scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers in "Channels in 2022"


Journal ArticleDOI
03 Feb 2022-Channels
TL;DR: Recent progress in developing the molecular pharmacology of VRAC is reviewed by screening a library of FDA-approved drugs for novel channel modulators, and the discovery and characterization of cysteinyl leukotriene receptor antagonists Pranlukast and Zafirlukast as novel VRAC inhibitors are discussed.
Abstract: ABSTRACT Newly emerging roles of LRRC8 volume-regulated anion channels (VRAC) raise important questions about the therapeutic potential of VRAC in the treatment of epilepsy, type 2 diabetes, and other human diseases. A critical barrier to evaluating whether VRAC represents a viable drug target is the lack of potent and specific small-molecule inhibitors and activators of the channel. Here we review recent progress in developing the molecular pharmacology of VRAC made by screening a library of FDA-approved drugs for novel channel modulators. We discuss the discovery and characterization of cysteinyl leukotriene receptor antagonists Pranlukast and Zafirlukast as novel VRAC inhibitors, and zinc pyrithione (ZPT), which apparently activates VRAC through a reactive oxygen species (ROS)-dependent mechanism. These ongoing efforts set the stage for developing a pharmacological toolkit for probing the integrative physiology, molecular pharmacology, and therapeutic potential of VRAC.

7 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
08 Aug 2022-Channels
TL;DR: It is found that one of the most common ways through which channels acquire non-ionic attributes, is by assembling with integrins, as these integrin-channel complexes exhibit broad genotypic and phenotypic heterogeneity and reveal a pleiotropic nature.
Abstract: ABSTRACT Started as an academic curiosity more than two decades ago, the idea that ion channels can regulate cellular processes in ways that do not depend on their conducting properties (non-ionic functions) gained traction and is now a flourishing area of research. Channels can regulate physiological processes including actin cytoskeletal remodeling, cell motility, excitation-contraction coupling, non-associative learning and embryogenesis, just to mention some, through non-ionic functions. When defective, non-ionic functions can give rise to channelopathies involved in cancer, neurodegenerative disease and brain trauma. Ion channels exert their non-ionic functions through a variety of mechanisms that range from physical coupling with other proteins, to possessing enzymatic activity, to assembling with signaling molecules. In this article, we take stock of the field and review recent findings. The concept that emerges, is that one of the most common ways through which channels acquire non-ionic attributes, is by assembling with integrins. These integrin-channel complexes exhibit broad genotypic and phenotypic heterogeneity and reveal a pleiotropic nature, as they appear to be capable of influencing both physiological and pathological processes.

7 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
05 Jan 2022-Channels
TL;DR: Oral administration of compound 194 reverses mechanical allodynia in a chronic constriction injury model of neuropathic pain and reverses the increased latency to cross an aversive barrier in a mechanical conflict-avoidance task following CCI, which support the conclusion that 194 is a robust inhibitor of NaV1.7.
Abstract: ABSTRACT The voltage-gated sodium channel isoform NaV1.7 is a critical player in the transmission of nociceptive information. This channel has been heavily implicated in human genetic pain disorders and is a validated pain target. However, targeting this channel directly has failed, and an indirect approach – disruption of interactions with accessory protein partners – has emerged as a viable alternative strategy. We recently reported that a small-molecule inhibitor of CRMP2 SUMOylation, compound 194, selectively reduces NaV1.7 currents in DRG neurons across species from mouse to human. This compound also reversed mechanical allodynia in a spared nerve injury and chemotherapy-induced model of neuropathic pain. Here, we show that oral administration of 194 reverses mechanical allodynia in a chronic constriction injury (CCI) model of neuropathic pain. Furthermore, we show that orally administered 194 reverses the increased latency to cross an aversive barrier in a mechanical conflict-avoidance task following CCI. These two findings, in the context of our previous report, support the conclusion that 194 is a robust inhibitor of NaV1.7 function with the ultimate effect of profoundly ameliorating mechanical allodynia associated with nerve injury. The fact that this was observed using both traditional, evoked measures of pain behavior as well as the more recently developed operator-independent mechanical conflict-avoidance assay increases confidence in the efficacy of 194-induced anti-nociception.

