Abstract

High voltage-gated calcium channels consist of a pore-forming subunit (alpha(1)) and three nonhomologous subunits (alpha(2)/delta, beta, and gamma). Although it is well established that the beta-subunit promotes traffic of channels to the plasma membrane and modifies their activity, the reversible nature of the interaction with the alpha(1)-subunit remains controversial. Here, we address this issue by examining the effect of purified beta(2a) protein on Ca(V)1.2 and Ca(V)2.3 channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The beta(2a)-subunit binds to the alpha(1)-interaction domain (AID) in vitro, and when injected into oocytes, it shifts the voltage dependence of activation and increases charge movement to ionic current coupling of Ca(V)1.2 channels. This increase depended on the integrity of AID but was not abolished by bafilomycin, demonstrating that the alpha(1)-beta interaction through the AID site can take place at the plasma membrane. Furthermore, injection of beta(2a) protein inhibited inactivation of Ca(V)2.3 channels and converted fast inactivating Ca(V)2.3/beta(1b) channels to slow inactivating channels. Inhibition of inactivation required larger concentration of beta(2a) in oocytes expressing Ca(V)2.3/beta(1b) channels than expressing Ca(V)2.3 alone but reached the same maximal level as expected for a competitive interaction through a single binding site. Together, our data show that the alpha(1)-beta interaction is reversible in intact cells and defines calcium channels beta-subunits as regulatory proteins rather than stoichiometric subunits.

Highlights

  • Extent to which both processes are independent from each other remain elusive

  • It was shown that the addition of the ␤-subunit as purified protein is capable of modulating channel activity of the ␣1 subunit expressed in Xenopus oocytes [4, 5] and on isolated membranes from skeletal muscle [6]

  • These results suggest that modulation of function is separated from the effect on channel expression and predicts that binding sites remain available on the mature channel

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Binding to AID was assayed as by Neely et al [4], using a glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusion protein encoding the ⌱-⌱⌱ loop of the CaV1.2 subunit (GST-AID), and as a negative control we used GST alone or fused to a 126-amino acid peptide derived from the C-terminal end of the chloride channel from human skeletal muscle ClC-1 (GST-ClC126). Electrophysiological recordings using the cut-open oocyte technique [12] with a CA-1B amplifier (Dagan Corp., Minneapolis, MN) were performed 4 – 6 days after cRNA injection as described [4]. For recording of oocytes expressing the CaV2.3 subunit, EGTA was replaced by BAPTA (1,2-bis(o-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,NЈ,NЈ,-tetraacetic acid) in the internal solution for a better control of calcium-activated chloride currents. 5– 6 days after CaV1.2 RNA injection, the oocytes were separated into two groups: one for electrophysiological recordings and the other for immunoassay. Individual oocytes were placed in 50 ␮l of SuperSignal enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay femto substrate (Pierce) in 96-well microplates (Optiplate; PerkinElmer Life Sciences), and chemiluminescence was quantified 30 s later with a luminometer (Viktor; PerkinElmer Life Sciences)

RESULTS
Subunit composition n
DISCUSSION
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