Cloning of the NCX2 isoform of the plasma membrane Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger

Zhigui Li(United States Department of Veterans Affairs), Satoshi Matsuoka(United States Department of Veterans Affairs), Larry V. Hryshko(United States Department of Veterans Affairs), Debora A. Nicoll(United States Department of Veterans Affairs), Malcolm Bersohn(United States Department of Veterans Affairs), E. P. Burke(United States Department of Veterans Affairs), Richard P. Lifton(United States Department of Veterans Affairs), Kenneth D. Philipson(United States Department of Veterans Affairs)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
July 1, 1994
Cited by 353Open Access
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Abstract

The Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger is an important regulator of cellular Ca2+ levels, and one isoform of this transporter, NCX1, has been cloned previously (Nicoll, D.A., Longoni, S., and Philipson, K.D. (1990) Science 250, 562-565). We now report the cloning of a second isoform (NCX2) of the Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger which was present in a rat brain cDNA library. NCX2 is predicted to code for a protein of 921 amino acids. NCX1 and NCX2 are 61 and 65% identical at the nucleotide and amino acid levels, respectively, and are the products of different genes. The genes for NCX1 and NCX2 are located on human chromosomes 2 and 14, respectively. Hydropathy profiles of the two exchangers are very similar. Transcripts of NCX2 are detected in brain and skeletal muscle. NCX2 was expressed in Xenopus oocytes and Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange activity was analyzed electrophysiologically by the giant inside-out, excised patch technique. Outward currents were evoked by the application of Na+ with the exchanger operating in the reversed mode (extracellular Ca2+ exchanging for intracellular Na+). The affinity for Na+ (30 mM) and the current-voltage relationship of NCX2 are similar to those for NCX1. Like NCX1, NCX2 is secondarily regulated by intracellular Ca2+, but the affinity of NCX2 for regulatory Ca2+ (1.5 microM) upon initial application of Na+ is lower than that of NCX1 (0.3 microM). The existence of multiple Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger isoforms may provide flexibility for regulation and expression.


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