6 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
02 May 2022-Channels
TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated the mechanism by which carvedilol facilitates Ca transient (CaT) and action potential duration (APD) alternans in rabbit atrial myocytes.
Abstract: Carvedilol is a nonspecific β-blocker clinically used for the treatment of cardiovascular diseases but has also been shown to have profound effects on excitation-contraction coupling and Ca signaling at the cellular level. We investigate the mechanism by which carvedilol facilitates Ca transient (CaT) and action potential duration (APD) alternans in rabbit atrial myocytes. Carvedilol lowered the frequency threshold for pacing-induced CaT alternans and facilitated alternans in a concentration-dependent manner. Carvedilol prolonged the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca release refractoriness by significantly increasing the time constant τ of recovery of SR Ca release; however, no changes in L-type calcium current recovery from inactivation or SR Ca load were found after carvedilol treatment. Carvedilol enhanced the degree of APD alternans nearly two-fold. Carvedilol slowed the APD restitution kinetics and steepened the APD restitution curve at the pacing frequency (2 Hz) where alternans were elicited. No effect on the CaT or APD alternans ratios was observed in experiments with a different β-blocker (metoprolol), excluding the possibility that the carvedilol effect on CaT and APD alternans was determined by its β-blocking properties. These data suggest that carvedilol contributes to the generation of CaT and APD alternans in atrial myocytes by modulating the restitution of CaT and APD.

4 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
12 Apr 2022-Channels
TL;DR: Selective modulation of NaV1.5 MS makes capsaicin a promising candidate for therapeutic interventions targeting MS, and divergent stimulus-dependent effects that could potentiate or mitigate the effect of Capsaicin are found, suggesting that mechanical stimuli may differentially modulate NaV 1.5 mechanosensitivity.
Abstract: ABSTRACT SCN5A-encoded NaV1.5 is a voltage-gated Na+ channel that drives the electrical excitability of cardiac myocytes and contributes to slow waves of the human gastrointestinal smooth muscle cells. NaV1.5 is mechanosensitive: mechanical force modulates several facets of NaV1.5’s voltage-gated function, and some NaV1.5 channelopathies are associated with abnormal NaV1.5 mechanosensitivity (MS). A class of membrane-active drugs, known as amphiphiles, therapeutically target NaV1.5’s voltage-gated function and produce off-target effects including alteration of MS. Amphiphiles may provide a novel option for therapeutic modulation of NaV1.5’s mechanosensitive operation. To more selectively target NaV1.5 MS, we searched for a membrane-partitioning amphipathic agent that would inhibit MS with minimal closed-state inhibition of voltage-gated currents. Among the amphiphiles tested, we selected capsaicin for further study. We used two methods to assess the effects of capsaicin on NaV1.5 MS: (1) membrane suction in cell-attached macroscopic patches and (2) fluid shear stress on whole cells. We tested the effect of capsaicin on NaV1.5 MS by examining macro-patch and whole-cell Na+ current parameters with and without force. Capsaicin abolished the pressure- and shear-mediated peak current increase and acceleration; and the mechanosensitive shifts in the voltage-dependence of activation (shear) and inactivation (pressure and shear). Exploring the recovery from inactivation and use-dependent entry into inactivation, we found divergent stimulus-dependent effects that could potentiate or mitigate the effect of capsaicin, suggesting that mechanical stimuli may differentially modulate NaV1.5 MS. We conclude that selective modulation of NaV1.5 MS makes capsaicin a promising candidate for therapeutic interventions targeting MS.

4 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
21 Mar 2022-Channels
TL;DR: A bibliometric analysis of AM PK channel studies from 2012 to 2021 in order to perform researchers with some directions for AMPK channel research is conducted.
Abstract: ABSTRACT In recent years, AMPK channel has gained considerable attention in a variety of research areas, and several academic journals have published articles on AMPK research. However, few attempts have been made to thoroughly assess the scientific output and current status systematically in this topic from a worldwide viewpoint. As a result, it is critical to adopt an appropriate visualization method to reveal the global status, future research trends, and hotspots in AMPK channel research. To investigate research hotspots/frontiers in certain domains, bibliometric analysis has been frequently utilized to determine the productivity of nations, institutions, authors, and the frequency of keywords. In this work, we used CiteSpace and VOSviewer to conduct a bibliometric analysis of AMPK channel studies from 2012 to 2021 in order to perform researchers with some directions for AMPK channel research.

