The Human Skeletal Muscle Na Channel Mutation R669H Associated with Hypokalemic Periodic Paralysis Enhances Slow Inactivation
Open Access
- 1 December 2000
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 20 (23) , 8610-8617
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.20-23-08610.2000
Abstract
Missense mutations of the human skeletal muscle voltage-gated Na channel (hSkM1) underlie a variety of diseases, including hyperkalemic periodic paralysis (HyperPP), paramyotonia congenita, and potassium-aggravated myotonia. Another disorder of sarcolemmal excitability, hypokalemic periodic paralysis (HypoPP), which is usually caused by missense mutations of the S4 voltage sensors of the L-type Ca channel, was associated recently in one family with a mutation in the outermost arginine of the IIS4 voltage sensor (R669H) of hSkM1 (Bulman et al., 1999). Intriguingly, an arginine-to-histidine mutation at the homologous position in the L-type Ca2+channel (R528H) is a common cause of HypoPP. We have studied the gating properties of the hSkM1-R669H mutant Na channel experimentally in human embryonic kidney cells and found that it has no significant effects on activation or fast inactivation but does cause an enhancement of slow inactivation. R669H channels exhibit an ∼10 mV hyperpolarized shift in the voltage dependence of slow inactivation and a twofold to fivefold prolongation of recovery after prolonged depolarization. In contrast, slow inactivation is often disrupted in HyperPP-associated Na channel mutants. These results demonstrate that, in R669H-associated HypoPP, enhanced slow inactivation does not preclude, and may contribute to, prolonged attacks of weakness and add support to previous evidence implicating the IIS4 voltage sensor in slow-inactivation gating.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spectrum of sodium channel disturbances in the nondystrophic myotonias and periodic paralysesKidney International, 2000
- A novel sodium channel mutation in a family with hypokalemic periodic paralysisNeurology, 1999
- Activation and Inactivation of the Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel: Role of Segment S5 Revealed by a Novel Hyperkalaemic Periodic Paralysis MutationJournal of Neuroscience, 1999
- Voltage Sensors in Domains III and IV, but Not I and II, Are Immobilized by Na+ Channel Fast InactivationNeuron, 1999
- Interaction between fast and slow inactivation in Skm1 sodium channelsBiophysical Journal, 1996
- A unique role for the S4 segment of domain 4 in the inactivation of sodium channels.The Journal of general physiology, 1996
- Impaired slow inactivation in mutant sodium channelsBiophysical Journal, 1996
- Sodium channel mutations in paramyotonia congenita uncouple inactivation from activationNeuron, 1994
- Theoretical reconstruction of myotonia and paralysis caused by incomplete inactivation of sodium channelsBiophysical Journal, 1993
- Slow changes in membrane permeability and long‐lasting action potentials in axons perfused with fluoride solutionsThe Journal of Physiology, 1970