Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
Mibefradil is a tetralol derivative chemically distinct from other calcium channel antagonists. I... more Mibefradil is a tetralol derivative chemically distinct from other calcium channel antagonists. It is a very effective antihypertensive agent that is thought to achieve its action via a higher affinity block for low-voltage-activated (T) than for high-voltage-activated (L) calcium channels. Estimates of affinity using Ba(2+) as the charge carrier have predicted a 10- to 15-fold preference of mibefradil for T channels over L channels. However, T channel IC(50) values are reported to be approximately 1 microM, which is much higher than expected for clinical efficacy because relevant blood levels of this drug are approximately 50 nM. We compared the affinity for mibefradil of the newly cloned T channel isoforms, alpha1G, alpha1H, and alpha1I with an L channel, alpha1C. In 10 mM Ba(2+), mibefradil blocked in the micromolar range and with 12- to 13-fold greater affinity for T channels than for L channels (approximately 1 microM versus 13 microM). When 2 mM Ca(2+) was used as the charge carrier, the drug was more efficacious; the IC(50) for alpha1G shifted to 270 nM and for alpha1H shifted to 140 nM, 4.5- and 9-fold higher affinity than in 10 mM Ba. The data are consistent with the idea that mibefradil competes for its binding site on the channel with the permeant species and that Ba(2+) is a more effective competitor than Ca(2+). Raising temperature to 35 degrees C reduced affinity (IC(50) 792 nM). Reducing channel availability to half increased affinity ( approximately 70 nM). This profile of mibefradil affinity makes these channels good candidates for the physiological target of this antihypertensive agent.
... Interactions between neurotransmitters that regulate cAMP and intracellular Ca2+ levels in th... more ... Interactions between neurotransmitters that regulate cAMP and intracellular Ca2+ levels in the CNS. Cooper DM, Caldwell KK, Perez-Reyes E, Ahlijanian MK, Schlegel W. University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver. PMID: 2907238 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]. ...
The skeletal muscle dihydropyridine receptor/Ca2+ channel is composed of five protein components ... more The skeletal muscle dihydropyridine receptor/Ca2+ channel is composed of five protein components (alpha 1, alpha 2 delta, beta, and gamma). Only two such components, alpha 1 and alpha 2, have been identified in heart. The present study reports the cloning and expression of a novel beta gene that is expressed in heart, lung, and brain. Coexpression of this beta with a cardiac alpha 1 in Xenopus oocytes causes the following changes in Ca2+ channel activity: it increases peak currents, accelerates activation kinetics, and shifts the current-voltage relationship toward more hyperpolarized potentials. It also increases dihydropyridine binding to alpha 1 in COS cells. These results indicate that the cardiac L-type Ca2+ channel has a similar subunit structure as in skeletal muscle, and provides evidence for the modulatory role of the beta subunit.
The diversity of L-type calcium channels was probed using the polymerase chain reaction and prime... more The diversity of L-type calcium channels was probed using the polymerase chain reaction and primers based on regions conserved in the L-type skeletal muscle (CaCh 1) and cardiac calcium channels (CaCh 2). Related sequences were amplified from human heart, hamster heart, rabbit heart, mouse ovary, mouse BC3H1 cells, and hamster insulin-secreting (HIT) cells. Sequencing of various clones revealed the presence of alternate splicing in gene products coding for CaCh 1, CaCh 2, and a related calcium channel. This related gene product, which we refer to as neuroendocrine or CaCh 3, is expressed in brain and endocrine cells. The diverse products can be explained by the use of alternate exons of equal size, which account for changes in amino acid composition, in combination with an alternate splice acceptor site or an exon skipping event, which produces channels of variable length. Four variants were defined for the gene 3 product, subtypes 3a, 3b, 3c, and 3d that differed in both the sequen...
General features of signal transduction by G proteins and structural properties of G-protein-modu... more General features of signal transduction by G proteins and structural properties of G-protein-modulated calcium channels are described. Recent results on roles of beta gamma dimers in signal transduction, on the kinetic properties of Gi alpha subunits and structural diversity of Go alpha subunits are discussed, as are the background and current state of our knowledge of the modulation of calcium channels by G proteins.
