Receptor‐mediated modulation of recombinant neuronal class E calcium channels

Gerhard Mehrke(TH Köln - University of Applied Sciences), Alexei Pereverzev(University of Cologne), Heike I. Grabsch(University of Cologne), J. Hescheler(University of Cologne), Toni Schneider(University of Cologne)
FEBS Letters
May 26, 1997
Cited by 49

Abstract

The modulation of a cloned neuronal calcium channel was studied in a human embryonic kidney cell line (HEK293). The HEK293 cells were stably transfected with the alpha1Ed cDNA, containing the pore forming subunit of a neuronal class E calcium channel. Inward currents of 25 +/- 1.9 pA/pF (n = 79) were measured with the cloned alpha1Ed-subunit. The application of the peptide hormone somatostatin, carbachol, ATP or adenosine reduced the amplitude of Ca2+ and Ba2+ inward currents and exhibited a slowing of inactivation. This inhibitory effect by somatostatin was significantly impaired after pre-incubating the transfected cell line with pertussis toxin (PTX). Internal perfusion of the cells with the G-protein-inactivating agent GDP-beta-S or with the permanently activating agent GTP-gamma-S also attenuated the somatostatin effect. The inhibition indicates that modulation of the alpha1Ed-mediated Ca2+ current involves pertussis toxin-sensitive G-proteins. The block of Ca2+ and Ba2+ inward currents by somatostatin is also found in cells expressing a truncated alpha1Ed-subunit which lacks a 129-bp fragment in the C-terminus. This fragment corresponds to the major structural difference between two native human alpha1E splice variants. As somatostatin inhibits inward currents through both, the cloned alpha1Ed- and the truncated alpha1Ed-DEL-subunit, the hormone-mediated modulation is independent from the presence of the 129-bp insertion in the C-terminus.


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