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NALCN Ion Channels Have Alternative Selectivity Filters Resembling Calcium Channels or Sodium Channels

NALCN is a member of the family of ion channels with four homologous, repeat domains that include voltage-gated calcium and sodium channels. NALCN is a highly conserved gene from simple, extant multicellular organisms without nervous systems such as sponges and placozoans and mostly remains a single...

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Autores principales: Senatore, Adriano, Monteil, Arnaud, van Minnen, Jan, Smit, August B., Spafford, J. David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3557258/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23383067
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0055088
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author Senatore, Adriano
Monteil, Arnaud
van Minnen, Jan
Smit, August B.
Spafford, J. David
author_facet Senatore, Adriano
Monteil, Arnaud
van Minnen, Jan
Smit, August B.
Spafford, J. David
author_sort Senatore, Adriano
collection PubMed
description NALCN is a member of the family of ion channels with four homologous, repeat domains that include voltage-gated calcium and sodium channels. NALCN is a highly conserved gene from simple, extant multicellular organisms without nervous systems such as sponges and placozoans and mostly remains a single gene compared to the calcium and sodium channels which diversified into twenty genes in humans. The single NALCN gene has alternatively-spliced exons at exons 15 or exon 31 that splices in novel selectivity filter residues that resemble calcium channels (EEEE) or sodium channels (EKEE or EEKE). NALCN channels with alternative calcium, (EEEE) and sodium, (EKEE or EEKE) -selective pores are conserved in simple bilaterally symmetrical animals like flatworms to non-chordate deuterostomes. The single NALCN gene is limited as a sodium channel with a lysine (K)-containing pore in vertebrates, but originally NALCN was a calcium-like channel, and evolved to operate as both a calcium channel and sodium channel for different roles in many invertebrates. Expression patterns of NALCN-EKEE in pond snail, Lymnaea stagnalis suggest roles for NALCN in secretion, with an abundant expression in brain, and an up-regulation in secretory organs of sexually-mature adults such as albumen gland and prostate. NALCN-EEEE is equally abundant as NALCN-EKEE in snails, but is greater expressed in heart and other muscle tissue, and 50% less expressed in the brain than NALCN-EKEE. Transfected snail NALCN-EEEE and NALCN-EKEE channel isoforms express in HEK-293T cells. We were not able to distinguish potential NALCN currents from background, non-selective leak conductances in HEK293T cells. Native leak currents without expressing NALCN genes in HEK-293T cells are NMDG(+) impermeant and blockable with 10 µM Gd(3+) ions and are indistinguishable from the hallmark currents ascribed to mammalian NALCN currents expressed in vitro by Lu et al. in Cell. 2007 Apr 20;129(2):371-83.
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spelling pubmed-35572582013-02-04 NALCN Ion Channels Have Alternative Selectivity Filters Resembling Calcium Channels or Sodium Channels Senatore, Adriano Monteil, Arnaud van Minnen, Jan Smit, August B. Spafford, J. David PLoS One Research Article NALCN is a member of the family of ion channels with four homologous, repeat domains that include voltage-gated calcium and sodium channels. NALCN is a highly conserved gene from simple, extant multicellular organisms without nervous systems such as sponges and placozoans and mostly remains a single gene compared to the calcium and sodium channels which diversified into twenty genes in humans. The single NALCN gene has alternatively-spliced exons at exons 15 or exon 31 that splices in novel selectivity filter residues that resemble calcium channels (EEEE) or sodium channels (EKEE or EEKE). NALCN channels with alternative calcium, (EEEE) and sodium, (EKEE or EEKE) -selective pores are conserved in simple bilaterally symmetrical animals like flatworms to non-chordate deuterostomes. The single NALCN gene is limited as a sodium channel with a lysine (K)-containing pore in vertebrates, but originally NALCN was a calcium-like channel, and evolved to operate as both a calcium channel and sodium channel for different roles in many invertebrates. Expression patterns of NALCN-EKEE in pond snail, Lymnaea stagnalis suggest roles for NALCN in secretion, with an abundant expression in brain, and an up-regulation in secretory organs of sexually-mature adults such as albumen gland and prostate. NALCN-EEEE is equally abundant as NALCN-EKEE in snails, but is greater expressed in heart and other muscle tissue, and 50% less expressed in the brain than NALCN-EKEE. Transfected snail NALCN-EEEE and NALCN-EKEE channel isoforms express in HEK-293T cells. We were not able to distinguish potential NALCN currents from background, non-selective leak conductances in HEK293T cells. Native leak currents without expressing NALCN genes in HEK-293T cells are NMDG(+) impermeant and blockable with 10 µM Gd(3+) ions and are indistinguishable from the hallmark currents ascribed to mammalian NALCN currents expressed in vitro by Lu et al. in Cell. 2007 Apr 20;129(2):371-83. Public Library of Science 2013-01-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3557258/ /pubmed/23383067 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0055088 Text en © 2013 Senatore et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Senatore, Adriano
Monteil, Arnaud
van Minnen, Jan
Smit, August B.
Spafford, J. David
NALCN Ion Channels Have Alternative Selectivity Filters Resembling Calcium Channels or Sodium Channels
title NALCN Ion Channels Have Alternative Selectivity Filters Resembling Calcium Channels or Sodium Channels
title_full NALCN Ion Channels Have Alternative Selectivity Filters Resembling Calcium Channels or Sodium Channels
title_fullStr NALCN Ion Channels Have Alternative Selectivity Filters Resembling Calcium Channels or Sodium Channels
title_full_unstemmed NALCN Ion Channels Have Alternative Selectivity Filters Resembling Calcium Channels or Sodium Channels
title_short NALCN Ion Channels Have Alternative Selectivity Filters Resembling Calcium Channels or Sodium Channels
title_sort nalcn ion channels have alternative selectivity filters resembling calcium channels or sodium channels
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3557258/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23383067
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0055088
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