| Literature DB >> 27055825 |
V Hinard1, A Britan1, J S Rougier2, A Bairoch3, H Abriel2, P Gaudet4.
Abstract
Ion channels are transmembrane proteins that selectively allow ions to flow across the plasma membrane and play key roles in diverse biological processes. A multitude of diseases, called channelopathies, such as epilepsies, muscle paralysis, pain syndromes, cardiac arrhythmias or hypoglycemia are due to ion channel mutations. A wide corpus of literature is available on ion channels, covering both their functions and their roles in disease. The research community needs to access this data in a user-friendly, yet systematic manner. However, extraction and integration of this increasing amount of data have been proven to be difficult because of the lack of a standardized vocabulary that describes the properties of ion channels at the molecular level. To address this, we have developed Ion Channel ElectroPhysiology Ontology (ICEPO), an ontology that allows one to annotate the electrophysiological parameters of the voltage-gated class of ion channels. This ontology is based on a three-state model of ion channel gating describing the three conformations/states that an ion channel can adopt: closed, open and inactivated. This ontology supports the capture of voltage-gated ion channel electrophysiological data from the literature in a structured manner and thus enables other applications such as querying and reasoning tools. Here, we present ICEPO (ICEPO ftp site:ftp://ftp.nextprot.org/pub/current_release/controlled_vocabularies/), as well as examples of its use.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27055825 PMCID: PMC4823818 DOI: 10.1093/database/baw017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Database (Oxford) ISSN: 1758-0463 Impact factor: 3.451
Figure 1.Three-state model of voltage-gated ion channels. Closed, open and inactivated states with the corresponding transitions are shown.
Figure 2.The ICEPO.
Effects of the SCN5A-p.Ile141Val mutation on the electrophysiological parameters of the channel
| Has normal | Macroscopic conductance | |
| Hyperpolarizes | Voltage dependence of activation | |
| Has normal | Voltage dependence of fast inactivation | |
| Has normal | Voltage sensitivity of activation | |
| Has normal | Voltage sensitivity of fast inactivation | |
| Hastens | Entry into activated state | |
| Hastens | Entry into fast inactivated state | |
| Has normal | Recovery from fast inactivation | |
| Has normal | Entry into slow inactivated state | |
| Has normal | Recovery from slow inactivation |
The relation ‘has normal’ is used to describe results that do not noticeably differ from wild-type.