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Mutation Causing Autosomal Dominant Nocturnal Frontal Lobe Epilepsy Alters Ca<sup>2+</sup>Permeability, Conductance, and Gating of Human α4β2 Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors
232
Citations
48
References
1997
Year
Synaptic TransmissionNeurotransmitterMutant AchrNeurotransmissionSynaptic SignalingCellular PhysiologySocial SciencesNeurobiology Of DiseaseChannel-lining DomainNeurologyNeurochemistryNeurogeneticsMolecular PhysiologyReceptor (Biochemistry)Ca2+ PermeabilityCell BiologySignal TransductionNeurophysiologyPhysiologyNeuropeptide ReceptorNeuroscienceMolecular NeurobiologyCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
A mutation (S247F) in the channel-lining domain (M2) of the alpha4 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) subunit has previously been linked genetically to autosomal dominant nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy (ADNFLE). To better understand the functional significance of this mutation, we characterized the properties of mutant and wild-type human alpha4beta2 AChRs expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Both had similar expression levels and EC50 values for ACh and nicotine. Substantial use-dependent functional upregulation was found for mutant alpha4beta2 AChRs, but not for wild type. Mutant AChR responses showed faster desensitization, slower recovery from desensitization, less inward rectification, and virtually no Ca2+ permeability as compared with wild-type alpha4beta2 AChRs. Addition of the alpha5 subunit restored Ca2+ permeability to the mutant alpha4beta2alpha5 AChRs. At -80 mV, wild-type alpha4beta2 AChR single channel currents exhibited two conductances, each with two mean open times (gamma1 = 17 pS, tau1 = 3.7 msec, and tau2 = 23.4 msec; gamma2 = 28 pS, tau1 = 1.9 msec, and tau2 = 8.1 msec). In contrast, mutant AChRs exhibited only one conductance of 11 pS, with tau1 = 1.9 msec and tau2 = 4.1 msec. The net effect of the mutation is to reduce AChR function. This could result in the hyperexcitability characteristic of epilepsy if the mutant AChRs were part of an inhibitory circuit, e.g., presynaptically regulating the release of GABA. In the minority of AChRs containing the alpha5 subunit, the overall functionality of these AChRs could be maintained despite the mutation in the alpha4 subunit.
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