Here we report the first assessment of the expression and modulation of an invertebrate α1 subunit homolog of mammalian presynaptic Cav2 calcium channels (N-type and P/Q-type) in mammalian cells. Our data show that molluscan channel (LCav2a) isolated from Lymnaea stagnalis is effectively membrane-targeted and electrophysiologically recordable in tsA-201 cells only when the first 44 amino acids of LCav2a are substituted for the corresponding region of rat Cav2.1. When coexpressed with rat accessory subunits, the biophysical properties of LCav2a-5′rbA resemble those of mammalian N-type calcium channels with respect to activation and inactivation, lack of pronounced calcium dependent inactivation, preferential permeation of barium ions, and cadmium block. Consistent with reports of native Lymnaea calcium currents, the LCav2a-5′rbA channel is insensitive to micromolar concentrations of ω-conotoxin GVIA and is not affected by nifedipine, thus confirming that it is not of the L-type. Interestingly, the LCav2a-5′rbA channel is almost completely and irreversibly inhibited by guanosine 5′-3-O-(thio)triphosphate but not regulated by syntaxinl, suggesting that invertebrate presynaptic calcium channels are differently modulated from their vertebrate counterparts.
CITATION STYLE
Spafford, J. D., Chen, L., Feng, Z. P., Smit, A. B., & Zamponi, G. W. (2003). Expression and modulation of an invertebrate presynaptic calcium channel α1 subunit homolog. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(23), 21178–21187. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M302212200
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