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Voltage-dependent open-state inactivation of cardiac sodium channels: gating current studies with Anthopleurin-A toxin

The gating charge and voltage dependence of the open state to the inactivated state (O-->I) transition was measured for the voltage- dependent mammalian cardiac Na channel. Using the site 3 toxin, Anthopleurin-A (Ap-A), which selectively modifies the O-->I transition (see Hanck, D. A., and M....

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Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1995
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2229277/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8576700
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collection PubMed
description The gating charge and voltage dependence of the open state to the inactivated state (O-->I) transition was measured for the voltage- dependent mammalian cardiac Na channel. Using the site 3 toxin, Anthopleurin-A (Ap-A), which selectively modifies the O-->I transition (see Hanck, D. A., and M. F. Sheets. 1995. Journal of General Physiology. 106:601-616), we studied Na channel gating currents (Ig) in voltage-clamped single canine cardiac Purkinje cells at approximately 12 degrees C. Comparison of Ig recorded in response to step depolarizations before and after modification by Ap-A toxin showed that toxin-modified gating currents decayed faster and had decreased initial amplitudes. The predominate change in the charge-voltage (Q-V) relationship was a reduction in gating charge at positive potentials such that Qmax was reduced by 33%, and the difference between charge measured in Ap-A toxin and in control represented the gating charge associated with Na channels undergoing inactivation by O-->I. By comparing the time course of channel activation (represented by the gating charge measured in Ap-A toxin) and gating charge associated with the O-->I transition (difference between control and Ap-A charge), the influence of activation on the time course of inactivation could be accounted for and the inherent voltage dependence of the O-->I transition determined. The O-->I transition for cardiac Na channels had a valence of 0.75 e-. The total charge of the cardiac voltage-gated Na channel was estimated to be 5 e-. Because charge is concentrated near the opening transition for this isoform of the channel, the time constant of the O-->I transition at 0 mV could also be estimated (0.53 ms, approximately 12 degrees C). Prediction of the mean channel open time-voltage relationship based upon the magnitude and valence of the O- ->C and O-->I rate constants from INa and Ig data matched data previously reported from single Na channel studies in heart at the same temperature.
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spelling pubmed-22292772008-04-23 Voltage-dependent open-state inactivation of cardiac sodium channels: gating current studies with Anthopleurin-A toxin J Gen Physiol Articles The gating charge and voltage dependence of the open state to the inactivated state (O-->I) transition was measured for the voltage- dependent mammalian cardiac Na channel. Using the site 3 toxin, Anthopleurin-A (Ap-A), which selectively modifies the O-->I transition (see Hanck, D. A., and M. F. Sheets. 1995. Journal of General Physiology. 106:601-616), we studied Na channel gating currents (Ig) in voltage-clamped single canine cardiac Purkinje cells at approximately 12 degrees C. Comparison of Ig recorded in response to step depolarizations before and after modification by Ap-A toxin showed that toxin-modified gating currents decayed faster and had decreased initial amplitudes. The predominate change in the charge-voltage (Q-V) relationship was a reduction in gating charge at positive potentials such that Qmax was reduced by 33%, and the difference between charge measured in Ap-A toxin and in control represented the gating charge associated with Na channels undergoing inactivation by O-->I. By comparing the time course of channel activation (represented by the gating charge measured in Ap-A toxin) and gating charge associated with the O-->I transition (difference between control and Ap-A charge), the influence of activation on the time course of inactivation could be accounted for and the inherent voltage dependence of the O-->I transition determined. The O-->I transition for cardiac Na channels had a valence of 0.75 e-. The total charge of the cardiac voltage-gated Na channel was estimated to be 5 e-. Because charge is concentrated near the opening transition for this isoform of the channel, the time constant of the O-->I transition at 0 mV could also be estimated (0.53 ms, approximately 12 degrees C). Prediction of the mean channel open time-voltage relationship based upon the magnitude and valence of the O- ->C and O-->I rate constants from INa and Ig data matched data previously reported from single Na channel studies in heart at the same temperature. The Rockefeller University Press 1995-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2229277/ /pubmed/8576700 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Voltage-dependent open-state inactivation of cardiac sodium channels: gating current studies with Anthopleurin-A toxin
title Voltage-dependent open-state inactivation of cardiac sodium channels: gating current studies with Anthopleurin-A toxin
title_full Voltage-dependent open-state inactivation of cardiac sodium channels: gating current studies with Anthopleurin-A toxin
title_fullStr Voltage-dependent open-state inactivation of cardiac sodium channels: gating current studies with Anthopleurin-A toxin
title_full_unstemmed Voltage-dependent open-state inactivation of cardiac sodium channels: gating current studies with Anthopleurin-A toxin
title_short Voltage-dependent open-state inactivation of cardiac sodium channels: gating current studies with Anthopleurin-A toxin
title_sort voltage-dependent open-state inactivation of cardiac sodium channels: gating current studies with anthopleurin-a toxin
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2229277/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8576700