.
After removal of the fast N-type inactivation gate, voltage-sensitive Shaker (Shaker IR) K channels are still able to inactivate, albeit slowly, upon sustained depolarization. The classical mechanism proposed for the slow inactivation observed in cell-free membrane patches—the so called C inactivation—is a constriction of the external mouth of the channel pore that prevents K+ ion conduction. This constriction is antagonized by the external application of the pore blocker tetraethylammonium (TEA). In contrast to C inactivation, here we show that, when recorded in whole Xenopus oocytes, slow inactivation kinetics in Shaker IR K channels is poorly dependent on external TEA but severely delayed by internal TEA. Based on the antagonism with internally or externally added TEA, we used a two-pulse protocol to show that half of the channels inactivate by way of a gate sensitive to internal TEA. Such gate had a recovery time course in the tens of milliseconds range when the interpulse voltage was −90 mV, whereas C-inactivated channels took several seconds to recover. Internal TEA also reduced gating charge conversion associated to slow inactivation, suggesting that the closing of the internal TEA-sensitive inactivation gate could be associated with a significant amount of charge exchange of this type. We interpreted our data assuming that binding of internal TEA antagonized with U-type inactivation (Klemic, K.G., G.E. Kirsch, and S.W. Jones. 2001. Biophys. J. 81:814–826). Our results are consistent with a direct steric interference of internal TEA with an internally located slow inactivation gate as a “foot in the door” mechanism, implying a significant functional overlap between the gate of the internal TEA-sensitive slow inactivation and the primary activation gate. But, because U-type inactivation is reduced by channel opening, trapping the channel in the open conformation by TEA would also yield to an allosteric delay of slow inactivation. These results provide a framework to explain why constitutively C-inactivated channels exhibit gating charge conversion, and why mutations at the internal exit of the pore, such as those associated to episodic ataxia type I in hKv1.1, cause severe changes in inactivation kinetics.  相似文献   

3.
Y Y Vilin  N Makita  A L George  Jr    P C Ruben 《Biophysical journal》1999,77(3):1384-1393
Skeletal and heart muscle excitability is based upon the pool of available sodium channels as determined by both fast and slow inactivation. Slow inactivation in hH1 sodium channels significantly differs from slow inactivation in hSkM1. The beta(1)-subunit modulates fast inactivation in human skeletal sodium channels (hSkM1) but has little effect on fast inactivation in human cardiac sodium channels (hH1). The role of the beta(1)-subunit in sodium channel slow inactivation is still unknown. We used the macropatch technique on Xenopus oocytes to study hSkM1 and hH1 slow inactivation with and without beta(1)-subunit coexpression. Our results indicate that the beta(1)-subunit is partly responsible for differences in steady-state slow inactivation between hSkM1 and hH1 channels. We also studied a sodium channel chimera, in which P-loops from each domain in hSkM1 sodium channels were replaced with corresponding regions from hH1. Our results show that these chimeras exhibit hH1-like properties of steady-state slow inactivation. These data suggest that P-loops are structural determinants of sodium channel slow inactivation, and that the beta(1)-subunit modulates slow inactivation in hSkM1 but not hH1. Changes in slow inactivation time constants in sodium channels coexpressed with the beta(1)-subunit indicate possible interactions among the beta(1)-subunit, P-loops, and the slow inactivation gate in sodium channels.  相似文献   

