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Received February 21, 2006
Revised March 7, 2006
Accepted after revision March 7, 2006
1 Universita 'La Sapienza'
2 Universita' 'La Sapienza'
3 Muscle Research Laboratory, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: francesca.grassi{at}uniroma1.it.
Slow-channel congenital myasthenic syndromes (CMS) caused by mutations in subunits of the endplate ACh receptor (AChR) result in prolonged synaptic currents and excitotoxic injury of the postsynaptic region by Ca2+ overloading. The Ca2+ overloading could owe entirely to the prolonged openings of the AChR channel or could be abetted by enhanced Ca2+ permeability of the mutant channels. We therefore measured the fractional Ca2+ current (Pf ), defined as the percentage of the total ACh-evoked current carried by Ca2+ ions, for AChRs harboring the
G153S or the
V249F slow-channel mutation, and for wild-type human AChR whose Pf has not yet been determined. Experiments were performed in transiently transfected GH4C1 cells and human myotubes with simultaneous recording of ACh-evoked whole-cell currents and fura-2 fluorescence-signals. We found that the Pf of the wild-type human endplate AChR was unexpectedly high (Pf ~7%), but neither the
V249F nor the
G153S mutation altered Pf . Fetal human AChRs containing either the wild type or the mutated
subunit had a much lower Pf (2 to 3 %). We conclude that the Ca2+ permeability of human endplate AChR is higher than that reported for any other human nicotinic AChR, with exception of
7-containing AChRs (Pf >10 %); and that neither the
G153S nor the
V249F mutations affect the Pf of fetal or adult endplate AChRs. However, the intrinsically high Ca2+ permeability of human receptor likely predisposes to development of the endplate myopathy when opening events of the AChR channel are prolonged by altered AChR-channel kinetics.
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