Publication | Open Access
Nav1.4 Deregulation in Dystrophic Skeletal Muscle Leads to Na+ Overload and Enhanced Cell Death
68
Citations
20
References
2008
Year
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a hereditary degenerative disease manifested by the absence of dystrophin, a structural, cytoskeletal protein, leading to muscle degeneration and early death through respiratory and cardiac muscle failure. Whereas the rise of cytosolic Ca(2+) concentrations in muscles of mdx mouse, an animal model of DMD, has been extensively documented, little is known about the mechanisms causing alterations in Na(+) concentrations. Here we show that the skeletal muscle isoform of the voltage-gated sodium channel, Na(v)1.4, which represents over 90% of voltage-gated sodium channels in muscle, plays an important role in development of abnormally high Na(+) concentrations found in muscle from mdx mice. The absence of dystrophin modifies the expression level and gating properties of Na(v)1.4, leading to an increased Na(+) concentration under the sarcolemma. Moreover, the distribution of Na(v)1.4 is altered in mdx muscle while maintaining the colocalization with one of the dystrophin-associated proteins, syntrophin alpha-1, thus suggesting that syntrophin is an important linker between dystrophin and Na(v)1.4. Additionally, we show that these modifications of Na(v)1.4 gating properties and increased Na(+) concentrations are strongly correlated with increased cell death in mdx fibers and that both cell death and Na(+) overload can be reversed by 3 nM tetrodotoxin, a specific Na(v)1.4 blocker.
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