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 hCIC-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 hCIC-1 was only slightly affected by the mutation. In contrast, A331T hCIC-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 CIC-1 gating and reveals novel processes defining transitions between open and closed states in CIC chloride channels.
CITATION STYLE
Warnstedt, M., Sun, C., Poser, B., Escriva, M. J., Tranebjærg, L., Torbergsen, T., … Fahlke, C. (2002). The myotonia congenita mutation A331T confers a novel hyperpolarization-activated gate to the muscle chloride channel CIC-1. Journal of Neuroscience, 22(17), 7462–7470. https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.22-17-07462.2002
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