A 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)1.2 (midpoint of activation curve (V(0.5)) shifted to -37.7 +/- 1.2 mV). We show here that wild-type gating can partially be restored by a helix stabilizing rescue mutation N785A. V(0.5) of I781T/N785A (V(0.5) = -21.5 +/- 0.6 mV) was shifted back towards wild-type (V(0.5) = -9.9 +/- 1.1 mV). Homology models developed in our group (see accompanying article for details) were used to perform Molecular Dynamics-simulations (MD-simulations) on wild-type and mutant channels. Systematic changes in segment IIIS6 (M1187-F1194) and in helix IIS6 (N785-L786) were studied. The simulated structural changes in S6 segments of I781T/N785A were less pronounced than in I781T. A delicate balance between helix flexibility and stability enabling the formation of hydrophobic seals at the inner channel mouth appears to be important for wild-type Ca(V)1.2 gating. Our study illustrates that effects of mutations in the lower part of IIS6 may not be localized to the residue or even segment being mutated, but may affect conformations of interacting segments.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3196984PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/chan.2.3.6160DOI Listing

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