MOLECULAR-STRUCTURES INVOLVED IN L-TYPE CALCIUM-CHANNEL INACTIVATION - ROLE OF THE CARBOXYL-TERMINAL REGION ENCODED BY EXONS-40-42 IN ALPHA(1C) SUBUNIT IN THE KINETICS AND CA2+ DEPENDENCE OF INACTIVATION
Nm. Soldatov et al., MOLECULAR-STRUCTURES INVOLVED IN L-TYPE CALCIUM-CHANNEL INACTIVATION - ROLE OF THE CARBOXYL-TERMINAL REGION ENCODED BY EXONS-40-42 IN ALPHA(1C) SUBUNIT IN THE KINETICS AND CA2+ DEPENDENCE OF INACTIVATION, The Journal of biological chemistry, 272(6), 1997, pp. 3560-3566
The pore-forming alpha(1C) subunit is the principal component of the v
oltage-sensitive L-type Ca2+ channel. It has a long cytoplasmic carbox
yl-terminal tail playing a critical role in channel gating. The expres
sion of alpha(1C) subunits is characterized by alternative splicing, w
hich generates its multiple isoforms, cDNA cloning points to a diversi
ty of human hippocampus alpha(1C) transcripts in the region of exons 4
0-43 that encode a part of the 662-amino acid carboxyl terminus. We co
mpared electrophysiological properties of the web defined 2138-amino a
cid alpha(1C,77) channel isoform with two splice variants, alpha(1C,72
) and alpha(1C,86). They contain alterations in the carboxyl terminus
due to alternative splicing of exons 40-42, The 2157-amino acid alpha(
1C,72) isoform contains an insertion of 19 amino acids at position 157
5. The 2139-amino acid alpha(1C,86) has 80 amino acids replaced in pos
itions 1572-1651 of alpha(1C,77) by a non-identical sequence of 81 ami
no acids. When expressed in Xenopus oocytes, all three splice variants
retained high sensitivity toward dihydropyridine blockers but showed
large differences in gating properties. Unlike alpha(1C,77) and alpha(
1C,72), Ba2+ currents (I-Ba) through alpha(1C,86) inactivated 8-10 tim
es faster at +20 mV, and its inactivation rate was strongly voltage-de
pendent. Compared to alpha(1C,77), the inactivation curves of I-Ba thr
ough alpha(1C,86) and alpha(1C,72) channels were shifted toward more n
egative voltages by 11 and 6 mV, respectively, Unlike alpha(1C,77) and
alpha(1C,72) the alpha(1C,86) channel lacks a Ca2+-dependent componen
t of inactivation Thus the segment 1572-1651 of the cytoplasmic tail o
f alpha(1C) is critical for the kinetics as well as for the Ca2+ and v
oltage dependence of L-type Ca2+ channel gating.