4.
In contrast to fast inactivation, the molecular basis of sodium (Na) channel slow inactivation is poorly understood. It has been suggested that structural rearrangements in the outer pore mediate slow inactivation of Na channels similar to C-type inactivation in potassium (K) channels. We probed the role of the outer ring of charge in inactivation gating by paired cysteine mutagenesis in the rat skeletal muscle Na channel (rNav1.4). The outer charged ring residues were substituted with cysteine, paired with cysteine mutants at other positions in the external pore, and coexpressed with rat brain beta1 in Xenopus oocytes. Dithiolthreitol (DTT) markedly increased the current in E403C+E758C double mutant, indicating the spontaneous formation of a disulfide bond and proximity of the alpha carbons of these residues of no more than 7 A. The redox catalyst Cu(II) (1,10-phenanthroline)3 (Cu(phe)3) reduced the peak current of double mutants (E403C+E758C, E403C+D1241C, E403C+D1532C, and D1241C+D1532C) at a rate proportional to the stimulation frequency. Voltage protocols that favored occupancy of slow inactivation states completely prevented Cu(phe)3 modification of outer charged ring paired mutants E403C+E758C, E403C+D1241C, and E403C+D1532C. In contrast, voltage protocols that favored slow inactivation did not prevent Cu(phe)3 modification of other double mutants such as E403C+W756C, E403C+W1239C, and E403C+W1531C. Our data suggest that slow inactivation of the Na channel is associated with a structural rearrangement of the outer ring of charge.  相似文献   

5.
Alanine-scanning mutagenesis of transmembrane segments IS6 and IIS6 of the rat brain Na(v)1.2 channel alpha subunit identified mutations N418A in IS6 and L975A in IIS6 as causing strong positive shifts in the voltage dependence of activation. In contrast, mutations V424A in IS6 and L983A in IIS6 caused strong negative shifts. Most IS6 mutations opposed inactivation from closed states, but most IIS6 mutations favored such inactivation. Mutations L421C and L983A near the intracellular ends of IS6 and IIS6, respectively, exhibited significant sustained Na(+) currents at the end of 30-ms depolarizations, indicating a role for these residues in Na(+) channel fast inactivation. These residues, in combination with residues at the intracellular end of IVS6, are well situated to form an inactivation gate receptor. Mutation I409A in IS6 reduced the affinity of the local anesthetic etidocaine for the inactivated state by 6-fold, and mutations I409A and N418A reduced use-dependent block by etidocaine. No IS6 or IIS6 mutations studied affected inactivated-state affinity or use-dependent block by the neuroprotective drug sipatrigine (compound 619C89). These results suggest that the local anesthetic receptor site is formed primarily by residues in segments IIIS6 and IVS6 with the contribution of a single amino acid in segment IS6.  相似文献   

6.
Previous studies using combined techniques of site-directed mutagenesis and electrophysiology of voltage-gated Na(+) channels have demonstrated that there are significant overlaps in the regions that are important for the two fundamental properties of the channels, namely gating and permeation. We have previously shown that a pore-lining residue, W402 in S5-S6 region (P loop) in domain I of the micro1 skeletal muscle Na(+) channel, was important in the gating of the channel. Here, we determined the role of an adjacent pore-lining negatively charged residue (E403) in channel gating. Charge neutralization or substitution with positively charged side chain at this position resulted in a marked delay in the rate of recovery from slow inactivation. Indeed, the fast inactivation process appeared intact. Restoration of the negatively charged side chain with a sulfhydryl modifier, MTS-ethylsulfonate, resulted in a reactivation profile from a slow-inactivated state, which was indistinguishable from that of the wild-type channels. We propose an additional functional role for the negatively charged residue. Assuming no major changes in the pore structure induced by the mutations, the negatively charged residue E403 may work in concert with other pore regions during recovery from slow inactivation of the channel. Our data represent the first report indicating the role of negative charge in the slow inactivation of the voltage-gated Na(+) channel.  相似文献   

7.
This study addresses the energetic coupling between the activation and slow inactivation gates of Shaker potassium channels. To track the status of the activation gate in inactivated channels that are nonconducting, we used two functional assays: the accessibility of a cysteine residue engineered into the protein lining the pore cavity (V474C) and the liberation by depolarization of a Cs(+) ion trapped behind the closed activation gate. We determined that the rate of activation gate movement depends on the state of the inactivation gate. A closed inactivation gate favors faster opening and slower closing of the activation gate. We also show that hyperpolarization closes the activation gate long before a channel recovers from inactivation. Because activation and slow inactivation are ubiquitous gating processes in potassium channels, the cross talk between them is likely to be a fundamental factor in controlling ion flux across membranes.  相似文献   

