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Dominant-negative suppression of Cav2.1 currents by alpha(1)2.1 truncations requires the conserved interaction domain for beta subunits
- Source :
- Molecular and cellular neurosciences. 34(2)
- Publication Year :
- 2006
-
Abstract
- Episodic ataxia type 2 (EA2) is an autosomal dominant disorder arising from CACNA1A mutations, which commonly predict heterozygous expression of Ca(v)2.1 calcium channels with truncated alpha(1)2.1 pore subunits. We hypothesized that alpha(1)2.1 truncations in EA2 exert dominant-negative effects on the function of wild-type subunits. Wild-type and truncated alpha(1)2.1 subunits with fluorescent protein tags were transiently co-expressed in cells stably expressing Ca(v) auxiliary beta subunits, which facilitate alpha1 subunit functional expression through high-affinity interactions with the alpha interaction domain (AID). Co-expression of wild-type subunits with truncations often resulted in severely reduced whole-cell currents compared to expression of wild-type subunits alone. Cellular image analyses revealed that current suppression was not due to reduced wild-type expression levels. Instead, the current suppression depended on truncations terminating distal to the AID. Moreover, only AID-bearing alpha(1)2.1 proteins co-immunoprecipitated with Ca(v) beta subunits. These results indicate that Ca(v) beta subunits may play a prominent role in EA2 disease pathogenesis.
- Subjects :
- Cerebellum
Patch-Clamp Techniques
Protein subunit
Green Fluorescent Proteins
Immunoblotting
Alpha (ethology)
Biology
Transfection
Cav2.1
Article
Membrane Potentials
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
Structure-Activity Relationship
Calcium Channels, N-Type
Channelopathy
medicine
Humans
Immunoprecipitation
Molecular Biology
Cell Line, Transformed
Analysis of Variance
Voltage-dependent calcium channel
Cell Biology
medicine.disease
Molecular biology
Cell biology
Protein Structure, Tertiary
Protein Subunits
medicine.anatomical_structure
G12/G13 alpha subunits
Mutation
biology.protein
Ion Channel Gating
Function (biology)
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10447431
- Volume :
- 34
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Molecular and cellular neurosciences
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5d7dcfa270b5b306ea40c00d329cb14d