The skeletal muscle dihydropyridine receptor/Ca2+ channel consists of five distinct subunits (alp... more The skeletal muscle dihydropyridine receptor/Ca2+ channel consists of five distinct subunits (alpha 1, alpha 2 delta, beta 1, and gamma). Homologous alpha 1, alpha 2 delta, and beta 2 subunits are expressed in heart and brain. The present study reports the cloning and expression of a third beta subunit, beta 3, which is expressed predominantly in brain. Its open reading frame encodes a protein with 484 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 54,571 Da. Coexpression of beta 3 with a cardiac alpha 1 in Xenopus oocytes induces similar changes in Ca2+ channel activity as beta 1 and beta 2, that is, it increases peak currents, modulates the voltage dependence of activation, and accelerates activation. In addition, beta 3 accelerates the rate of inactivation at positive test potentials.
Although pharmacological and electrophysiological studies have demonstrated the existence of mult... more Although pharmacological and electrophysiological studies have demonstrated the existence of multiple types of voltage-dependent calcium channels in neuronal tissue, the subunit composition of these channels is not well known. Here, we report the cloning and expression of a new rat brain beta subunit (beta 4). Northern blot analysis indicates that beta 4 mRNA is expressed almost exclusively in neuronal tissues, with the highest levels being found in the cerebellum. Coexpression studies indicate that rat beta 4 can interact with rabbit cardiac muscle alpha 1, rabbit skeletal muscle alpha 1, and calcium channels endogenous to Xenopus oocytes. beta 4 modulation of alpha 1 activity is similar to the modulation induced by beta 1, beta 2, or beta 3. The most striking effect of beta subunits is their ability to increase functional alpha 1 activity, which can be measured as either increased dihydropyridine binding to membranes from transfected COS cells or increased calcium channel activity...
Intracellular calcium (Ca2+) inhibits the opening of L-type (alpha 1C) Ca2+ channels, providing p... more Intracellular calcium (Ca2+) inhibits the opening of L-type (alpha 1C) Ca2+ channels, providing physiological control of Ca2+ entry into a wide variety of cells. A structural determinant of this Ca(2+)-sensitive inactivation was revealed by chimeric Ca2+ channels derived from parental alpha 1C and alpha 1E channels, the latter of which is a neuronal channel lacking Ca2+ inactivation. A consensus Ca(2+)-binding motif (an EF hand), located on the alpha 1C subunit, was required for Ca2+ inactivation. Donation of the alpha 1C EF-hand region to the alpha 1E channel conferred the Ca(2+)-inactivating phenotype. These results strongly suggest that Ca2+ binding to the alpha 1C subunit initiates Ca2+ inactivation.
CaV3.2 T-type calcium channels, encoded by CACNA1H, are expressed throughout the brain, yet their... more CaV3.2 T-type calcium channels, encoded by CACNA1H, are expressed throughout the brain, yet their general function remains unclear. We discovered that CaV3.2 channels control NMDA-sensitive glutamatergic receptor (NMDA-R)-mediated transmission and subsequent NMDA-R-dependent plasticity of AMPA-R-mediated transmission at rat central synapses. Interestingly, functional CaV3.2 channels primarily incorporate into synapses, replace existing CaV3.2 channels, and can induce local calcium influx to control NMDA transmission strength in an activity-dependent manner. Moreover, human childhood absence epilepsy (CAE)-linked hCaV3.2(C456S) mutant channels have a higher channel open probability, induce more calcium influx, and enhance glutamatergic transmission. Remarkably, cortical expression of hCaV3.2(C456S) channels in rats induces 2- to 4-Hz spike and wave discharges and absence-like epilepsy characteristic of CAE patients, which can be suppressed by AMPA-R and NMDA-R antagonists but not T-t...
