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Dominant-Negative Calcium Channel Suppression by Truncated Constructs Involves a Kinase Implicated in the Unfolded Protein Response
- Source :
- Journal of Neuroscience. 24:5400-5409
- Publication Year :
- 2004
- Publisher :
- Society for Neuroscience, 2004.
-
Abstract
- Expression of the calcium channel Ca(V)2.2 is markedly suppressed by coexpression with truncated constructs of Ca(V)2.2. Furthermore, a two-domain construct of Ca(V)2.1 mimicking an episodic ataxia-2 mutation strongly inhibited Ca(V)2.1 currents. We have now determined the specificity of this effect, identified a potential mechanism, and have shown that such constructs also inhibit endogenous calcium currents when transfected into neuronal cell lines. Suppression of calcium channel expression requires interaction between truncated and full-length channels, because there is inter-subfamily specificity. Although there is marked cross-suppression within the Ca(V)2 calcium channel family, there is no cross-suppression between Ca(V)2 and Ca(V)3 channels. The mechanism involves activation of a component of the unfolded protein response, the endoplasmic reticulum resident RNA-dependent kinase (PERK), because it is inhibited by expression of dominant-negative constructs of this kinase. Activation of PERK has been shown previously to cause translational arrest, which has the potential to result in a generalized effect on protein synthesis. In agreement with this, coexpression of the truncated domain I of Ca(V)2.2, together with full-length Ca(V)2.2, reduced the level not only of Ca(V)2.2 protein but also the coexpressed alpha2delta-2. Thapsigargin, which globally activates the unfolded protein response, very markedly suppressed Ca(V)2.2 currents and also reduced the expression level of both Ca(V)2.2 and alpha2delta-2 protein. We propose that voltage-gated calcium channels represent a class of difficult-to-fold transmembrane proteins, in this case misfolding is induced by interaction with a truncated cognate Ca(V) channel. This may represent a mechanism of pathology in episodic ataxia-2.
- Subjects :
- Protein Folding
Thapsigargin
Xenopus
Blotting, Western
chemistry.chemical_element
Calcium
Biology
Polymerase Chain Reaction
eIF-2 Kinase
chemistry.chemical_compound
Animals
RNA, Messenger
Voltage-dependent calcium channel
General Neuroscience
Calcium channel
Endoplasmic reticulum
Molecular biology
Transmembrane protein
Cell biology
R-type calcium channel
chemistry
Protein Biosynthesis
Oocytes
Unfolded protein response
Calcium Channels
Cellular/Molecular
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15292401 and 02706474
- Volume :
- 24
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Neuroscience
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d1a92b3d73be26ca29c829bd92998d6d
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.0553-04.2004