Abstract

Skeletal and cardiac muscles express distinct isoforms of the dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR), a type of voltage-gated Ca2+ channel that is important for excitation-contraction (EC) coupling. However, entry of Ca2+ through the channel is not required for skeletal muscle-type EC coupling. Previous work (Tanabe, T., Beam, K. G., Adams, B. A., Niidome, T., and Numa, S. (1990) Nature 346, 567-569) revealed that the loop between repeats II and III (II-III loop) is an important determinant of skeletal-type EC coupling. In the present study we have further dissected the regions of the II-III loop critical for skeletal-type EC coupling by expression of cDNA constructs in dysgenic myotubes. Because Ser687 of the skeletal II-III loop has been reported to be rapidly phosphorylated in vitro, we substituted this serine with alanine, the corresponding cardiac residue. This alanine-substituted skeletal DHPR retained the ability to mediate skeletal-type EC coupling. Weak skeletal-type EC coupling was produced by a chimeric DHPR, which was entirely cardiac except for a small amount of skeletal sequence (residues 725-742) in the II-III loop. Skeletal-type coupling was stronger when both residues 725-742 and adjacent residues were skeletal (e.g. a chimera containing skeletal residues 711-765). However, residues 725-742 appeared to be critical because skeletal-type coupling was not produced either by a chimera with skeletal residues 711-732 or by one with skeletal residues 734-765.

Highlights

  • Skeletal and cardiac muscles express distinct isoforms of the dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR), a type of voltage-gated Ca2؉ channel that is important for excitation-contraction (EC) coupling

  • Expression of these chimeric DHPRs in dysgenic myotubes, which lack a functional gene for the skeletal DHPR (9), revealed that the putative cytoplasmic region between repeats II and III (II-III loop, amino acids 666 –791) of the skeletal DHPR is an important determinant of skeletal-type EC coupling (3)

  • To determine the importance of these and other amino acid differences for skeletal-type EC coupling, we have examined a skeletal DHPR in which Ser[687] was mutated to alanine and analyzed chimeric DHPRs in which skeletal sequence was substituted for successively smaller portions of the II-III loop of the cardiac DHPR

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Summary

Introduction

Skeletal and cardiac muscles express distinct isoforms of the dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR), a type of voltage-gated Ca2؉ channel that is important for excitation-contraction (EC) coupling. Expression of these chimeric DHPRs in dysgenic myotubes, which lack a functional gene for the skeletal DHPR (9), revealed that the putative cytoplasmic region between repeats II and III (II-III loop, amino acids 666 –791) of the skeletal DHPR is an important determinant of skeletal-type EC coupling (3).

Results
Conclusion

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