8.
Chemical, enzymatic and physicochemical methods of a structural analysis of 5S rRNAs in lupine, wheat germ, and other plants led us to propose a new three-dimensional model of these molecules The main features of the model are tertiary interactions between the β- and γ-domains of the molecule, specifically nucleotides (34)CCCA(37) in loop C and nucleotides (85)GGGU(88) in loop D. In addition we propose tertiary base-pairing in A100-U53 between loops B and E. We have confirmed this model by NMR spectroscopy and by chemical modification with diethylpyrocarbonate. Our results are consistent with the proposed model and are also applicable to all eukaryotic 5S rRNAs. Our model is clearly differentiated from others by intramolecular tertiary hydrogen bonds between the two domains.  相似文献   

9.
During inactivation of Na+ channels, the intracellular loop connecting domains III and IV is thought to fold into the channel protein and occlude the pore through interaction of the hydrophobic motif isoleucine-phenylalanine-methionine (IFM) with a receptor site. We have searched for amino acid residues flanking the IFM motif which may contribute to formation of molecular hinges that allow this motion of the inactivation gate. Site-directed mutagenesis of proline and glycine residues, which often are components of molecular hinges in proteins, revealed that G1484, G1485, P1512, P1514, and P1516 are required for normal fast inactivation. Mutations of these residues slow the time course of macroscopic inactivation. Single channel analysis of mutations G1484A, G1485A, and P1512A showed that the slowing of macroscopic inactivation is produced by increases in open duration and latency to first opening. These mutant channels also show a higher probability of entering a slow gating mode in which their inactivation is further impaired. The effects on gating transitions in the pathway to open Na+ channels indicate conformational coupling of activation to transitions in the inactivation gate. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that these glycine and proline residues contribute to hinge regions which allow movement of the inactivation gate during the inactivation process of Na+ channels.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
HERG encodes an inwardly-rectifying potassium channel that plays an important role in repolarization of the cardiac action potential. Inward rectification of HERG channels results from rapid and voltage-dependent inactivation gating, combined with very slow activation gating. We asked whether the voltage sensor is implicated in the unusual properties of HERG gating: does the voltage sensor move slowly to account for slow activation and deactivation, or could the voltage sensor move rapidly to account for the rapid kinetics and intrinsic voltage dependence of inactivation? To probe voltage sensor movement, we used a fluorescence technique to examine conformational changes near the positively charged S4 region. Fluorescent probes attached to three different residues on the NH2-terminal end of the S4 region (E518C, E519C, and L520C) reported both fast and slow voltage-dependent changes in fluorescence. The slow changes in fluorescence correlated strongly with activation gating, suggesting that the slow activation gating of HERG results from slow voltage sensor movement. The fast changes in fluorescence showed voltage dependence and kinetics similar to inactivation gating, though these fluorescence signals were not affected by external tetraethylammonium blockade or mutations that alter inactivation. A working model with two types of voltage sensor movement is proposed as a framework for understanding HERG channel gating and the fluorescence signals.  相似文献   

