PubMed 20826800
Referenced in: none
Automatically associated channels: Slo1
Title: The N terminus of a schistosome beta subunit regulates inactivation and current density of a Cav2 channel.
Authors: Vicenta Salvador-Recatalà, Robert M Greenberg
Journal, date & volume: J. Biol. Chem., 2010 Nov 12 , 285, 35878-88
PubMed link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20826800
Abstract
The β subunit of high voltage-activated Ca(2+) (Ca(v)) channels targets the pore-forming α(1) subunit to the plasma membrane and tunes the biophysical phenotype of the Ca(v) channel complex. We used a combination of molecular biology and whole-cell patch clamp to investigate the functional role of a long N-terminal polyacidic motif (NPAM) in a Ca(v)β subunit of the human parasite Schistosoma mansoni (β(Sm)), a motif that does not occur in other known Ca(v)β subunits. When expressed in human embryonic kidney cells stably expressing Ca(v)2.3, β(Sm) accelerates Ca(2+)/calmodulin-independent inactivation of Ca(v)2.3. Deleting the first 44 amino acids of β(Sm), a region that includes NPAM, significantly slows the predominant time constant of inactivation (τ(fast)) under conditions that prevent Ca(2+)/CaM-dependent inactivation (β(Sm): τ(fast) = 66 ms; β(SmΔ2-44): τ(fast) = 111 ms, p < 0.01). Interestingly, deleting the amino acids that are N-terminal to NPAM (2-24 or 2-17) results in faster inactivation than with an intact N terminus (τ(fast) = 42 ms with β(SmΔ2-17); τ(fast) = 40 ms with β(SmΔ2-24), p < 0.01). This suggests that NPAM is the structural determinant for accelerating Ca(2+)/calmodulin-independent inactivation. We also created three chimeric subunits that contain the first 44 amino acids of β(Sm) attached to mammalian β(1b), β(2a), and β(3) subunits. For any given mammalian β subunit, inactivation was faster if it contained the N terminus of β(Sm) than if it did not. Co-expression of the mammalian α(2)δ-1 subunit resulted in doubling of the inactivation rate, but the effects of NPAM persisted. Thus, it appears that the schistosome Ca(v) channel complex has acquired a new function that likely contributes to reducing the amount of Ca(2+) that enters the cells in vivo. This feature is of potential interest as a target for new antihelminthics.