Two classes of calcium channels were activated by membrane depolarization in cell-free membrane patches from GH3 cells, an electrically excitable cell line derived from a mammalian pituitary tumor. One class had a conductance of ~ 10 pS in 90 mM barium, had a threshold of activation near -40 mV, and was inactivated rapidly at holding potentials more positive than -80 mV. The other class, with a conductance of ~ 23 pS and a threshold nearer -20 mV, did not inactivate in barium but stopped responding to depolarization altogether when the cytoplasmic side of the patch was exposed to a standard physiological saline solution. Buffering the concentration of calcium ions to < 10 nM on the cytoplasmic side did not prevent this loss of activity. However, activity was restored and maintained for the duration of the patch when the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase was added with MgATP to the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. Cell-free patch formation in the presence of the dihydropyridine, BAY K 8644, also delayed the loss of activity, but unlike the catalytic subunit plus ATP, BAY K 8644 alone did not restore activity when it was added after the channels no longer responded to depolarization. Evidently the dihydropyridine-sensitive class of voltage-activated calcium channels must be phosphorylated in order to open when the membrane is depolarized. That hypothesis provides a simple framework for understanding the modulation of calcium channel gating by neurotransmitters, calcium ions, and dihydropyridines.
CITATION STYLE
Armstrong, D., & Eckert, R. (1987). Voltage-activated calcium channels that must be phosphorylated to respond to membrane depolarization. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 84(8), 2518–2522. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.84.8.2518
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