Publication | Open Access
Reduction of Calcium Currents by Lambert–Eaton Syndrome Sera: Motoneurons Are Preferentially Affected, and L-Type Currents Are Spared
31
Citations
60
References
1996
Year
Electrolyte DisorderSynaptic TransmissionNeurotransmissionPeripheral NervesSynaptic SignalingCellular PhysiologySocial SciencesNeuromuscular BlockadeHyperpolarization (Biology)L-type CurrentsNeurologyIon ChannelsNervous SystemNeuromuscular PhysiologyLambert–eaton Syndrome SeraCalcium CurrentsLes SeraNeurophysiologyPhysiologyElectrophysiologyNeuroscienceLambert-eaton SyndromeMedicine
Previous work has demonstrated that Lambert-Eaton syndrome (LES) antibodies reduce calcium currents in nonneuronal cells and neurons and reduce the amplitude of extracellularly recorded currents at mouse motor nerve terminals. We compared effects of LES sera on whole-cell currents of cultured nerve and muscle. LES sera more strongly reduced calcium currents in motoneurons than in sensory neurons. Motoneuronal potassium currents were unaffected. The sera minimally affected calcium currents in skeletal and cardiac muscle. In motoneurons, both low voltage-activated (LVA) and high voltage-activated (HVA) components of calcium current were decreased, demonstrating that the sera targeted more than one calcium channel type. The HVA current remaining in LES-treated motoneurons was little affected by micromolar omega-conotoxin MVIIC but was reduced > 70% by micromolar nimodipine. This pharmacological profile contrasts with untreated cells and suggest that LES sera primarily spare L-type currents in motoneurons.
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