Molecular cloning studies have revealed that heterogeneity of T-type Ca2+ currents in native tiss... more Molecular cloning studies have revealed that heterogeneity of T-type Ca2+ currents in native tissues arises from the three isoforms of Ca(v)3 channels: Ca(v)3.1, Ca(v)3.2, and Ca(v)3.3. From pharmacological analysis of the recombinant T-type channels, low concentrations (<50 microM) of nickel were found to selectively block the Ca(v)3.2 over the other isoforms. To date, however, the structural element(s) responsible for the nickel block on the Ca(v)3.2 T-type Ca2+ channel remain unknown. Thus, we constructed chimeric channels between the nickel-sensitive Ca(v)3.2 and the nickel-insensitive Ca(v)3.1 to localize the region interacting with nickel. Systematic assaying of serial chimeras suggests that the region preceding domain I S4 of Ca(v)3.2 contributes to nickel block. Point mutations of potential nickel-interacting sites revealed that H191Q in the S3-S4 loop of domain I significantly attenuated the nickel block of Ca(v)3.2, mimicking the nickel-insensitive blocking potency of C...
The Journal of Neuroscience : The Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience
Recent studies have demonstrated an important role for T-type Ca2+ channels (T-channels) in contr... more Recent studies have demonstrated an important role for T-type Ca2+ channels (T-channels) in controlling the excitability of peripheral pain-sensing neurons (nociceptors). However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the functions of T-channels in nociceptors are poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that reducing agents as well as endogenous metal chelators sensitize C-type dorsal root ganglion nociceptors by chelating Zn2+ ions off specific extracellular histidine residues on Ca(v)3.2 T-channels, thus relieving tonic channel inhibition, enhancing Ca(v)3.2 currents, and lowering the threshold for nociceptor excitability in vitro and in vivo. Collectively, these findings describe a novel mechanism of nociceptor sensitization and firmly establish reducing agents, as well as Zn2+, Zn2+-chelating amino acids, and Zn2+-chelating proteins as endogenous modulators of Ca(v)3.2 and nociceptor excitability.
Blood gas and tissue pH regulation depend on the ability of the brain to sense CO2 and/or H(+) an... more Blood gas and tissue pH regulation depend on the ability of the brain to sense CO2 and/or H(+) and alter breathing appropriately, a homeostatic process called central respiratory chemosensitivity. We show that selective expression of the proton-activated receptor GPR4 in chemosensory neurons of the mouse retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN) is required for CO2-stimulated breathing. Genetic deletion of GPR4 disrupted acidosis-dependent activation of RTN neurons, increased apnea frequency, and blunted ventilatory responses to CO2. Reintroduction of GPR4 into RTN neurons restored CO2-dependent RTN neuronal activation and rescued the ventilatory phenotype. Additional elimination of TASK-2 (K2P5), a pH-sensitive K(+) channel expressed in RTN neurons, essentially abolished the ventilatory response to CO2. The data identify GPR4 and TASK-2 as distinct, parallel, and essential central mediators of respiratory chemosensitivity.
Inhibition of T-type Ca(2+) channels has been proposed to play a role in the therapeutic action o... more Inhibition of T-type Ca(2+) channels has been proposed to play a role in the therapeutic action of succinimide antiepileptic drugs. Despite the widespread acceptance of this hypothesis, recent studies using rat and cat neurons have failed to confirm inhibition of T-type currents at therapeutically relevant concentrations. The present study re-examines this issue using the three cloned human channels that constitute the T-type family: alpha 1G, alpha 1H, and alpha 1I. The cloned cDNAs were stably transfected and expressed into mammalian cells, leading to the appearance of typical T-type currents. The results demonstrate that both ethosuximide and the active metabolite of methsuximide, alpha-methyl-alpha-phenylsuccinimide (MPS), block human T-type channels in a state-dependent manner, with higher affinity for inactivated channels. In contrast, succinimide analogs that are not anticonvulsive were relatively poor blockers. The apparent affinity of MPS for inactivated states of the three...