3 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
07 Apr 2022-Channels
TL;DR: The study found that the TRPV family is an excellent prognostic stratification for ccRCC, and among them,TRPV3 is the most significant prognostic marker ofccRCC.
Abstract: ABSTRACT The transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV) family has been preliminarily discovered to play an important role in various cancers, including clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), which is closely associated with immune infiltration. However, the expression and prognosis of TRPV family and tumor-infiltrating immune cells in ccRCC are obscure. This study aimed to explore the prognostic and therapeutic value of the TRPV family expression in ccRCC from the perspective of bioinformatics. We analyzed the transcriptome and clinical data of kidney renal clear cell carcinoma (KIRC) from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database. A clustering analysis and immune infiltration analysis were conducted to investigate the influence of the TRPV family genes on ccRCC. Our study found that the TRPV family is an excellent prognostic stratification for ccRCC. Among them, TRPV3 is the most significant prognostic marker of ccRCC. In addition, we performed a drug sensitivity analysis to identify the drugs with the strongest association with TRPV3. As a result, the TRPV family, particularly TRPV3, can act as a prognostic biomarker in ccRCC to determine prognosis and levels of immune infiltration.

3 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
08 Aug 2022-Channels
TL;DR: It is shown that MscA and MscB localize in Endoplasmic Reticulum and the Plasma Membrane, respectively, whereas their overexpression leads to increased CaCl2 toxicity or/and reduction of asexual spore formation, contributing to understanding the role of MscS-like channels in filamentous fungi and relative pathogens.
Abstract: ABSTRACT Mechanosensitive ion channels are integral membrane proteins ubiquitously present in bacteria, archaea, and eukarya. They act as molecular sensors of mechanical stress to serve vital functions such as touch, hearing, osmotic pressure, proprioception and balance, while their malfunction is often associated with pathologies. Amongst them, the structurally distinct MscL and MscS channels from bacteria are the most extensively studied. MscS-like channels have been found in plants and Schizosaccharomyces pombe, where they regulate intracellular Ca2+ and cell volume under hypo-osmotic conditions. Here we characterize two MscS-like putative channels, named MscA and MscB, from the model filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans. Orthologues of MscA and MscB are present in most fungi, including relative plant and animal pathogens. MscA/MscB and other fungal MscS-like proteins share the three transmembrane helices and the extended C-terminal cytosolic domain that form the structural fingerprint of MscS-like channels with at least three additional transmembrane segments than Escherichia coli MscS. We show that MscA and MscB localize in Endoplasmic Reticulum and the Plasma Membrane, respectively, whereas their overexpression leads to increased CaCl2 toxicity or/and reduction of asexual spore formation. Our findings contribute to understanding the role of MscS-like channels in filamentous fungi and relative pathogens.

3 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
08 Aug 2022-Channels
TL;DR: A 39-year old patient with toxic cardiogenic shock after yew poisoning is reported, who was successfully rescued by venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and had a full neurological recovery.
Abstract: ABSTRACT Ingestion of leaves of the European yew tree (Taxus baccata) can result in fatal cardiac arrhythmias and acute cardiogenic shock. This cardiotoxicity derives from taxine alkaloids that block cardiac voltage-gated sodium and calcium channels. Prompt initiation of venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation is essential to bridge these critically ill patients to recovery, as there is no antidote available. We here report a 39-year old patient with toxic cardiogenic shock after yew poisoning, who was successfully rescued by venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and had a full neurological recovery. This report emphasizes the role of intoxications as reversible causes of cardiac arrest and adds further evidence to the body of existing literature thus encouraging the early use of venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in patients with yew poisoning and cardiogenic shock.