12.
Genetic variants in SCN5A gene were identified in patients with various arrhythmogenic conditions including Brugada syndrome. Despite significant progress of last decades in studying the molecular mechanism of arrhythmia-associated SCN5A mutations, the understanding of relationship between genetics, electrophysiological consequences and clinical phenotype is lacking. We have found a novel genetic variant Y739D in the SCN5A-encoded sodium channel Nav1.5 of a male patient with Brugada syndrome (BrS). The objective of the study was to characterize the biophysical properties of Nav1.5-Y739D and provide possible explanation of the phenotype observed in the patient. The WT and Y739D channels were heterologously expressed in the HEK-293T cells and the whole-cell sodium currents were recorded. Substitution Y739D reduced the sodium current density by 47 ± 2% at ?20 mV, positively shifted voltage-dependent activation, accelerated both fast and slow inactivation, and decelerated recovery from the slow inactivation. The Y739D loss-of-function phenotype likely causes the BrS manifestation. In the hNav1.5 homology models, which are based on the cryo-EM structure of rat Nav1.5 channel, Y739 in the extracellular loop IIS1-S2 forms H-bonds with K1381 and E1435 and pi-cation contacts with K1397 (all in loop IIIS5-P1). In contrast, Y739D accepts H-bonds from K1397 and Y1434. Substantially different contacts of Y739 and Y739D with loop IIIS5-P1 would differently transmit allosteric signals from VSD-II to the fast-inactivation gate at the N-end of helix IIIS5 and slow-inactivation gate at the C-end of helix IIIP1. This may underlie the atomic mechanism of the Y739D channel dysfunction.  相似文献   

13.
Slow inactivation in voltage-gated sodium channels (NaChs) occurs in response to depolarizations of seconds to minutes and is thought to play an important role in regulating membrane excitability and action potential firing patterns. However, the molecular mechanisms of slow inactivation are not well understood. To test the hypothesis that transmembrane segment 6 of domain 2 (D2-S6) plays a role in NaCh slow inactivation, we substituted different amino acids at position V787 (valine) in D2-S6 of rat skeletal muscle NaCh mu(1) (Na(v)1.4). Whole-cell recordings from transiently expressed NaChs in HEK cells were used to study and compare slow inactivation phenotypes between mutants and wild type. V787K (lysine substitution) showed a marked enhancement of slow inactivation. V787K enters the slow-inactivated state approximately 100x faster than wild type (tau(1) approximately 30 ms vs. approximately 3 s), and occurs at much more hyperpolarized potentials than wild type (V(1/2) of s(infinity) curve approximately -130 mV vs. approximately -75 mV). V787C (cysteine substitution) showed a resistance to slow inactivation, i.e., opposite to that of V787K. Entry into the slow inactivation state in V787C was slower (tau(1) approximately 5 s), less complete, and less voltage-dependent (V(1/2) of s(infinity) curve approximately -50 mV) than in wild type. Application of the cysteine modification agent methanethiosulfonate ethylammonium (MTSEA) to V787C demonstrated that the 787 position undergoes a relative change in molecular conformation that is associated with the slow inactivation state. Our results suggest that the V787 position in Na(v)1.4 plays an important role in slow inactivation gating and that molecular rearrangement occurs at or near residue V787 in D2-S6 during NaCh slow inactivation.  相似文献   

14.
Hyperpolarization-activated HCN channels are modulated by direct binding of cyclic nucleotides. For HCN2 channels, cAMP shifts the voltage dependence for activation, with relatively little change in the maximal conductance. By contrast, in spHCN channels, cAMP relieves a rapid inactivation process and produces a large increase in maximum conductance. Our results suggest that these two effects of cAMP represent the same underlying process. We also find that spHCN inactivation occurs not by closure of a specialized inactivation gate, as for other voltage-dependent channels, but by reclosure of the same intracellular gate opened upon activation. Effectively, the activation gate exhibits a "desensitization to voltage," perhaps by slippage of the coupling between the voltage sensors and the gate. Differences in the initial coupling efficiency could allow cAMP to produce either the inactivation or the shift phenotype by strengthening effective coupling: a shift would naturally occur if coupling is already strong in the absence of cAMP.  相似文献   