The diversity of L-type calcium channels was probed using the polymerase chain reaction and prime... more The diversity of L-type calcium channels was probed using the polymerase chain reaction and primers based on regions conserved in the L-type skeletal muscle (CaCh 1) and cardiac calcium channels (CaCh 2). Related sequences were amplified from human heart, hamster heart, rabbit heart, mouse ovary, mouse BC3H1 cells, and hamster insulin-secreting (HIT) cells. Sequencing of various clones revealed the presence of alternate splicing in gene products coding for CaCh 1, CaCh 2, and a related calcium channel. This related gene product, which we refer to as neuroendocrine or CaCh 3, is expressed in brain and endocrine cells. The diverse products can be explained by the use of alternate exons of equal size, which account for changes in amino acid composition, in combination with an alternate splice acceptor site or an exon skipping event, which produces channels of variable length. Four variants were defined for the gene 3 product, subtypes 3a, 3b, 3c, and 3d that differed in both the sequen...
... USA [Back to top] The Role of T-type Calcium Channels in Epilepsy and Pain MT Nelson, SM Todo... more ... USA [Back to top] The Role of T-type Calcium Channels in Epilepsy and Pain MT Nelson, SM Todorovic and E. Perez-Reyes. ... New work suggests pore formation by homo-oligomers of VDAC or hetero-oligomers composed of VDAC and pro-apoptotic proteins such as Bax or Bak. ...
Although nitrous oxide (N(2)O; laughing gas) remains widely used as an anesthetic and analgesic i... more Although nitrous oxide (N(2)O; laughing gas) remains widely used as an anesthetic and analgesic in clinical practice, its cellular mechanisms of action remain inadequately understood. In this report, we examined the effects of N(2)O on voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels in acutely dissociated small sensory neurons of adult rat. At subanesthetic concentrations, N(2)O blocks low-voltage-activated, T-type Ca(2+) currents (T currents), but not high-voltage-activated (HVA) currents. This blockade of T currents was concentration dependent, with an IC(50) value of 45 +/- 13%, maximal block of 38 +/- 12%, and Hill coefficient of 2.6 +/- 1.0. No desensitization of the response or change in current kinetics was observed during N(2)O application. The magnitude of T current blockade by N(2)O does not seem to reflect any use- or voltage-dependent properties. In addition, T current blockade was not altered when intracellular GTP was replaced with guanosine 5'-(gamma-thio)triphosphate or guanosine ...
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience, Jan 15, 2001
The mouse mutant ducky, a model for absence epilepsy, is characterized by spike-wave seizures and... more The mouse mutant ducky, a model for absence epilepsy, is characterized by spike-wave seizures and ataxia. The ducky gene was mapped previously to distal mouse chromosome 9. High-resolution genetic and physical mapping has resulted in the identification of the Cacna2d2 gene encoding the alpha2delta2 voltage-dependent calcium channel subunit. Mutations in Cacna2d2 were found to underlie the ducky phenotype in the original ducky (du) strain and in a newly identified strain (du(2J)). Both mutations are predicted to result in loss of the full-length alpha2delta2 protein. Functional analysis shows that the alpha2delta2 subunit increases the maximum conductance of the alpha1A/beta4 channel combination when coexpressed in vitro in Xenopus oocytes. The Ca(2+) channel current in acutely dissociated du/du cerebellar Purkinje cells was reduced, with no change in single-channel conductance. In contrast, no effect on Ca(2+) channel current was seen in cerebellar granule cells, results consistent ...
The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, 2000
Mibefradil is a tetralol derivative chemically distinct from other calcium channel antagonists. I... more Mibefradil is a tetralol derivative chemically distinct from other calcium channel antagonists. It is a very effective antihypertensive agent that is thought to achieve its action via a higher affinity block for low-voltage-activated (T) than for high-voltage-activated (L) calcium channels. Estimates of affinity using Ba(2+) as the charge carrier have predicted a 10- to 15-fold preference of mibefradil for T channels over L channels. However, T channel IC(50) values are reported to be approximately 1 microM, which is much higher than expected for clinical efficacy because relevant blood levels of this drug are approximately 50 nM. We compared the affinity for mibefradil of the newly cloned T channel isoforms, alpha1G, alpha1H, and alpha1I with an L channel, alpha1C. In 10 mM Ba(2+), mibefradil blocked in the micromolar range and with 12- to 13-fold greater affinity for T channels than for L channels (approximately 1 microM versus 13 microM). When 2 mM Ca(2+) was used as the charge c...
