The dual role of calcium: pore blocker and modulator of gating.

نویسنده

  • R Horn
چکیده

Faced with the bewildering characteristics of the ionic currents that cause the action potential in squid axon, Hodgkin and Huxley in 1952 developed an elegant model (1) that remains one of the most insightful descriptions of the functional properties of voltage-gated ion channels. One ingredient in this conceptual wizardry was the strict separation between gating, the process responsible for activation and inactivation of sodium and potassium channels, and permeation, the nearly ohmic behavior of fully activated channels. This clean separation between gating and permeation has been a bedrock principle in the biophysical characterization of voltagedependent ion channels and is supported by many singlechannel studies in which the opening and closing of channels is distinct from the properties of open channels. The maxim is that the gates open and close channels and pay scant attention to the flow of ions through the open channel. This dogma has some major exceptions, however, notably because of effects of permeant and pore-blocking ions on gating. Although such effects are quite variable among various classes of ion channels, the customary observation is that raising the concentration of either permeant or pore-blocking ions inhibits the gates from closing (2–15). The experimental data strongly suggest that, if an ion can bind deeply within the permeation pathway, it will tend to obstruct gate closure. This is the ‘‘foot-in-the-door’’ phenomenon originally described by Clay Armstrong to account for the effects of intracellular pore blockers on potassium channel gating (2, 3). The two papers from Armstrong’s laboratory in this issue of the Proceedings (16, 17) report precisely the opposite result. The binding of extracellular calcium within the pore of sodium channels has two consequences. Besides blocking current carried by sodium ions, it enhances the rate of closing of the activation gates. This raises two intriguing possibilities. First, the binding of extracellular calcium within the pore may be a necessary requirement for channels to close. A corollary of this is that the voltage dependence of calcium block may contribute to the voltage dependence of deactivation, the closing of activation gates. Second, the release of a calcium ion from the pore may be required for the activation gates to open. This is a completely novel concept of calcium’s effects on the gating of sodium channels. Although the pore-blocking effects of extracellular calcium are well known, the effects on gating usually have been ascribed to neutralization of a negative surface potential (18, 19), either by screening or binding of the divalent cation (20). Reducing the negative surface potential should shift the voltage dependence of gating by increasing the electric field across the bilayer, thereby stabilizing sodium channels in their closed conformation. It originally was assumed that the negative surface potential, estimated to be '260 mV in vertebrate cells, was caused by negatively charged phospholipids. More recent data suggest, however, that the charge originates primarily on the channel itself (21), either from negatively charged amino acids or from sialic acid residues. An unfulfilled requirement of standard surface potential theories is that extracellular calcium must shift the voltage dependence of all gating parameters (e.g., activation, deactivation, and inactivation) equally. Many exceptions to this rule have been observed experimentally, beginning with the paper that introduced the surface potential hypothesis (18). To address this complication, modifications of the theory have included the possibility that calcium interacts with specific regions of the channel, such as the negatively charged vestibule near the voltage sensor of the sodium channel (22). The idea that the pore-blocking site is also the modulatory site for the shift of gating was introduced by Armstrong and Cota in 1991 (23). In this paper, they showed a strong correlation between the binding of calcium in the pore and the depolarizing shift of activation gating. The two new papers from Armstrong’s laboratory both support and extend this idea. First, the rate of deactivation at 280 mV increases linearly with the fraction of channels blocked by calcium (16). This fraction was altered by changing extracellular calcium concentration. Remarkably, extrapolation of this relationship predicts that unblocked sodium channels cannot close; that is, the deactivation rate is zero in the absence of calcium. Unfortunately, a direct test of this hypothesis is not possible with the mammalian cells used in this study because the cells cannot survive the complete removal of extracellular divalent cations. The second paper examines the effect of extracellular calcium on sodium currents of squid giant axon (17). This preparation has two advantages over the mammalian cells used in the first paper. The axon can tolerate complete removal of calcium, at least for brief periods, and it is possible to measure the movement of the voltage sensors directly as a gating current (24). Armstrong exploited the latter by blocking all ionic current with the pore blocker saxitoxin and examining the effects of extracellular calcium on gating current kinetics. Because saxitoxin prevents access of calcium to its blocking site, this experiment is a direct test of the hypothesis that calcium acts elsewhere, either on the channel itself or on the lipid bilayer, to modulate gating. Calcium not only had small effects on the kinetics of gating currents, but the effects were qualitatively inconsistent with any gate-shifting model. The prediction of such models is that increasing extracellular calcium concentration should decrease the activation (ON) kinetics of the gating current and increase the deactivation (OFF) kinetics. However, there was a small decrease of both rates. Removal of saxitoxin exposes the calcium-binding site in the pore and reveals a large effect of calcium on the deactivation kinetics of ionic currents, as observed for the sodium currents of mammalian cells (16). Clearly, the predominant effect of calcium on gating requires access to the pore. The binding of calcium at other sites can at best play a minor role on the gating of sodium channels. Complete removal of extracellular calcium had two effects on the sodium currents of squid axon. Over a period of tens of seconds it produced a gradual decrease in the rate of deactivation, presumably because of the gradual loss of calcium from the glial layers surrounding the axon. The second effect was a concomitant disappearance of sodium current. This loss of

