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Calmodulin-Cork Model of Gap Junction Channel Gating—One Molecule, Two Mechanisms
The Calmodulin-Cork gating model is based on evidence for the direct role of calmodulin (CaM) in channel gating. Indeed, chemical gating of cell-to-cell channels is sensitive to nanomolar cytosolic calcium concentrations [Ca(2+)](i). Calmodulin inhibitors and inhibition of CaM expression prevent che...
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7404200/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32668628 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms21144938 |
Sumario: | The Calmodulin-Cork gating model is based on evidence for the direct role of calmodulin (CaM) in channel gating. Indeed, chemical gating of cell-to-cell channels is sensitive to nanomolar cytosolic calcium concentrations [Ca(2+)](i). Calmodulin inhibitors and inhibition of CaM expression prevent chemical gating. CaMCC, a CaM mutant with higher Ca(2+)-sensitivity greatly increases chemical gating sensitivity (in CaMCC the NH(2)-terminal EF-hand pair (res. 9–76) is replaced by the COOH-terminal pair (res. 82–148). Calmodulin colocalizes with connexins. Connexins have high-affinity CaM binding sites. Several connexin mutants paired to wild-type connexins have a high gating sensitivity that is eliminated by inhibition of CaM expression. Repeated transjunctional voltage (Vj) pulses slowly and progressively close a large number of channels by the chemical/slow gate (CaM lobe). At the single-channel level, the chemical/slow gate closes and opens slowly with on-off fluctuations. The model proposes two types of CaM-driven gating: “Ca-CaM-Cork” and “CaM-Cork”. In the first, gating involves Ca(2+)-induced CaM-activation. In the second, gating takes place without [Ca(2+)](i) rise. The Ca-CaM-Cork gating is only reversed by a return of [Ca(2+)](i) to resting values, while the CaM-Cork gating is reversed by Vj positive at the gated side. |
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