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
Mibefradil is a tetralol derivative chemically distinct from other calcium channel antagonists. I... more Mibefradil is a tetralol derivative chemically distinct from other calcium channel antagonists. It is a very effective antihypertensive agent that is thought to achieve its action via a higher affinity block for low-voltage-activated (T) than for high-voltage-activated (L) calcium channels. Estimates of affinity using Ba(2+) as the charge carrier have predicted a 10- to 15-fold preference of mibefradil for T channels over L channels. However, T channel IC(50) values are reported to be approximately 1 microM, which is much higher than expected for clinical efficacy because relevant blood levels of this drug are approximately 50 nM. We compared the affinity for mibefradil of the newly cloned T channel isoforms, alpha1G, alpha1H, and alpha1I with an L channel, alpha1C. In 10 mM Ba(2+), mibefradil blocked in the micromolar range and with 12- to 13-fold greater affinity for T channels than for L channels (approximately 1 microM versus 13 microM). When 2 mM Ca(2+) was used as the charge carrier, the drug was more efficacious; the IC(50) for alpha1G shifted to 270 nM and for alpha1H shifted to 140 nM, 4.5- and 9-fold higher affinity than in 10 mM Ba. The data are consistent with the idea that mibefradil competes for its binding site on the channel with the permeant species and that Ba(2+) is a more effective competitor than Ca(2+). Raising temperature to 35 degrees C reduced affinity (IC(50) 792 nM). Reducing channel availability to half increased affinity ( approximately 70 nM). This profile of mibefradil affinity makes these channels good candidates for the physiological target of this antihypertensive agent.
... Interactions between neurotransmitters that regulate cAMP and intracellular Ca2+ levels in th... more ... Interactions between neurotransmitters that regulate cAMP and intracellular Ca2+ levels in the CNS. Cooper DM, Caldwell KK, Perez-Reyes E, Ahlijanian MK, Schlegel W. University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver. PMID: 2907238 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]. ...
The skeletal muscle dihydropyridine receptor/Ca2+ channel is composed of five protein components ... more The skeletal muscle dihydropyridine receptor/Ca2+ channel is composed of five protein components (alpha 1, alpha 2 delta, beta, and gamma). Only two such components, alpha 1 and alpha 2, have been identified in heart. The present study reports the cloning and expression of a novel beta gene that is expressed in heart, lung, and brain. Coexpression of this beta with a cardiac alpha 1 in Xenopus oocytes causes the following changes in Ca2+ channel activity: it increases peak currents, accelerates activation kinetics, and shifts the current-voltage relationship toward more hyperpolarized potentials. It also increases dihydropyridine binding to alpha 1 in COS cells. These results indicate that the cardiac L-type Ca2+ channel has a similar subunit structure as in skeletal muscle, and provides evidence for the modulatory role of the beta subunit.
The diversity of L-type calcium channels was probed using the polymerase chain reaction and prime... more The diversity of L-type calcium channels was probed using the polymerase chain reaction and primers based on regions conserved in the L-type skeletal muscle (CaCh 1) and cardiac calcium channels (CaCh 2). Related sequences were amplified from human heart, hamster heart, rabbit heart, mouse ovary, mouse BC3H1 cells, and hamster insulin-secreting (HIT) cells. Sequencing of various clones revealed the presence of alternate splicing in gene products coding for CaCh 1, CaCh 2, and a related calcium channel. This related gene product, which we refer to as neuroendocrine or CaCh 3, is expressed in brain and endocrine cells. The diverse products can be explained by the use of alternate exons of equal size, which account for changes in amino acid composition, in combination with an alternate splice acceptor site or an exon skipping event, which produces channels of variable length. Four variants were defined for the gene 3 product, subtypes 3a, 3b, 3c, and 3d that differed in both the sequen...
General features of signal transduction by G proteins and structural properties of G-protein-modu... more General features of signal transduction by G proteins and structural properties of G-protein-modulated calcium channels are described. Recent results on roles of beta gamma dimers in signal transduction, on the kinetic properties of Gi alpha subunits and structural diversity of Go alpha subunits are discussed, as are the background and current state of our knowledge of the modulation of calcium channels by G proteins.