15.
Activation and inactivation of voltage-gated sodium channels (Navs) are well studied, yet the molecular mechanisms governing channel gating in the membrane remain unknown. We present two conformations of a Nav from Caldalkalibacillus thermarum reconstituted into lipid bilayers in one crystal at 9 Å resolution based on electron crystallography. Despite a voltage sensor arrangement identical with that in the activated form, we observed two distinct pore domain structures: a prominent form with a relatively open inner gate and a closed inner-gate conformation similar to the first prokaryotic Nav structure. Structural differences, together with mutational and electrophysiological analyses, indicated that widening of the inner gate was dependent on interactions among the S4–S5 linker, the N-terminal part of S5 and its adjoining part in S6, and on interhelical repulsion by a negatively charged C-terminal region subsequent to S6. Our findings suggest that these specific interactions result in two conformational structures.  相似文献   

16.
We have studied the inactivation of high-voltage-activated (HVA), omega- conotoxin-sensitive, N-type Ca2+ current in embryonic chick dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons. Voltage steps from -80 to 0 mV produced inward Ca2+ currents that inactivated in a biphasic manner and were fit well with the sum of two exponentials (with time constants of approximately 100 ms and > 1 s). As reported previously, upon depolarization of the holding potential to -40 mV, N current amplitude was significantly reduced and the rapid phase of inactivation all but eliminated (Nowycky, M. C., A. P. Fox, and R. W. Tsien. 1985. Nature. 316:440-443; Fox, A. P., M. C. Nowycky, and R. W. Tsien. 1987a. Journal of Physiology. 394:149-172; Swandulla, D., and C. M. Armstrong. 1988. Journal of General Physiology. 92:197-218; Plummer, M. R., D. E. Logothetis, and P. Hess. 1989. Neuron. 2:1453-1463; Regan, L. J., D. W. Sah, and B. P. Bean. 1991. Neuron. 6:269-280; Cox, D. H., and K. Dunlap. 1992. Journal of Neuroscience. 12:906-914). Such kinetic properties might be explained by a model in which N channels inactivate by both fast and slow voltage-dependent processes. Alternatively, kinetic models of Ca-dependent inactivation suggest that the biphasic kinetics and holding-potential-dependence of N current inactivation could be due to a combination of Ca-dependent and slow voltage- dependent inactivation mechanisms. To distinguish between these possibilities we have performed several experiments to test for the presence of Ca-dependent inactivation. Three lines of evidence suggest that N channels inactivate in a Ca-dependent manner. (a) The total extent of inactivation increased 50%, and the ratio of rapid to slow inactivation increased approximately twofold when the concentration of the Ca2+ buffer, EGTA, in the patch pipette was reduced from 10 to 0.1 mM. (b) With low intracellular EGTA concentrations (0.1 mM), the ratio of rapid to slow inactivation was additionally increased when the extracellular Ca2+ concentration was raised from 0.5 to 5 mM. (c) Substituting Na+ for Ca2+ as the permeant ion eliminated the rapid phase of inactivation. Other results do not support the notion of current-dependent inactivation, however. Although high intracellular EGTA (10 mM) or BAPTA (5 mM) concentrations suppressed the rapid phase inactivation, they did not eliminate it. Increasing the extracellular Ca2+ from 0.5 to 5 mM had little effect on this residual fast inactivation, indicating that it is not appreciably sensitive to Ca2+ influx under these conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
KcsA is a proton-activated K+ channel that is regulated at two gates: an activation gate located in the inner entrance of the pore and an inactivation gate at the selectivity filter. Previously, we revealed that the cytoplasmic domain (CPD) of KcsA senses proton and that electrostatic changes of the CPD influences the opening and closing of the activation gate. However, our previous studies did not reveal the effect of CPD on the inactivation gate because we used a non-inactivating mutant (E71A). In the present study, we used mutants that did not harbor the E71A mutation, and showed that the electrostatic state of the CPD influences the inactivation gate. Three novel CPD mutants were generated in which some negatively charged amino acids were replaced with neutral amino acids. These CPD mutants conducted K+, but showed various inactivation properties. Mutants carrying the D149N mutation showed high open probability and slow inactivation, whereas those without the D149N mutation showed low open probability and fast inactivation, similar to wild-type KcsA. In addition, mutants with D149N showed poor K+ selectivity, and permitted Na+ to flow. These results indicated that electrostatic changes in the CPD by D149N mutation triggered the loss of fast inactivation and changes in the conformation of selectivity filter. Additionally, the loss of fast inactivation induced by D149N was reversed by R153A mutation, suggesting that not only the electrostatic state of D149, but also that of R153 affects inactivation.  相似文献   

