Modulation of cardiac CaV1.2 channels by dihydropyridine and phosphatase inhibitor requires Ser-1142 in the domain III pore loop

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FONTE

The National Academy of Sciences

RESUMO

Dihydropyridine-sensitive, voltage-activated calcium channels respond to membrane depolarization with two distinct modes of activity: short bursts of very short openings (mode 1) or repetitive openings of much longer duration (mode 2). Here we show that both the dihydropyridine, BayK8644 (BayK), and the inhibitor of Ser/Thr protein phosphatases, okadaic acid, have identical effects on the gating of the recombinant cardiac calcium channel, CaV1.2 (α1C). Each produced identical mode 2 gating in cell-attached patches, and each prevented rundown of channel activity when the membrane patch was excised into ATP-free solutions. These effects required Ser or Thr at position 1142 in the domain III pore loop between transmembrane segments S5 and S6, where dihydropyridines bind to the channel. Mutation of Ser-1142 to Ala or Cys produced channels with very low activity that could not be modulated by either BayK or okadaic acid. A molecular model of CaV1.2 indicates that Ser-1142 is unlikely to be phosphorylated, and thus we conclude that BayK binding stabilizes mode 2 gating allosterically by either protecting a phospho Ser/Thr on the α1C subunit or mimicking phosphorylation at that site.

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