The skeletal muscle dihydropyridine receptor/Ca2+ channel consists of five distinct subunits (alp... more The skeletal muscle dihydropyridine receptor/Ca2+ channel consists of five distinct subunits (alpha 1, alpha 2 delta, beta 1, and gamma). Homologous alpha 1, alpha 2 delta, and beta 2 subunits are expressed in heart and brain. The present study reports the cloning and expression of a third beta subunit, beta 3, which is expressed predominantly in brain. Its open reading frame encodes a protein with 484 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 54,571 Da. Coexpression of beta 3 with a cardiac alpha 1 in Xenopus oocytes induces similar changes in Ca2+ channel activity as beta 1 and beta 2, that is, it increases peak currents, modulates the voltage dependence of activation, and accelerates activation. In addition, beta 3 accelerates the rate of inactivation at positive test potentials.
Although pharmacological and electrophysiological studies have demonstrated the existence of mult... more Although pharmacological and electrophysiological studies have demonstrated the existence of multiple types of voltage-dependent calcium channels in neuronal tissue, the subunit composition of these channels is not well known. Here, we report the cloning and expression of a new rat brain beta subunit (beta 4). Northern blot analysis indicates that beta 4 mRNA is expressed almost exclusively in neuronal tissues, with the highest levels being found in the cerebellum. Coexpression studies indicate that rat beta 4 can interact with rabbit cardiac muscle alpha 1, rabbit skeletal muscle alpha 1, and calcium channels endogenous to Xenopus oocytes. beta 4 modulation of alpha 1 activity is similar to the modulation induced by beta 1, beta 2, or beta 3. The most striking effect of beta subunits is their ability to increase functional alpha 1 activity, which can be measured as either increased dihydropyridine binding to membranes from transfected COS cells or increased calcium channel activity...
Intracellular calcium (Ca2+) inhibits the opening of L-type (alpha 1C) Ca2+ channels, providing p... more Intracellular calcium (Ca2+) inhibits the opening of L-type (alpha 1C) Ca2+ channels, providing physiological control of Ca2+ entry into a wide variety of cells. A structural determinant of this Ca(2+)-sensitive inactivation was revealed by chimeric Ca2+ channels derived from parental alpha 1C and alpha 1E channels, the latter of which is a neuronal channel lacking Ca2+ inactivation. A consensus Ca(2+)-binding motif (an EF hand), located on the alpha 1C subunit, was required for Ca2+ inactivation. Donation of the alpha 1C EF-hand region to the alpha 1E channel conferred the Ca(2+)-inactivating phenotype. These results strongly suggest that Ca2+ binding to the alpha 1C subunit initiates Ca2+ inactivation.
CaV3.2 T-type calcium channels, encoded by CACNA1H, are expressed throughout the brain, yet their... more CaV3.2 T-type calcium channels, encoded by CACNA1H, are expressed throughout the brain, yet their general function remains unclear. We discovered that CaV3.2 channels control NMDA-sensitive glutamatergic receptor (NMDA-R)-mediated transmission and subsequent NMDA-R-dependent plasticity of AMPA-R-mediated transmission at rat central synapses. Interestingly, functional CaV3.2 channels primarily incorporate into synapses, replace existing CaV3.2 channels, and can induce local calcium influx to control NMDA transmission strength in an activity-dependent manner. Moreover, human childhood absence epilepsy (CAE)-linked hCaV3.2(C456S) mutant channels have a higher channel open probability, induce more calcium influx, and enhance glutamatergic transmission. Remarkably, cortical expression of hCaV3.2(C456S) channels in rats induces 2- to 4-Hz spike and wave discharges and absence-like epilepsy characteristic of CAE patients, which can be suppressed by AMPA-R and NMDA-R antagonists but not T-t...
