RATIONALE: L-Type (Cav1.2) Ca(2+) channels are critical regulators of muscle and neural function. Although Cav1.2 channel activity varies regionally, little is known about the mechanisms underlying this heterogeneity. OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that Cav1.2 channels can gate coordinately. METHODS AND RESULTS: We used optical and electrophysiological approaches to record Cav1.2 channel activity in cardiac, smooth muscle, and tsA-201 cells expressing Cav1.2 channels. Consistent with our hypothesis, we found that small clusters of Cav1.2 channels can open and close in tandem. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer and electrophysiological studies suggest that this coupling of Cav1.2 channels involves transient interactions between neighboring channels via their C termini. The frequency of coupled gating events increases in hypertensive smooth muscle and in cells expressing a mutant Cav1.2 channel that causes arrhythmias and autism in humans with Timothy syndrome (LQT8). CONCLUSIONS: Coupled gating of Cav1.2 channels may represent a novel mechanism for the regulation of Ca(2+) influx and excitability in neurons, cardiac, and arterial smooth muscle under physiological and pathological conditions.
RATIONALE: L-Type (Cav1.2) Ca(2+) channels are critical regulators of muscle and neural function. Although Cav1.2 channel activity varies regionally, little is known about the mechanisms underlying this heterogeneity. OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that Cav1.2 channels can gate coordinately. METHODS AND RESULTS: We used optical and electrophysiological approaches to record Cav1.2 channel activity in cardiac, smooth muscle, and tsA-201 cells expressing Cav1.2 channels. Consistent with our hypothesis, we found that small clusters of Cav1.2 channels can open and close in tandem. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer and electrophysiological studies suggest that this coupling of Cav1.2 channels involves transient interactions between neighboring channels via their C termini. The frequency of coupled gating events increases in hypertensive smooth muscle and in cells expressing a mutant Cav1.2 channel that causes arrhythmias and autism in humans with Timothy syndrome (LQT8). CONCLUSIONS: Coupled gating of Cav1.2 channels may represent a novel mechanism for the regulation of Ca(2+) influx and excitability in neurons, cardiac, and arterial smooth muscle under physiological and pathological conditions.
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