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Differential interactions of Na+ channel toxins with T-type Ca2+ channels
Authors:Sun Hui  Varela Diego  Chartier Denis  Ruben Peter C  Nattel Stanley  Zamponi Gerald W  Leblanc Normand
Affiliation:Excigen, Inc., Baltimore, MD 21224, USA.
Abstract:Two types of voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels have been identified in heart: high (I(CaL)) and low (I(CaT)) voltage-activated Ca(2+) channels. In guinea pig ventricular myocytes, low voltage-activated inward current consists of I(CaT) and a tetrodotoxin (TTX)-sensitive I(Ca) component (I(Ca(TTX))). In this study, we reexamined the nature of low-threshold I(Ca) in dog atrium, as well as whether it is affected by Na(+) channel toxins. Ca(2+) currents were recorded using the whole-cell patch clamp technique. In the absence of external Na(+), a transient inward current activated near -50 mV, peaked at -30 mV, and reversed around +40 mV (HP = -90 mV). It was unaffected by 30 microM TTX or micromolar concentrations of external Na(+), but was inhibited by 50 microM Ni(2+) (by approximately 90%) or 5 microM mibefradil (by approximately 50%), consistent with the reported properties of I(CaT). Addition of 30 microM TTX in the presence of Ni(2+) increased the current approximately fourfold (41% of control), and shifted the dose-response curve of Ni(2+) block to the right (IC(50) from 7.6 to 30 microM). Saxitoxin (STX) at 1 microM abolished the current left in 50 microM Ni(2+). In the absence of Ni(2+), STX potently blocked I(CaT) (EC(50) = 185 nM) and modestly reduced I(CaL) (EC(50) = 1.6 microM). While TTX produced no direct effect on I(CaT) elicited by expression of hCa(V)3.1 and hCa(V)3.2 in HEK-293 cells, it significantly attenuated the block of this current by Ni(2+) (IC(50) increased to 550 microM Ni(2+) for Ca(V)3.1 and 15 microM Ni(2+) for Ca(V)3.2); in contrast, 30 microM TTX directly inhibited hCa(V)3.3-induced I(CaT) and the addition of 750 microM Ni(2+) to the TTX-containing medium led to greater block of the current that was not significantly different than that produced by Ni(2+) alone. 1 microM STX directly inhibited Ca(V)3.1-, Ca(V)3.2-, and Ca(V)3.3-mediated I(CaT) but did not enhance the ability of Ni(2+) to block these currents. These findings provide important new implications for our understanding of structure-function relationships of I(CaT) in heart, and further extend the hypothesis of a parallel evolution of Na(+) and Ca(2+) channels from an ancestor with common structural motifs.
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