Molecular cloning studies have revealed that heterogeneity of T-type Ca2+ currents in native tiss... more Molecular cloning studies have revealed that heterogeneity of T-type Ca2+ currents in native tissues arises from the three isoforms of Ca(v)3 channels: Ca(v)3.1, Ca(v)3.2, and Ca(v)3.3. From pharmacological analysis of the recombinant T-type channels, low concentrations (<50 microM) of nickel were found to selectively block the Ca(v)3.2 over the other isoforms. To date, however, the structural element(s) responsible for the nickel block on the Ca(v)3.2 T-type Ca2+ channel remain unknown. Thus, we constructed chimeric channels between the nickel-sensitive Ca(v)3.2 and the nickel-insensitive Ca(v)3.1 to localize the region interacting with nickel. Systematic assaying of serial chimeras suggests that the region preceding domain I S4 of Ca(v)3.2 contributes to nickel block. Point mutations of potential nickel-interacting sites revealed that H191Q in the S3-S4 loop of domain I significantly attenuated the nickel block of Ca(v)3.2, mimicking the nickel-insensitive blocking potency of C...
The Journal of Neuroscience : The Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience
Recent studies have demonstrated an important role for T-type Ca2+ channels (T-channels) in contr... more Recent studies have demonstrated an important role for T-type Ca2+ channels (T-channels) in controlling the excitability of peripheral pain-sensing neurons (nociceptors). However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the functions of T-channels in nociceptors are poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that reducing agents as well as endogenous metal chelators sensitize C-type dorsal root ganglion nociceptors by chelating Zn2+ ions off specific extracellular histidine residues on Ca(v)3.2 T-channels, thus relieving tonic channel inhibition, enhancing Ca(v)3.2 currents, and lowering the threshold for nociceptor excitability in vitro and in vivo. Collectively, these findings describe a novel mechanism of nociceptor sensitization and firmly establish reducing agents, as well as Zn2+, Zn2+-chelating amino acids, and Zn2+-chelating proteins as endogenous modulators of Ca(v)3.2 and nociceptor excitability.
Blood gas and tissue pH regulation depend on the ability of the brain to sense CO2 and/or H(+) an... more Blood gas and tissue pH regulation depend on the ability of the brain to sense CO2 and/or H(+) and alter breathing appropriately, a homeostatic process called central respiratory chemosensitivity. We show that selective expression of the proton-activated receptor GPR4 in chemosensory neurons of the mouse retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN) is required for CO2-stimulated breathing. Genetic deletion of GPR4 disrupted acidosis-dependent activation of RTN neurons, increased apnea frequency, and blunted ventilatory responses to CO2. Reintroduction of GPR4 into RTN neurons restored CO2-dependent RTN neuronal activation and rescued the ventilatory phenotype. Additional elimination of TASK-2 (K2P5), a pH-sensitive K(+) channel expressed in RTN neurons, essentially abolished the ventilatory response to CO2. The data identify GPR4 and TASK-2 as distinct, parallel, and essential central mediators of respiratory chemosensitivity.
Inhibition of T-type Ca(2+) channels has been proposed to play a role in the therapeutic action o... more Inhibition of T-type Ca(2+) channels has been proposed to play a role in the therapeutic action of succinimide antiepileptic drugs. Despite the widespread acceptance of this hypothesis, recent studies using rat and cat neurons have failed to confirm inhibition of T-type currents at therapeutically relevant concentrations. The present study re-examines this issue using the three cloned human channels that constitute the T-type family: alpha 1G, alpha 1H, and alpha 1I. The cloned cDNAs were stably transfected and expressed into mammalian cells, leading to the appearance of typical T-type currents. The results demonstrate that both ethosuximide and the active metabolite of methsuximide, alpha-methyl-alpha-phenylsuccinimide (MPS), block human T-type channels in a state-dependent manner, with higher affinity for inactivated channels. In contrast, succinimide analogs that are not anticonvulsive were relatively poor blockers. The apparent affinity of MPS for inactivated states of the three...
