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Voltage-Gated Sodium Channels

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Voltage-Gated Sodium Channels ... Kv4.2 Nav 1 increases Kv4.2-encoded current densities Coexpression with Nav 1 increases total and cell-surface Kv4.2 protein ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Voltage-Gated Sodium Channels


1
Voltage-Gated Sodium Channels
  • Zhenbo Huang Brandon Chelette
  • Membrane Biophysics, Fall 2014

2
Voltage-gated Sodium Channels
  • Historical importance
  • Structure
  • Biophysical importance
  • Diversity
  • Associated pathologies

3
Historical importance
  • Channels that allowed Hodgkin and Huxley to
    perform their seminal work in the 1950s.
  • Evolutionarily ancient
  • Catalyst for a large shift in research focus
  • Led to the discovery and characterization of many
    more ion channel proteins

4
Structure
  • Consists of an a subunit and one or two
    associated ß subunit(s).
  • The a subunit is sufficient to form a functioning
    sodium channel
  • ß subunits alter the kinetics and voltage
    dependence of the channel

5
Structure
6
Biophysical Importance
  • Responsible for initiation of action potential
  • Open in response to depolarization and activate
    quickly
  • Quickly inactivate
  • Allows for patterned firing of action potentials
  • Firing pattern signal

7
Biophysical Importance
8
Biophysical Importance
  • Not solely voltage-gated
  • Can be modulated by a handful of
    neurotransmitters (ACh, 5-HT, DA, others)
  • GPCR ? PKA PKC ? phosphorylation of
    intracellular loop ? reduced channel activity
    (except in Nav1.8 activity is enhanced)

9
Biophysical Importance
10
Diversity
  • 10 different a subunit genes
  • Spatial expression
  • Temporal expression
  • Gating kinetics
  • 4 different ß subunits
  • ß1 and ß3 non-covalently associated
  • ?2 and ß4 disulfide bond

11
Diversity
12
Associated Pathologies
13
Summary
  • Incredibly important group of membrane channel
    proteins
  • Widely expressed throughout many tissues and
    involved in many functions

14
Loss-of-function mutations in sodium channel
Nav1.7 cause anosmia
Weiss, et al. 2011. Nature
15
Nav1.7 is necessary for functional nociception
  • SCN9A gene ? Nav1.7 a-subunit
  • Loss-of-function mutation identified in three
    individuals with chronic analgesia
    (channelopathy-associated insensitivity to pain
    CAIP)
  • What about other sensory modalities?

16
Role of Nav1.7 in Human Olfaction
  • Same subjects from earlier nociception studies
  • First subject assessed via University of
    Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test
  • Pair of siblings and parents assessed with
    sequence of odors (balsamic vinegar, orange,
    mint, perfume, water, and coffee)

17
Results of Olfactory Assessment in CAIP subjects
First subject did not identify any odors in UPSIT
  • Siblings could not identify any odors presented
  • Parents correctly identified each odor in
    seqeunce (as well as reporting no odor when
    presented with water as control)

18
Nav1.7 in Olfactory Sensory Neurons
  • Loss of olfactory capabilities can only be
    attributed to loss-of-function mutation in SCN9A
    if Nav1.7 is expressed somewhere in the olfactory
    system. But at what junction?
  • First guess OSNs

19
Nav1.7 in Olfactory Sensory Neurons
Human olfactory epithelium of normal, unaffected
adults
20
Creating Nav1.7 KO mice
Nav1.7 expression in mouse OSNs
21
Creating Nav1.7 KO mice
Nav1.7 expression in mouse olfactory bulb and
main olfactory epithelium
22
Creating Nav1.7 KO mice
High immunoreactivity in the olfactory nerve
layer and glomerular layer of olfactory bulb
Also high immunoreactivity in olfactory sensory
neuron axon bundles of the main olfactory
epithelium
23
Creating Nav1.7 KO mice
  • Okay, so Nav1.7 is highly expressed in the
    olfactory sensory neurons. Especially in the
    olfactory nerve layer and the glomerular layer.
  • Tissue selective KO of Nav1.7 in OSNs using
    lox-cre system under control of OMP promoter.
  • Cre recombinase-mediated deletion of Nav1.7 in
    OMP-positive cells (which includes all OSNs)

24
Creating Nav1.7 KO mice
Nav1.7 -/- mice loss of immunoreactivity in OB
and MOE
25
Investigation of Biophysical Role of Nav1.7
  • Voltage clamp MOE tissue of Nav1.7 -/- and Nav1.7
    /-
  • Both resulted in TTX-sensitive currents in
    response to step depolarizations.

