Alternative splicing as a molecular switch for Ca2+/calmodulin- dependent facilitation of P/Q-type Ca2+ channels

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Abstract

Alternative splicing of the P/Q-type channel (Cav2.1) promises customization of the computational repertoire of neurons. Here we report that concerted splicing of its main α1A subunit, at both an EF-hand-like domain and the channel C terminus, controls the form of Ca 2+-dependent facilitation (CDF), an activity-dependent enhancement of channel opening that is triggered by calmodulin. In recombinant channels, such alternative splicing switches CDF among three modes: (1) completely "ON" and driven by local Ca2+ influx through individual channels, (2) completely "OFF," and (3) partially OFF but inducible by elevated global Ca2+ influx. Conversion from modes 1 to 3 represents an unprecedented dimension of control. The physiological function of these variants is likely important, because we find that the distribution of EF-hand splice variants is strikingly heterogeneous in the human brain, varying both across regions and during development.

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Chaudhuri, D., Chang, S. Y., DeMaria, C. D., Alvania, R. S., Soong, T. W., & Yue, D. T. (2004). Alternative splicing as a molecular switch for Ca2+/calmodulin- dependent facilitation of P/Q-type Ca2+ channels. Journal of Neuroscience, 24(28), 6334–6342. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1712-04.2004

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