The diversity of L-type calcium channels was probed using the polymerase chain reaction and prime... more The diversity of L-type calcium channels was probed using the polymerase chain reaction and primers based on regions conserved in the L-type skeletal muscle (CaCh 1) and cardiac calcium channels (CaCh 2). Related sequences were amplified from human heart, hamster heart, rabbit heart, mouse ovary, mouse BC3H1 cells, and hamster insulin-secreting (HIT) cells. Sequencing of various clones revealed the presence of alternate splicing in gene products coding for CaCh 1, CaCh 2, and a related calcium channel. This related gene product, which we refer to as neuroendocrine or CaCh 3, is expressed in brain and endocrine cells. The diverse products can be explained by the use of alternate exons of equal size, which account for changes in amino acid composition, in combination with an alternate splice acceptor site or an exon skipping event, which produces channels of variable length. Four variants were defined for the gene 3 product, subtypes 3a, 3b, 3c, and 3d that differed in both the sequen...
... USA [Back to top] The Role of T-type Calcium Channels in Epilepsy and Pain MT Nelson, SM Todo... more ... USA [Back to top] The Role of T-type Calcium Channels in Epilepsy and Pain MT Nelson, SM Todorovic and E. Perez-Reyes. ... New work suggests pore formation by homo-oligomers of VDAC or hetero-oligomers composed of VDAC and pro-apoptotic proteins such as Bax or Bak. ...
Although nitrous oxide (N(2)O; laughing gas) remains widely used as an anesthetic and analgesic i... more Although nitrous oxide (N(2)O; laughing gas) remains widely used as an anesthetic and analgesic in clinical practice, its cellular mechanisms of action remain inadequately understood. In this report, we examined the effects of N(2)O on voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels in acutely dissociated small sensory neurons of adult rat. At subanesthetic concentrations, N(2)O blocks low-voltage-activated, T-type Ca(2+) currents (T currents), but not high-voltage-activated (HVA) currents. This blockade of T currents was concentration dependent, with an IC(50) value of 45 +/- 13%, maximal block of 38 +/- 12%, and Hill coefficient of 2.6 +/- 1.0. No desensitization of the response or change in current kinetics was observed during N(2)O application. The magnitude of T current blockade by N(2)O does not seem to reflect any use- or voltage-dependent properties. In addition, T current blockade was not altered when intracellular GTP was replaced with guanosine 5'-(gamma-thio)triphosphate or guanosine ...
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience, Jan 15, 2001
The mouse mutant ducky, a model for absence epilepsy, is characterized by spike-wave seizures and... more The mouse mutant ducky, a model for absence epilepsy, is characterized by spike-wave seizures and ataxia. The ducky gene was mapped previously to distal mouse chromosome 9. High-resolution genetic and physical mapping has resulted in the identification of the Cacna2d2 gene encoding the alpha2delta2 voltage-dependent calcium channel subunit. Mutations in Cacna2d2 were found to underlie the ducky phenotype in the original ducky (du) strain and in a newly identified strain (du(2J)). Both mutations are predicted to result in loss of the full-length alpha2delta2 protein. Functional analysis shows that the alpha2delta2 subunit increases the maximum conductance of the alpha1A/beta4 channel combination when coexpressed in vitro in Xenopus oocytes. The Ca(2+) channel current in acutely dissociated du/du cerebellar Purkinje cells was reduced, with no change in single-channel conductance. In contrast, no effect on Ca(2+) channel current was seen in cerebellar granule cells, results consistent ...
The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, 2000
Mibefradil is a tetralol derivative chemically distinct from other calcium channel antagonists. I... more Mibefradil is a tetralol derivative chemically distinct from other calcium channel antagonists. It is a very effective antihypertensive agent that is thought to achieve its action via a higher affinity block for low-voltage-activated (T) than for high-voltage-activated (L) calcium channels. Estimates of affinity using Ba(2+) as the charge carrier have predicted a 10- to 15-fold preference of mibefradil for T channels over L channels. However, T channel IC(50) values are reported to be approximately 1 microM, which is much higher than expected for clinical efficacy because relevant blood levels of this drug are approximately 50 nM. We compared the affinity for mibefradil of the newly cloned T channel isoforms, alpha1G, alpha1H, and alpha1I with an L channel, alpha1C. In 10 mM Ba(2+), mibefradil blocked in the micromolar range and with 12- to 13-fold greater affinity for T channels than for L channels (approximately 1 microM versus 13 microM). When 2 mM Ca(2+) was used as the charge c...
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Papers by Edward Perez-reyes