26
Investigation of Biophysical Role of Nav1.7
OSNs of Nav1.7 -/- mice show significant sodium
current
Only a 20 reduction of current compared to
Nav1.7 /- OSNs
27
Investigation of Biophysical Role of Nav1.7
Nav1.7 -/- OSNs are still capable of generating
odor-evoked action potentials Loose-patch
recording of OSN dendritic knobs
28
Investigation of Biophysical Role of Nav1.7
Nerve stimulation leads to postsynaptic response
in mitral cell in /- but not -/- (patch clamp,
whole cell) Direct current injection from
pipette produced normal APs in both /- and
-/- (current clamp, whole cell)
29
Investigation of Biophysical Role of Nav1.7
Post synaptic potentials
Area under curve analysis of postsynaptic current
Post synaptic currents
30
Behavioral Confirmation/Follow-up/Investigation
  • Mice subjected to battery of behavioral tests
    that test odor-guided behaviors.
  • Consensus inability to detect odors

31
Behavioral Confirmation/Follow-up/Investigation
Innate Olfactory Preference Test
32
Behavioral Confirmation/Follow-up/Investigation
Odor avoidance behavior test
Black circle TMT (fox odor)
33
Behavioral Confirmation/Follow-up/Investigation
  1. Novel odor investigation
  2. Odor learning
  3. Odor discrimination

34
Behavioral Confirmation/Follow-up/Investigation
Pup retrieval ability of females (likely depends
on olfactory cues)
35
Conclusions
  • Loss-of-function mutation in Nav1.7 gene leads to
    loss of olfactory capabilities in humans and in
    KO mice.
  • Since OSNs and Mitral cells are still
    electrically functional, Nav1.7 must be critical
    for propagation of the signal in the glomerular
    layer

36
Molecular Bases for the Asynchronous Activation
of Sodium and Potassium Channels Required for
Nerve Impulse Generation  Jérôme J. Lacroix,
Fabiana V. Campos, Ludivine Frezza, Francisco
Bezanilla  Neuron  Volume 79, Issue 4, Pages
651-657 (August 2013) DOI 10.1016/j.neuron.2013.
05.036
37
William A. Catterall, 2000
http//courses.washington.edu/conj/membrane/nachan
.htm
38
Why activation of sodium channel is quicker than
potassium channels?
NavAb
KvAP
Payandeh et al., 2011
D. Peter Tieleman, 2006
39
What we have know
  • Opening Nav channels requires the rearrangement
    of only three VSs, while pore opening in Kv
    channels typically requires the rearrangement of
    four
  • It is known that the main factor underlying fast
    activation of Nav channels is the rapid
    rearrangement of their VS.

What is still unknown
  • The molecular bases for the kinetic differences
    between voltage sensors of Na and K channels
    remain unexplained.

40
Acceleration of VS Movement in Mammalian Nav
Channels by the ß1 Subunit
Gating current
Ionic current
Clay M. Armstrong (2008), Scholarpedia,
3(10)3482.
http//courses.washington.edu/conj/membrane/nachan
.htm
41
Acceleration of VS Movement in Mammalian Nav
Channels by the ß1 Subunit
42
Two Speed-Control Residues in Voltage Sensors
43
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44
Hydrophilic Conversion of Speed-Control Residues
in Nav1.4 DIV Accelerates Fast Inactivation
45
A Mechanism for the Speed-Control Residues in
Voltage Sensors
46
Mechanisms conserve in a evolutionary-distant VS
Ciona Intestinalis voltage-sensitive
phosphatase(Ci-VSP)
47
The Sodium Channel Accessory Subunit Navß1
RegulatesNeuronal Excitability through
Modulation of RepolarizingVoltage-Gated K
Channels
Celine Marionneau, Yarimar Carrasquillo, Aaron J.
Norris, R. Reid Townsend, Lori L. Isom, Andrew J.
Link, and Jeanne M. Nerbonne
  • The Journal of Neuroscience, April 25, 2012
    32(17)5716 5727

48
William A. Catterall, 2000
49
Navß1 is identified in mouse brain Kv4.2 channel
complexes
Mass spectrometric analyses
50
Navß1 coimmunoprecipitates with Kv4.2
51
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52
Navß1 increases Kv4.2-encoded current densities
53
Coexpression with Navß1 increases total and
cell-surface Kv4.2 protein expression
54
Acute knockdown of Navß1 decreases IA densities
in cortical neurons
55
Loss of Navß1 prolongs action potentials and
increases repetitive firing in cortical pyramidal
neurons
56
Navß1 increases the stability of Kv4.2
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