Abstract
Native Ca V1.3 channels within cochlear hair cells exhibit a surprising lack of Ca 2+-dependent inactivation (CDI), given that heterologously expressed Ca V1.3 channels show marked CDI. To determine whether alternative splicing at the C terminus of the Ca V1.3 gene may produce a hair cell splice variant with weak CDI, we transcript-scanned mRNA obtained from rat cochlea. We found that the alternate use of exon 41 acceptor sites generated a splice variant that lost the calmodulin-binding IQ motif of the C terminus. These Ca V1.3 IQΔ ("IQ deleted") channels exhibited a lack of CDI, which was independent of the type of coexpressed β-subunits. Ca V1.3 IQΔ channel immunoreactivity was preferentially localized to cochlear outer hair cells (OHCs), whereas that of Ca V1.3 IQfull channels (IQ-possessing) labeled inner hair cells (IHCs). The preferential expression of Ca V1.3 IQΔ within OHCs suggests that these channels may play a role in processes such as electromotility or activity-dependent gene transcription rather than neurotransmitter release, which is performed predominantly by IHCs in the cochlea. Copyright © 2006 Society for Neuroscience.
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Shen, Y., Yu, D., Hiel, H., Liao, P., Yue, D. T., Fuchs, P. A., & Tuck, W. S. (2006). Alternative splicing of the Ca V1.3 channel IQ domain, a molecular switch for Ca 2+-dependent inactivation within auditory hair cells. Journal of Neuroscience, 26(42), 10690–10699. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2093-06.2006
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