برای دانلود رایگان متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

منابع مشابه

Synthesis and Effects of Novel Dihydropyridines as Dual Calcium Channel Blocker and Angiotensin Antagonist on Isolated Rat Aorta

Objective(s) Four novel losartan analogues 5a-d were synthesized by connecting a dihydropyridine nucleus to imidazole ring. The effects of 5a and 5b on angiotensin receptors (AT') and L-type calcium channels were investigated on isolated rat aorta. Materials and Methods Aortic rings were pre-contracted with 1 pM Angiotensin II or 80 mM KCl and relaxant effects of losartan, nifedipine, 5a and...

متن کامل

Role of a voltage-sensitive calcium channel blocker on inhibition of apoptosis in sensory neurons of cultured dorsal root ganglia in adult rat

Introduction: Under pathological conditions, abnormal increase in intracellular calcium concentrations is believed to induce cell death. In the present study, a voltage-sensitive calcium channel blocker (loperamide hydrochloride) was used to investigate its role in inhibition of apoptosis in sensory neurons of cultured spinal dorsal root ganglia (DRG). Methods: L5 DRG from adult rats were di...

متن کامل

Hyperinsulinemic Euglycemia and Intravenous Lipid Emulsion Treatments for Calcium Channel Blocker and Beta Blocker Poisoning: A Report of Two Cases

Poisoning with calcium channel blockers and beta blockers are associated with high mortality and morbidity rates, especially in children. Treatment of poisoning with these drugs includes administration of atropine, glucagon, calcium and inotropic agents as clinically needed; and newer approaches like hyperinsulinemic euglycemia and intravenous lipid emulsion therapies. We herein present two ref...

متن کامل

Involvement of voltage-dependent calcium channels in synaptic plasticity of the rat visual cortex

In this study, involvement ofvoltage-dependent calcium channels in LTP of responses of rat visual cortex slices was analyzed. Field potentials including EPSP1 and EPSP2 from layers II/III were recorded through stimulation of layer IV. Whereas nifedipine, a L-type calcium channel blocker (L-VDCC), did not considerably affect the LTP of responses, but Ni2+, a relatively selective blocker of T-typ...

متن کامل

Involvement of voltage-dependent calcium channels in synaptic plasticity of the rat visual cortex

In this study, involvement ofvoltage-dependent calcium channels in LTP of responses of rat visual cortex slices was analyzed. Field potentials including EPSP1 and EPSP2 from layers II/III were recorded through stimulation of layer IV. Whereas nifedipine, a L-type calcium channel blocker (L-VDCC), did not considerably affect the LTP of responses, but Ni2+, a relatively selective blocker of T-typ...

متن کامل

ذخیره در منابع من


  با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید

عنوان ژورنال:
  • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

دوره 96 7  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 1999