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A novel alteration of muscle chloride channel gating in myotonia levior
Author(s) -
Ryan Aisling,
Rüdel Reinhardt,
Kuchenbecker Maya,
Fahlke Christoph
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jphysiol.2002.027037
Subject(s) - myotonia , chloride channel , gating , myotonia congenita , chemistry , medicine , biophysics , biology , biochemistry , myotonic dystrophy
Mutations in the voltage‐dependent skeletal muscle chloride channel, ClC‐1, result in dominant or recessive myotonia congenita. The Q552R mutation causes a variant of dominant myotonia with a milder phenotype, myotonia levior. To characterise the functional properties of this mutation, homodimeric mutant and heterodimeric wild‐type (WT) mutant channels were expressed in tsA201 cells and studied using the whole‐cell recording technique. Q552R ClC‐1 mutants formed functional channels with normal ion conduction but altered gating properties. Mutant channels were activated by membrane depolarisation, with a voltage dependence of activation that was shifted by more than +90 mV compared to WT channels. Q552R channels were also activated by hyperpolarisation, and this process was dependent upon the intracellular chloride concentration ([ Cl − ] i ). Together, these alterations resulted in a substantial reduction in the open probability at −85 mV at a physiological [ Cl − ] i . Heterodimeric WT‐Q552R channels did not exhibit hyperpolarisation‐activated gating transitions. As was the case for WT channels, activation occurred upon depolarisation, but the activation curve was shifted by 28 mV to more positive potentials. The functional properties of heterodimeric channels suggest a weakly dominant effect, a finding that correlates with the inheritance pattern and symptom profile of myotonia levior.