Human autoantibodies specific for the α <sub>1A</sub> calcium channel subunit reduce both P-type and Q-type calcium currents in cerebellar neurons

Ashwin Pinto(John Radcliffe Hospital), Samantha Gillard(John Radcliffe Hospital), Fraser J. Moss(John Radcliffe Hospital), Kathryn A Whyte(John Radcliffe Hospital), Paul F. Brust(John Radcliffe Hospital), Mark E. Williams(John Radcliffe Hospital), Ken Stauderman(John Radcliffe Hospital), Michael M. Harpold(John Radcliffe Hospital), Bethan Lang(John Radcliffe Hospital), John Newsom–Davis(John Radcliffe Hospital), David Bleakman(John Radcliffe Hospital), David Lodge(John Radcliffe Hospital), John R. Boot(John Radcliffe Hospital)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
July 7, 1998
Cited by 114Open Access
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Abstract

The pharmacological properties of voltage-dependent calcium channel (VDCC) subtypes appear mainly to be determined by the alpha1 pore-forming subunit but, whether P-and Q-type VDCCs are encoded by the same alpha1 gene presently is unresolved. To investigate this, we used IgG antibodies to presynaptic VDCCs at motor nerve terminals that underlie muscle weakness in the autoimmune Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LEMS). We first studied their action on changes in intracellular free Ca2+ concentration [Ca2+]i in human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cell lines expressing different combinations of human recombinant VDCC subunits. Incubation for 18 h with LEMS IgG (2 mg/ml) caused a significant dose-dependent reduction in the K+-stimulated [Ca2+]i increase in the alpha1A cell line but not in the alpha1B, alpha1C, alpha1D, and alpha1E cell lines, establishing the alpha1A subunit as the target for these autoantibodies. Exploiting this specificity, we incubated cultured rat cerebellar neurones with LEMS IgG and observed a reduction in P-type current in Purkinje cells and both P- and Q-type currents in granule cells. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that the alpha1A gene encodes for the pore-forming subunit of both P-type and Q-type VDCCs.


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