Developmental Activation of Calmodulin-Dependent Facilitation of Cerebellar P-Type Ca2+ Current

P-type (CaV2.1) Ca2+ channels are a central conduit of neuronal Ca2+ entry, so their Ca2+ feedback regulation promises widespread neurobiological impact. Heterologous expression of recombinant CaV2.1 channels demonstrates that the Ca2+ sensor calmodulin can trigger Ca2+-dependent facilitation (CDF)...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of neuroscience 2005-09, Vol.25 (36), p.8282-8294
Hauptverfasser: Chaudhuri, Dipayan, Alseikhan, Badr A, Chang, Siao Yun, Soong, Tuck Wah, Yue, David T
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:P-type (CaV2.1) Ca2+ channels are a central conduit of neuronal Ca2+ entry, so their Ca2+ feedback regulation promises widespread neurobiological impact. Heterologous expression of recombinant CaV2.1 channels demonstrates that the Ca2+ sensor calmodulin can trigger Ca2+-dependent facilitation (CDF) of channel opening. This facilitation occurs when local Ca2+ influx through individual channels selectively activates the C-terminal lobe of calmodulin. In neurons, however, such calmodulin-mediated processes have yet to be detected, and CDF of native P-type current has thus far appeared different, arguably triggered by other Ca2+ sensing molecules. Here, in cerebellar Purkinje somata abundant with prototypic P-type channels, we find that the C-terminal lobe of calmodulin does produce CDF, and such facilitation augments Ca2+ entry during stimulation by repetitive action-potential and complex-spike waveforms. Beyond recapitulating key features of recombinant channels, these neurons exhibit an additional modulatory dimension: developmental upregulation of CDF during postnatal week 2. This phenomenon reflects increasing somatic expression of CaV2.1 splice variants that manifest CDF and progressive dendritic targeting of variants lacking CDF. Calmodulin-triggered facilitation is thus fundamental to native CaV2.1 and rapidly enhanced during early development.
ISSN:0270-6474
1529-2401
DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2253-05.2005