3 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
16 Feb 2022-Channels
TL;DR: The clinical and genetic spectrum of patients with MC in the China is expanded, finding the MC phenotype in Chinese people is not different from that found in the West, while the genotype is different.
Abstract: ABSTRACT Myotonia congenita (MC) is a rare genetic disease caused by mutations in the skeletal muscle chloride channel gene (CLCN1), encoding the voltage-gated chloride channel ClC-1 in skeletal muscle. Our study reported the clinical and molecular characteristics of six patients with MC and systematically review the literature on Chinese people. We retrospectively analyzed demographics, clinical features, family history, creatine kinase (CK), electromyography (EMG), treatment, and genotype data of our patients and reviewed the clinical data and CLCN1 mutations in literature. The median ages at examination and onset were 26.5 years (range 11–50 years) and 6.5 years (range 1.5–11 years), respectively, in our patients, and 21 years (range 3.5–65 years, n = 45) and 9 years (range 0.5–26 years, n = 50), respectively, in literature. Similar to previous reports, myotonia involved limb, lids, masticatory, and trunk muscles to varying degrees. Warm-up phenomenon (5/6), percussion myotonia (3/5), and grip myotonia (6/6) were common. Menstruation triggered myotonia in females, not observed in Chinese patients before. The proportion of abnormal CK levels (4/5) was higher than data from literature. Electromyography performed in six patients revealed myotonic changes (100%). Five novel CLCN1 mutations, including a splicing mutation (c.853 + 4A>G), a deletion mutation (c.2010_2014del), and three missense mutations (c.2527C>T, c.1727C>T, c.2017 G > C), were identified. The c.892 G > A (p.A298T) mutation was the most frequent mutation in the Chinese population. Our study expanded the clinical and genetic spectrum of patients with MC in the China. The MC phenotype in Chinese people is not different from that found in the West, while the genotype is different.

3 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
08 Aug 2022-Channels
TL;DR: Piezo1 is overexpressed in OC tissues and contributes to OC tumor growth and metastasis, and suppression of Piezo 1 is a potential therapeutic strategy for OC.
Abstract: ABSTRACT Ovarian cancer (OC) is a highly malignant cancer with great metastatic potential. Here we aimed to investigate the role of Piezo1, a gene related to the mechanical environment of the tumor, in promoting the metastasis of OC. We performed Piezo1 knockdown in A-1847 cells using small hairpin RNAs, and the cells were inoculated subcutaneously in nude mice. Piezo1 knockdown decreased the tumor growth rate of OC tumor xenografts in mice and reduced cell migration in vitro. Metastasis in the lung was also attenuated after Piezo1 knockdown as revealed by HE staining of the lung tissues, which was concomitant with downregulation of E-Cadherin and vimentin and upregulation of N-Cadherin analyzed using western blot analysis, suggesting suppressed epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. Migration of Piezo1-knockdown cells was also analyzed for their migratory capabilities using the scratch assay. We also analyzed the key proteins in the Hippo/YAP signaling pathway using western blot after treating A-1847 and 3AO cells with a Piezo1 inducer, Yoda1. Piezo1 inducer Yoda1 activated Hippo/YAP signal in OC cells. In conclusion, Piezo1 is overexpressed in OC tissues and contributes to OC tumor growth and metastasis. Suppression of Piezo1 is a potential therapeutic strategy for OC.

Journal ArticleDOI
08 Sep 2022-Channels
TL;DR: An updated overview of ankyrin proteins and their known channel and transporter interactions is provided and several potential avenues of future research that would expand the understanding of these important organizational proteins are discussed.
Abstract: ABSTRACT The ankyrin proteins (Ankyrin-R, Ankyrin-B, and Ankyrin-G) are a family of scaffolding, or membrane adaptor proteins necessary for the regulation and targeting of several types of ion channels and membrane transporters throughout the body. These include voltage-gated sodium, potassium, and calcium channels in the nervous system, heart, lungs, and muscle. At these sites, ankyrins recruit ion channels, and other membrane proteins, to specific subcellular domains, which are then stabilized through ankyrin’s interaction with the submembranous spectrin-based cytoskeleton. Several recent studies have expanded our understanding of both ankyrin expression and their ion channel binding partners. This review provides an updated overview of ankyrin proteins and their known channel and transporter interactions. We further discuss several potential avenues of future research that would expand our understanding of these important organizational proteins.

Journal ArticleDOI
27 Jun 2022-Channels
TL;DR: It was found that 9 dyne/cm2 loading for 30 minutes showed an upregulation trend on Piezo1 when MLO-Y4 osteocytes were exposed to an FSS microenvironment, and it was demonstrated thatPiezo1-mediated FSS promotes the expression of OPG and inhibits theexpression of RANKL via NOTCH3 in MLO's osteocytes.
Abstract: ABSTRACT Piezo1, a mechanosensitive ion channel, participates in a variety of biological processes in maintaining bone homeostasis. As the most abundant cells in bones of the mammals, osteocytes play an essential role in bone formation, remodeling, and bone mass maintenance. Here, by exposing MLO-Y4 osteocytes to the fluid shear stress (FSS) microenvironment, we explored the effect of Piezo1-mediated FSS on the expression of the molecules critical to the process of bone formation and resorption, Receptor Activator of Nuclear Factor-Kappa-B Ligand (RANKL) and Osteoprotegerin (OPG). It was found that 9 dyne/cm2 loading for 30 minutes showed an upregulation trend on Piezo1 when MLO-Y4 osteocytes were exposed to an FSS microenvironment. FSS promotes the expression of OPG and inhibits the expression of RANKL. The blocker of Piezo1, GsMTx4, downregulates the effect of FSS on the expression of these two molecules. In addition, NOTCH3 was involved in this process. Thus, the results demonstrated that Piezo1-mediated FSS promotes the expression of OPG and inhibits the expression of RANKL via NOTCH3 in MLO-Y4 osteocytes.

