The Myotonia Congenita Mutation A331T Confers a Novel Hyperpolarization-Activated Gate to the Muscle Chloride Channel ClC-1

Mutations in the muscle chloride channel gene CLCN1 cause myotonia congenita, an inherited disorder of skeletal muscle excitability leading to a delayed relaxation after muscle contraction. Here, we examine the functional consequences of a novel disease-causing mutation that predicts the substitutio...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of neuroscience 2002-09, Vol.22 (17), p.7462-7470
Hauptverfasser: Warnstedt, Maike, Sun, Chen, Poser, Barbara, Escriva, Maria Jose, Tranebjarg, Lisbeth, Torbergsen, Torberg, van Ghelue, Marijke, Fahlke, Christoph
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mutations in the muscle chloride channel gene CLCN1 cause myotonia congenita, an inherited disorder of skeletal muscle excitability leading to a delayed relaxation after muscle contraction. Here, we examine the functional consequences of a novel disease-causing mutation that predicts the substitution of alanine by threonine at position 331 (A331T) by whole-cell patch-clamp recording of recombinant mutant channels. A331T hClC-1 channels exhibit a novel slow gate that activates during membrane hyperpolarization and closes at positive potentials. This novel gate acts in series with fast opening and closing transitions that are common to wild-type (WT) and mutant channels. Under conditions at which this novel gate is not activated, i.e., a holding potential of 0 mV, the typical depolarization-induced activation gating of WT hClC-1 was only slightly affected by the mutation. In contrast, A331T hClC-1 channels with an open slow gate display an altered voltage dependence of open probability. These novel gating features of mutant channels produce a decreased open probability at -85 mV, the normal muscle resting potential, leading to a reduced resting chloride conductance of affected muscle fibers. The A331T mutation causes an unprecedented alteration of ClC-1 gating and reveals novel processes defining transitions between open and closed states in ClC chloride channels.
ISSN:0270-6474
1529-2401
DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.22-17-07462.2002