18.
Kir2.1 (also known as IRK1) plays key roles in regulation of resting membrane potential and cell excitability. To achieve its physiological roles, Kir2.1 performs a series of conformational transition, named as gating. However, the structural basis of gating is still obscure. Here, we combined site‐directed mutation, two‐electrode voltage clamp with molecular dynamics simulations and determined that H221 regulates the gating process of Kir2.1 by involving a weak interaction network. Our data show that the H221R mutant accelerates the rundown kinetics and decelerates the reactivation kinetics of Kir2.1. Compared with the WT channel, the H221R mutation strengthens the interaction between the CD‐ and G‐loops (E303‐R221) which stabilizes the close state of the G‐loop gate and weakens the interactions between C‐linker and CD‐loop (R221‐R189) and the adjacent G‐loops (E303‐R312) which destabilizes the open state of G‐loop gate. Our data indicate that the three pairs of interactions (E303‐H221, H221‐R189 and E303‐R312) precisely regulate the G‐loop gate by controlling the conformation of G‐loop. Proteins 2016; 84:1929–1937. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
Molecular coupling of S4 to a K(+) channel's slow inactivation gate   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The mechanism by which physiological signals regulate the conformation of molecular gates that open and close ion channels is poorly understood. Voltage clamp fluorometry was used to ask how the voltage-sensing S4 transmembrane domain is coupled to the slow inactivation gate in the pore domain of the Shaker K(+) channel. Fluorophores attached at several sites in S4 indicate that the voltage-sensing rearrangements are followed by an additional inactivation motion. Fluorophores attached at the perimeter of the pore domain indicate that the inactivation rearrangement projects from the selectivity filter out to the interface with the voltage-sensing domain. Some of the pore domain sites also sense activation, and this appears to be due to a direct interaction with S4 based on the finding that S4 comes into close enough proximity to the pore domain for a pore mutation to alter the nanoenvironment of an S4-attached fluorophore. We propose that activation produces an S4-pore domain interaction that disrupts a bond between the S4 contact site on the pore domain and the outer end of S6. Our results indicate that this bond holds the slow inactivation gate open and, therefore, we propose that this S4-induced bond disruption triggers inactivation.  相似文献   

20.
Recent reports suggest that four S6 C-termini may jointly close the voltage-gated cation channel at the cytoplasmic side, probably as an inverted teepee structure. In this study we substituted individually a total of 18 residues at D1S6 and D4S6 C-terminal ends of the rNav1.4 Na(+) channel alpha-subunit with tryptophan (W) and examined their corresponding gating properties when expressed in Hek293t cells along with beta1 subunit. Several W-mutants displayed significant changes in activation, fast inactivation, and/or slow inactivation gating. In particular, five S6 W-mutants showed incomplete fast inactivation with noninactivating maintained currents present. Cysteine (C) substitutions of these five residues resulted in two mutants with slightly more maintained currents. Multiple substitutions at these five positions yielded two mutants (L437C/A438W, L435W/L437C/A438W) that exhibited phenotypes with minimal fast inactivation. Unexpectedly, such inactivation-deficient mutants expressed Na(+) currents as well as did the wild-type. Furthermore, all mutants with impaired fast inactivation exhibited an enhanced slow inactivation phenotype. Implications of these results will be discussed in terms of indirect allosteric modulations via amino acid substitutions and/or a direct involvement of S6 C-termini in Na(+) channel gating.  相似文献   

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