Abstract

The Ca(V)1.4 voltage-gated calcium channel is predominantly expressed in the retina, and mutations to this channel have been associated with human congenital stationary night blindness type-2. The L-type Ca(V)1.4 channel displays distinct properties such as absence of calcium-dependent inactivation (CDI) and slow voltage-dependent inactivation (VDI) due to the presence of an autoinhibitory domain (inhibitor of CDI) in the distal C terminus. We hypothesized that native Ca(V)1.4 is subjected to extensive alternative splicing, much like the other voltage-gated calcium channels, and employed the transcript scanning method to identify alternatively spliced exons within the Ca(V)1.4 transcripts isolated from the human retina. In total, we identified 19 alternative splice variations, of which 16 variations have not been previously reported. Characterization of the C terminus alternatively spliced exons using whole-cell patch clamp electrophysiology revealed a splice variant that exhibits robust CDI. This splice variant arose from the splicing of a novel alternate exon (43*) that can be found in 13.6% of the full-length transcripts screened. Inclusion of exon 43* inserts a stop codon that truncates half the C terminus. The Ca(V)1.4 43* channel exhibited robust CDI, a larger current density, a hyperpolarized shift in activation potential by ∼10 mV, and a slower VDI. Through deletional experiments, we showed that the inhibitor of CDI was responsible for modulating channel activation and VDI, in addition to CDI. Calcium currents in the photoreceptors were observed to exhibit CDI and are more negatively activated as compared with currents elicited from heterologously expressed full-length Ca(V)1.4. Naturally occurring alternative splice variants may in part contribute to the properties of the native Ca(V)1.4 channels.

Highlights

  • Alternative splicing diversifies calcium channel structure to change channel properties

  • The CaV1.4 voltage-gated calcium channel is predominantly expressed in the retina, and mutations to this channel have been associated with human congenital stationary night blindness type-2

  • As the CaV1.4 transcripts are predominantly expressed in the retina [1, 2, 4], we used human retina cDNA in PCRs to amplify across all the splice junctions of the CaV1.4 gene; and we generated at least 15 overlapping PCR amplicons

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Summary

Background

Alternative splicing diversifies calcium channel structure to change channel properties. Ca2ϩ currents measured in rod photoreceptor and bipolar synapses do exhibit CDI [15,16,17] These discrepancies suggest that the endogenous CaV1.4 channels could be modulated to activate at more hyperpolarized potentials as well as exhibit CDI. This may occur by mechanisms including cytoplasmic Ca2ϩ protein buffers or post-transcriptional modifications such as alternative splicing. Additional shifts in activation potential and modulations to other electrophysiological type-2; ICDI, inhibitor of calcium-dependent inactivation; I-V, current-voltage; SSI, steady-state inactivation; VDI, voltage-dependent inactivation; pF, picofarad. Other electrophysiological properties that were altered include voltage-dependent inactivation (VDI) and current density

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