Journal ArticleDOI
04 Apr 2022-Channels
TL;DR: JZTX-V could inhibit not only transient outward potassium currents evoked in small-sized DRG neurons but also Kv4.3-encoded currents expressed in HEK293T cells in the concentration and voltage dependence and speculated the underlying action mechanism that the hydrophobic interaction and steric effects played key roles in the binding of JZ TX-V with Kv 4.3.
Abstract: ABSTRACT JZTX-V is a toxin isolated from the venom of the Chinese spider Chilobrachys jingzhao. Previous studies had shown that JZTX-V could inhibit the transient outward potassium current of Kv4.2 and Kv4.3 expressed in Xenopus oocytes but had no effects on Kv1.2–1.4. However, the underlying action mechanism of JZTX-V on Kv4.3 remains unclear. In our study, JZTX-V could inhibit not only transient outward potassium currents evoked in small-sized DRG neurons but also Kv4.3-encoded currents expressed in HEK293T cells in the concentration and voltage dependence. The half maximal inhibitory concentration of JZTX-V on Kv4.3 was 9.6 ± 1.2 nM. In addition, the time course for JZTX-V inhibition and release of inhibition after washout were 15.8 ± 1.54 s and 58.8 ± 4.35 s. Electrophysiological assays indicated that 25 nM JZTX-V could shift significantly the voltage dependence of steady-state activation and steady-state inactivation to depolarization. Meanwhile, 25 nM JZTX-V decreased markedly the time constant of activation and inactivation but had no effect on the time constant of recovery from inactivation. To study the molecular determinants of Kv4.3, we performed alanine scanning on a conserved motif of Kv4.3 and assayed the affinity between mutants and JZTX-V. The results not only showed that I273, L275, V283, and F287 were molecular determinants in the conserved motif of Kv4.3 for interacting with JZTX-V but also speculated the underlying action mechanism that the hydrophobic interaction and steric effects played key roles in the binding of JZTX-V with Kv4.3. In summary, our studies have laid a scientific theoretical foundation for further research on the interaction mechanism between JZTX-V and Kv4.3.

Journal ArticleDOI
10 Aug 2022-Channels
TL;DR: Investigation of the effects of the beta blocker propranolol on INaL expressed by ΔKPQ and E1784K channels in induced pluripotent stem cells derived from patients carrying these mutations suggests that the protective effects of proPRanolol in treating LQT3 patients is due in part to modulation of InaL.
Abstract: ABSTRACT The congenital long QT syndrome (LQTS), one of the most common cardiac channelopathies, is characterized by delayed ventricular repolarization underlying prolongation of the QT interval of the surface electrocardiogram. LQTS is caused by mutations in genes coding for cardiac ion channels or ion channel-associated proteins. The major therapeutic approach to LQTS management is beta blocker therapy which has been shown to be effective in treatment of LQTS variants caused by mutations in K+ channels. However, this approach has been questioned in the treatment of patients identified as LQTS variant 3(LQT3) patients who carry mutations in SCN5A, the gene coding for the principal cardiac Na+ channel. LQT3 mutations are gain of function mutations that disrupt spontaneous Na+ channel inactivation and promote persistent or late Na+ channel current (INaL) that delays repolarization and underlies QT prolongation. Clinical investigation of patients with the two most common LQT3 mutations, the ΔKPQ and the E1784K mutations, found beta blocker treatment a useful therapeutic approach for managing arrhythmias in this patient population. However, there is little experimental data that reveals the mechanisms underlying these antiarrhythmic actions. Here, we have investigated the effects of the beta blocker propranolol on INaL expressed by ΔKPQ and E1784K channels in induced pluripotent stem cells derived from patients carrying these mutations. Our results indicate that propranolol preferentially inhibits INaL expressed by these channels suggesting that the protective effects of propranolol in treating LQT3 patients is due in part to modulation of INaL.

