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Received August 8, 2003
Revised September 5, 2003
Accepted after revision November 10, 2003
1 INSERM U546
2 Groupe Hospitalier Pitie-Salpetriere
3 Service de neurologie, CHU Bordeaux
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: nacira.tabti{at}chups.jussieu.fr.
Paramyotonia Congenita (PC) is a dominantly inherited
skeletal muscle disorder caused by missense mutations in
the SCN4A gene encoding the pore-forming
subunit
(hSkM1) of the skeletal muscle Na+ channel. Muscle
stiffness is the predominant clinical symptom. It is
usually induced by exposure to cold and is aggravated by
exercise. The most prevalent PC mutations occur at T1313
on DIII-DIV linker, and at R1448 on DIV-S4 of the &
[alpha] subunit. Only one substitution has been
described at T1313 (T1313M), whereas 4 distinct amino-
acid substitutions were found at R1448 (R1448C/H/P/S).
We report herein a novel mutation at position 1313
(T1313A) associated with a typical phenotype of PC. We
stably expressed T1313A or wild-type (hSkM1) channels in
HEK293 cells, and performed a detailed study on mutant
channel gating defects using the whole-cell
configuration of the patch-clamp technique. T1313A
mutation impaired Na+ channel fast inactivation: It
slowed and reduced the voltage sensitivity of the
kinetics, accelerated the recovery, and decreased the
voltage-dependence of the steady state. Slow
inactivation was slightly enhanced by the T1313A
mutation: the voltage dependence was shifted toward
hyperpolarization and its steepness was reduced compared
to wild-type. Deactivation from the open state assessed
by the tail current decay was only slowed at positive
potentials. This may be an indirect consequence of
disrupted fast inactivation. Deactivation from the
inactivation state was hastened. The T1313A mutation did
not modify the temperature sensitivity of the Na+
channel per se. However, gating kinetics of the mutant
channels were further slowed with cooling, and reached
levels that may represent the threshold for myotonia. In
conclusion, our results confirm the role of T1313
residue in Na+ channel fast inactivation, and unveil
subtle changes in other gating processes that may
influence the clinical phenotype.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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M. Bouhours, S. Luce, D. Sternberg, J. C. Willer, B. Fontaine, and N. Tabti A1152D mutation of the Na+ channel causes paramyotonia congenita and emphasizes the role of DIII/S4-S5 linker in fast inactivation J. Physiol., June 1, 2005; 565(2): 415 - 427. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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