| Literature DB >> 28386229 |
Diogo R Poroca1, Ryan M Pelis2, Valérie M Chappe1.
Abstract
The discovery of ClC proteins at the beginning of the 1990s was important for the development of the Cl- transport research field. ClCs form a large family of proteins that mediate voltage-dependent transport of Cl- ions across cell membranes. They are expressed in both plasma and intracellular membranes of cells from almost all living organisms. ClC proteins form transmembrane dimers, in which each monomer displays independent ion conductance. Eukaryotic members also possess a large cytoplasmic domain containing two CBS domains, which are involved in transport modulation. ClC proteins function as either Cl- channels or Cl-/H+ exchangers, although all ClC proteins share the same basic architecture. ClC channels have two gating mechanisms: a relatively well-studied fast gating mechanism, and a slow gating mechanism, which is poorly defined. ClCs are involved in a wide range of physiological processes, including regulation of resting membrane potential in skeletal muscle, facilitation of transepithelial Cl- reabsorption in kidneys, and control of pH and Cl- concentration in intracellular compartments through coupled Cl-/H+ exchange mechanisms. Several inherited diseases result from C1C gene mutations, including myotonia congenita, Bartter's syndrome (types 3 and 4), Dent's disease, osteopetrosis, retinal degeneration, and lysosomal storage diseases. This review summarizes general features, known or suspected, of ClC structure, gating and physiological functions. We also discuss biophysical properties of mammalian ClCs that are directly involved in the pathophysiology of several human inherited disorders, or that induce interesting phenotypes in animal models.Entities:
Keywords: ClC channels; Dent’s disease; channelopathy; deafness; leukodystrophy; myotonia congenita; osteopetrosis; salt loss
Year: 2017 PMID: 28386229 PMCID: PMC5362633 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00151
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Mammalian ClC chloride channels.
| Isoform | Tissue | Function | Human disease | Knock-out mice | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cl- channels (cell surface) | ClC-1 | Skeletal muscles | Recover resting membrane potential | Myotonia congenita | Myotonia congenita ( |
| ClC-2/ (GlialCAM) | Brain; kidney; liver; heart; pancreas; skeletal muscles; lungs and GI tract | Transepithelial transport | Leukodystrophy, azoospermia | Retinal and testes degeneration; leukodystrophy ( | |
| ClC-Ka/Barttin | Inner ear; Kidney | Transepithelial transport | Loss of Barttin or both ClC-Ks: Bartter IV (renal salt loss and deafness | Diabetes insipidus ( | |
| ClC-Kb/Barttin | Loss of ClC-Kb: Bartter III (renal salt loss) |
Mammalian ClC chloride exchangers.
| Isoform | Tissue | Function | Human disease | Knock-out mice | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cl-/H+ exchangers Intracellular (Endo/lysosomes) | ClC-3 | Broad | Ion homeostasis of intracellular vesicles | Retinal and brain degeneration ( | |
| ClC-4 | Skeletal muscles; brain and heart | Ion homeostasis of endosomes? | Intellectual disabilities? | ||
| ClC-5 | Kidney; intestine | Ion homeostasis of early endosomes | Dent’s disease | Impaired renal endocytosis ( | |
| ClC-6 | neurons | Ion homeostasis of late endosomes | Lysosomal storage disease ( | ||
| ClC7/ Ostm1 | Brain; kidney; liver and bone | Acidification of resorption lacuna in osteoclasts; ion homeostasis of lysosomes | Osteopetrosis, retinal degeneration, lysosomal storage disease | Osteopetrosis; retinal degeneration; lysosomal storage disease ( |