Gating defects of a novel Na+ channel mutant causing hypokalemic periodic paralysis |
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Authors: | Carle Thomas Lhuillier Loïc Luce Sandrine Sternberg Damien Devuyst Olivier Fontaine Bertrand Tabti Nacira |
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Affiliation: | INSERM U546, Faculté de Médecine P & M Curie, 75013 Paris, France. |
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Abstract: | Hypokalemic periodic paralysis type 2 (hypoPP2) is an inherited skeletal muscle disorder caused by missense mutations in the SCN4A gene encoding the alpha subunit of the skeletal muscle Na+ channel (Nav1.4). All hypoPP2 mutations reported so far target an arginine residue of the voltage sensor S4 of domain II (R672/G/H/S). We identified a novel hypoPP2 mutation that neutralizes an arginine residue in DIII-S4 (R1132Q), and studied its functional consequences in HEK cells transfected with the human SCN4A cDNA. Whole-cell current recordings revealed an enhancement of both fast and slow inactivation, as well as a depolarizing shift of the activation curve. The unitary Na+ conductance remained normal in R1132Q and in R672S mutants, and cannot therefore account for the reduction of Na+ current presumed in hypoPP2. Altogether, our results provide a clear evidence for the role of R1132 in channel activation and inactivation, and confirm loss of function effects of hypoPP2 mutations leading to muscle hypoexcitability. |
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Keywords: | SCN4A Nav1.4 Mutation Skeletal muscle Patch-clamp Electrophysiology Heterologous Na+ channel expression HEK cells Hypokalemic periodic paralysis Channelopathy |
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