Journal ArticleDOI
26 Aug 2022-Channels
TL;DR: This review synthesizes information from ~30 compounds derived from natural sources like plants and fungi and delineate their effects on VGSCs and VGCCs in human disease, particularly pain.
Abstract: ABSTRACT Voltage-gated sodium and calcium channels (VGSCs and VGCCs) play an important role in the modulation of physiologically relevant processes in excitable cells that range from action potential generation to neurotransmission. Once their expression and/or function is altered in disease, specific pharmacological approaches become necessary to mitigate the negative consequences of such dysregulation. Several classes of small molecules have been developed with demonstrated effectiveness on VGSCs and VGCCs; however, off-target effects have also been described, limiting their use and spurring efforts to find more specific and safer molecules to target these channels. There are a great number of plants and herbal preparations that have been empirically used for the treatment of diseases in which VGSCs and VGCCs are involved. Some of these natural products have progressed to clinical trials, while others are under investigation for their action mechanisms on signaling pathways, including channels. In this review, we synthesize information from ~30 compounds derived from natural sources like plants and fungi and delineate their effects on VGSCs and VGCCs in human disease, particularly pain.

Journal ArticleDOI
27 Jun 2022-Channels
TL;DR: Rab35 GTPase regulated KATP channel current amplitude in isolated adult cardiomyocytes by affecting its surface expression but not channel properties, which validated its physiologic relevance and the potential of pharmacologic target for treating the diseases with KatP channel trafficking defects.
Abstract: ABSTRACT ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channel couples membrane excitability to intracellular energy metabolism. Maintaining KATP channel surface expression is key to normal insulin secretion, blood pressure and cardioprotection. However, the molecular mechanisms regulating KATP channel internalization and endocytic recycling, which directly affect the surface expression of KATP channels, are poorly understood. Here we used the cardiac KATP channel subtype, Kir6.2/SUR2A, and characterized Rab35 GTPase as a key regulator of KATP channel endocytic recycling. Electrophysiological recordings and surface biotinylation assays showed decreased KATP channel surface density with co-expression of a dominant negative Rab35 mutant (Rab35-DN), but not other recycling-related Rab GTPases, including Rab4, Rab11a and Rab11b. Immunofluorescence images revealed strong colocalization of Rab35-DN with recycling Kir6.2. Rab35-DN minimized the recycling rate of KATP channels. Rab35 also regulated KATP channel current amplitude in isolated adult cardiomyocytes by affecting its surface expression but not channel properties, which validated its physiologic relevance and the potential of pharmacologic target for treating the diseases with KATP channel trafficking defects. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT

Journal ArticleDOI
12 May 2022-Channels
TL;DR: The results indicate that the tg mutation causes a dominant disorder of the hippocampus-related memory and synaptic plasticity, raising the possibility that in CACNA1A-associated human diseases, functionally aberrant CaV2.1 Ca2+ channels actively induce the observed cognitive deficits independently of the neurological symptoms.
Abstract: ABSTRACT CACNA1A-associated epilepsy and ataxia frequently accompany cognitive impairments as devastating co-morbidities. However, it is unclear whether the cognitive deficits are consequences secondary to the neurological symptoms elicited by CACNA1A mutations. To address this issue, Cacna1a mutant mice tottering (tg), and in particular tg/+ heterozygotes, serve as a suitable model system, given that tg/+ heterozygotes fail to display spontaneous absence epilepsy and ataxia typically observed in tg/tg homozygotes. Here, we examined hippocampus-dependent behaviors and hippocampal learning-related synaptic plasticity in tg mice. In behavioral analyses of tg/+ and tg/tg, acquisition and retention of spatial reference memory were characteristically impaired in the Morris water maze task, while working memory was intact in the eight-arm radial maze and T-maze tasks. tg/+ heterozygotes showed normal motor function in contrast to tg/tg homozygotes. In electrophysiological analyses, Schaffer collateral–CA1 synapses showed a deficit in the maintenance of long-term potentiation in tg/+ and tg/tg mice and an increased paired-pulse facilitation induced by paired pulses with 100 ms in tg/tg mice. Our results indicate that the tg mutation causes a dominant disorder of the hippocampus-related memory and synaptic plasticity, raising the possibility that in CACNA1A-associated human diseases, functionally aberrant CaV2.1 Ca2+ channels actively induce the observed cognitive deficits independently of the neurological symptoms.

