| Literature DB >> 14981509 |
Tammy L Wingo1, Vikas N Shah, Mark E Anderson, Terry P Lybrand, Walter J Chazin, Jeffrey R Balser.
Abstract
Sodium channels initiate the electrical cascade responsible for cardiac rhythm, and certain life-threatening arrhythmias arise from Na(+) channel dysfunction. We propose a novel mechanism for modulation of Na(+) channel function whereby calcium ions bind directly to the human cardiac Na(+) channel (hH1) via an EF-hand motif in the C-terminal domain. A functional role for Ca(2+) binding was identified electrophysiologically, by measuring Ca(2+)-induced modulation of hH1. A small hH1 fragment containing the EF-hand motif was shown to form a structured domain and to bind Ca(2+) with affinity characteristic of calcium sensor proteins. Mutations in this domain reduce Ca(2+) affinity in vitro and the inactivation gating effects of Ca(2+) in electrophysiology experiments. These studies reveal the molecular basis for certain forms of long QT syndrome and other arrhythmia-producing syndromes, and suggest a potential pharmacological target for antiarrhythmic drug design.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 14981509 DOI: 10.1038/nsmb737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Struct Mol Biol ISSN: 1545-9985 Impact factor: 15.369