Inactivation of L-type calcium channel (Cav1.2) is an important determinant of the length of the cardiac action potential. Here, we report a key role of the voltage-sensing segment IS4 in Cav1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to specify the role of individual S4 segments in Ca1.2 gating, charged residues of segments IS4-IVS4 were replaced by glutamine and the corresponding effects on activation/deactivation of calcium channel currents were analysed. Almost all replacements of charges in IS4 and IIIS4 decreased the slope of the Boltzmann curve of channel activation (activation curve) while charge neutralisations in IIS4 and IVS4 did not significantly affect the slope.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVoltage sensors trigger the closed-open transitions in the pore of voltage-gated ion channels. To probe the transmission of voltage sensor signalling to the channel pore of Ca(V)1.2, we investigated how elimination of positive charges in the S4 segments (charged residues were replaced by neutral glutamine) modulates gating perturbations induced by mutations in pore-lining S6 segments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Timothy syndrome mutations G402S and G406R abolish inactivation of Ca(V)1.2 and cause multiorgan dysfunction and lethal arrhythmias. To gain insights into the consequences of the G402S mutation on structure and function of the channel, we systematically mutated the corresponding Gly-432 of the rabbit channel and applied homology modeling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSingle point mutations in pore-forming S6 segments of calcium channels may transform a high-voltage-activated into a low-voltage-activated channel, and resulting disturbances in calcium entry may cause channelopathies (Hemara-Wahanui et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 102(21):7553-7558, 16). Here we ask the question how physicochemical properties of amino acid residues in gating-sensitive positions on S6 segments determine the threshold of channel activation of Ca(V)1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPoint mutations in pore-lining S6 segments of CaV1.2 shift the voltage dependence of activation into the hyperpolarizing direction and significantly decelerate current activation and deactivation. Here, we analyze theses changes in channel gating in terms of a circular four-state model accounting for an activation R-A-O and a deactivation O-D-R pathway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVoltage dependence and kinetics of Ca(V)1.2 activation are affected by structural changes in pore-lining S6 segments of the alpha(1)-subunit. Significant effects are induced by either proline or threonine substitutions in the lower third of segment IIS6 ("bundle crossing region"), where S6 segments are likely to seal the channel in the closed conformation (Hohaus, A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCalcium channel family members activate at different membrane potentials, which enables tissue specific calcium entry. Pore mutations affecting this voltage dependence are associated with channelopathies. In this review we analyze the link between voltage sensitivity and corresponding kinetic phenotypes of calcium channel activation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA channelopathy mutation in segment IIS6 of Ca(V)1.4 (I745T) has been shown to cause severe visual impairment by shifting the activation and inactivation curves to more hyperpolarized voltages and slowing activation and inactivation kinetics. A similar gating phenotype is caused by the corresponding mutation, I781T, in Ca(V)1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVoltage-gated calcium channels are in a closed conformation at rest and open temporarily when the membrane is depolarized. To gain insight into the molecular architecture of Ca(v)1.2, we probed the closed and open conformations with the charged phenylalkylamine (-)devapamil ((-)qD888).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mechanism of channel opening for voltage-gated calcium channels is poorly understood. The importance of a conserved isoleucine residue in the pore-lining segment IIS6 has recently been highlighted by functional analyses of a mutation (I745T) in the Ca(V)1.4 channel causing severe visual impairment (Hemara-Wahanui, A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAhnak, a protein of 5643 amino acids, interacts with the regulatory beta-subunit of cardiac calcium channels and with F-actin. Recently, we defined the binding sites among the protein partners in the carboxyl-terminal domain of ahnak. Here we further narrowed down the beta(2)-interaction sites to the carboxyl-terminal 188 amino acids of ahnak by the recombinant ahnak protein fragments P3 (amino acids 5456-5556) and P4 (amino acids 5556-5643).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAhnak is a ubiquitously expressed giant protein of 5643 amino acids implicated in cell differentiation and signal transduction. In a recent study, we demonstrated the association of ahnak with the regulatory beta2 subunit of the cardiac L-type Ca2+ channel. Here we identify the most carboxyl-terminal ahnak region (aa 5262-5643) to interact with recombinant beta2a as well as with beta2 and beta1a isoforms of native muscle Ca2+ channels using a panel of GST fusion proteins.
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