Journal ArticleDOI
02 Mar 2022-Channels
TL;DR: The human channel was not modulated by intracellular cAMP, a hallmark of the other known HCN channels so the missing response to cAMP distinguishes human HCN3 from both the well cAMP responding HCN subtypes 2 and 4 and the weak responding subtype 1.
Abstract: The HCN channel family comprises of four members (HCN1-4) expressed in the heart and nervous system. The current produced by HCN channels is known as I-h (or I-f or I-q). I-h has also been designated as pacemaker current because it plays a key role in controlling rhythmic activity of cardiac pacemaker cells and spontaneously firing neurons [1]. The diversity of functions that HCN channels perform is partly attributable to differences in their subcellular localization [2]. HCN channels are highly regulated proteins, which respond to different cellular stimuli, they open at hyperpolarizingpotential, carrymixed Na/K current, and are regulated by cyclic nucleotides [3]. These channels play important roles in modulating cellular excitability, rhythmic activity, dendritic integration, and synaptic transmission. HCN channel functions range from setting resting potential, synaptic normalization, gain control, after-hyperpolarization, setting responses in dendrites, mediating cannabinoid role in neuronal plasticity, to the gating of plasticity [4]. These functions have been implicated in a wide range of diseases, including major depressive disorder, neuropathic pain, and multiple subtypes of epilepsy [4,5. Among the four known isoforms, HCN1 is the most expressed in the neocortex and hippocampus. Some studies suggest that coordinated changes in protein expression and surface expression of HCN1 serve as the key regulatory mechanisms controlling the function of the endogenous HCN1 protein in cortical neurons [6]. HCN1 might be involved in reduced vagal modulation and possibly in increased cardiac mortality in schizophrenia patients [7]. HCN2 ion channel activity plays a crucial role in the progress of peripheral neuropathic pain (PNP). Some studies suggest that HCN2 contributes to the development of neuropathic pain by inducing spinal LTP via activation of NMDA receptor-mediated CaMKII signaling, decreased HCN2 channel expression attenuates neuropathic pain by inhibiting pro-inflammatory reactions and NF-kappa B activation[8,9] Like all other HCNs, hHCN3 was inhibited rapidly and reversibly by extracellular cesium and slowly and irreversibly by extracellular applied ZD7288. The human channel was not modulated by intracellular cAMP, a hallmark of the other known HCN channels so the missing response to cAMP distinguishes human HCN3 from both the well cAMP responding HCN subtypes 2 and 4 and the weak responding subtype 1[10]. Upregulation of HCN3 channels in IGL neurons is essential for intrinsic excitability and rhythmic burst firing, and PIP2 serves as a powerful modulator of I-h-dependent properties via an effect on HCN3 channel gating[11]. HCN4 is expressed in brain regions relevant to mood and anxiety disorders including specific thalamic nuclei, the basolateral amygdala, and the midbrain dopamine system[12].

Journal ArticleDOI
14 Oct 2022-Channels
TL;DR: Results support a significant role for NaV1.6 in phrenic nerve signaling and respiratory function in rats and seek to determine the mechanism of the in vivo adverse effects of inhibitors by studying the selectivity of the compounds on NaV 1.6.
Abstract: ABSTRACT As part of a drug discovery effort to identify potent inhibitors of NaV1.7 for the treatment of pain, we observed that inhibitors produced unexpected cardiovascular and respiratory effects in vivo. Specifically, inhibitors administered to rodents produced changes in cardiovascular parameters and respiratory cessation. We sought to determine the mechanism of the in vivo adverse effects by studying the selectivity of the compounds on NaV1.5, NaV1.4, and NaV1.6 in in vitro and ex vivo assays. Inhibitors lacking sufficient NaV1.7 selectivity over NaV1.6 were associated with respiratory cessation after in vivo administration to rodents. Effects on respiratory rate in rats were consistent with effects in an ex vivo hemisected rat diaphragm model and in vitro NaV1.6 potency. Furthermore, direct blockade of the phrenic nerve signaling was observed at exposures known to cause respiratory cessation in rats. Collectively, these results support a significant role for NaV1.6 in phrenic nerve signaling and respiratory function.