Abstract

The identification of currents carried by N- and P-type Ca(2+) channels in the nervous system relies on the use of omega-conotoxin (CTx) GVIA and omega-agatoxin (Aga) IVA. The peptide omega-Aga-IVA inhibits P-type currents at nanomolar concentrations and N-type currents at micromolar concentrations. omega-CTx-GVIA blocks N-type currents, but there have been no reports that it can also inhibit P-type currents. To assess the effects of omega-CTx-GVIA on P-type channels, we made patch-clamp recordings from the soma of Purkinje cells in cerebellar slices of mature [postnatal days (P) 40-50, P40-50] and immature (P13-20) rats, in which P-type channels carry most of the Ca(2+) channel current (>/=85%). These showed that micromolar concentrations of omega-CTx-GVIA inhibited the current in P40-50 cells (66%, 3 microM; 78%, 10 microM) and in P13-20 Purkinje cells (86%, 3 muM; 89%, 10 microM). The inhibition appeared to be reversible, in contrast to the known irreversible inhibition of N-type current. Exposure of slices from young animals to the enzyme commonly used to dissociate Purkinje cells, protease XXIII, abolished the inhibition by omega-CTx-GVIA but not by omega-Aga-IVA (84%, 30 nM). Our finding that micromolar concentrations of omega-CTx-GVIA inhibit P-type currents suggests that specific block of N-type current requires the use of submicromolar concentrations. The protease-induced removal of block by omega-CTx-GVIA but not by omega-Aga-IVA indicates a selective proteolytic action at site(s) on P-type channels with which omega-CTx-GVIA interacts. It also suggests that Ca(2+) channel pharmacology in neurons dissociated using protease may not predict that in neurons not exposed to the enzyme.

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