| Literature DB >> 34643236 |
Samantha C Salvage1, Zaki F Habib1,2, Hugh R Matthews2, Antony P Jackson1, Christopher L-H Huang1,2.
Abstract
Voltage-dependent Na+ channel activation underlies action potential generation fundamental to cellular excitability. In skeletal and cardiac muscle this triggers contraction via ryanodine-receptor (RyR)-mediated sarcoplasmic reticular (SR) Ca2+ release. We here review potential feedback actions of intracellular [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]i) on Na+ channel activity, surveying their structural, genetic and cellular and functional implications, translating these to their possible clinical importance. In addition to phosphorylation sites, both Nav1.4 and Nav1.5 possess potentially regulatory binding sites for Ca2+ and/or the Ca2+-sensor calmodulin in their inactivating III-IV linker and C-terminal domains (CTD), where mutations are associated with a range of skeletal and cardiac muscle diseases. We summarize in vitro cell-attached patch clamp studies reporting correspondingly diverse, direct and indirect, Ca2+ effects upon maximal Nav1.4 and Nav1.5 currents (Imax) and their half-maximal voltages (V1/2) characterizing channel gating, in cellular expression systems and isolated myocytes. Interventions increasing cytoplasmic [Ca2+]i down-regulated Imax leaving V1/2 constant in native loose patch clamped, wild-type murine skeletal and cardiac myocytes. They correspondingly reduced action potential upstroke rates and conduction velocities, causing pro-arrhythmic effects in intact perfused hearts. Genetically modified murine RyR2-P2328S hearts modelling catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT), recapitulated clinical ventricular and atrial pro-arrhythmic phenotypes following catecholaminergic challenge. These accompanied reductions in action potential conduction velocities. The latter were reversed by flecainide at RyR-blocking concentrations specifically in RyR2-P2328S as opposed to wild-type hearts, suggesting a basis for its recent therapeutic application in CPVT. We finally explore the relevance of these mechanisms in further genetic paradigms for commoner metabolic and structural cardiac disease.Entities:
Keywords: C-terminal domain; ca2+; cardiac arrhythmia; cardiomyocytes; skeletal myocytes; sodium channels
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34643236 PMCID: PMC8589445 DOI: 10.1042/BST20200604
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Soc Trans ISSN: 0300-5127 Impact factor: 5.407
Figure 1.Structure of the Nav channel.
(A) Key structural features of the Nav channel α-subunit. The four internally homologous domains, DI-IV, are colour-coded, with the S0 and transmembrane helices, S1–6, voltage-sensing domain (VSD), pore domain (PD), C-terminal domain and intracellular DIII-DIV linker region as indicated. (B) Cryo-EM structures of human Nav1.5 (PDB: 7dtc) and human Nav1.4 (PDB: 6agf) in top view and human Nav1.5 in side view. Domains colour-coded as in (A). The intracellular DIII-DIV linker is shown in the side view in light grey.
Figure 2.The intracellular DIII-DIV linker.
(A) Sequence alignment of the DIII-DIV linkers from Nav1.5 and Nav1.4. Identical residues indicated by (*), conservative changes by (:) and semi-conservative changes by (.) below the sequence alignments. IFM motifs indicated in red. Site A and site B helices boxed. In the Nav1.5 sequence, examples of residues whose mutations are associated with Long QT syndrome (LQT3) indicated by (†) and with Brugada syndrome (BrS) by (#). LQT3 and BrS-associated residues implicated in binding of the DIII-DIV linker to the α-subunit and to Ca2+-calmodulin coloured orange and sky blue, respectively. In the Nav1.4 sequence, residues whose mutations are associated with myotonia indicated by (|) and with paramyotonia congenita (PMC) by (‡). (B) Expanded view of the Nav1.5 DIII-DIV linker (light grey), showing locations of the key residues coloured in (A), see text for details. (C). Binding of site A helix and site B helix to Ca2+-calmodulin C-lobe and N-lobe, respectively. Note the location of key site A and B residues coloured as in (A) and (B).
Figure 3.The Nav channel C-terminal domain (CTD).
(A) Sequence alignment of CTDs from Nav1.5 and Nav1.4. Identical residues are indicated below the sequence alignment by (*), conservative changes by (:) and semi-conservative changes by (.). Locations of the linker region, EF hand and helix 6 highlighted. The extended region of helix 6 containing sequences implicated in apo- or Ca2+-calmodulin binding coloured cyan. Within this region, the consensus IQ-motif is indicated. In the Nav1.5 sequence, examples of LQT3 and BrS-associated residues coloured orange and sky blue, respectively. In the Nav1.4 sequence, myotonia and PMC-associated residues coloured tan and purple, respectively. (B) Comparative structures of CTDs from Nav1.5 (a–c) and Nav1.4 (d,e) with apo-calmodulin (a,d) or Ca2+-calmodulin (b,c,e), in side view and top view. To emphasize the variety of ways in which calmodulin can bind to helix 6, the EF hands have been removed from the top views and the orientation of each helix 6 structure has been arbitrarily standardized, with Nav1.5 residue R1897 and its Nav1.4 equivalent K1723 placed at 12 o'clock. In the Nav1.5 structures, LQT3 and BrS-associated residues highlighted as spheres and coloured orange and sky blue, respectively. In the Nav1.4 structures, myotonia and PMC-associated residues highlighted as spheres and coloured tan and purple, respectively. Ca2+ ions shown as red balls.
Figure 4.Proposed Nav channel conformational states during the action potential cycle.
(A) Closed (resting), open (activated) and inactivated (refractory) states schematizing relationships between the activating DI-III (right side, orange), the inactivating DIV (left side, grey) voltage sensing domains, the CTD, and sites A and B of the intracellular III–IV linker. (B) Possible conformational relationships involving DIII-DIV linker and calmodulin during Nav1.5 recovery from inactivation. (a) Inactivated state, with IFM motif and DIII-DIV linker fully engaged with the α-subunit and the CTD dissociated from site A. Ca2+ levels are assumed to be elevated following opening of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels, so that Ca2+-calmodulin binds to helix 6 (PDB structure 4jq0). (b–e) Possible, sequential conformational changes occurring during the recovery from inactivation steps (see text for details). (f) Proposed Nav1.5 conformation after return to the closed (resting) state. Since Ca2+ levels are now low, apo-calmodulin binds to helix 6 (PDB structure 4ovn). Ca2+ shown as red balls.
Disease related C-terminal mutations in the Nav1.4 and Nav1.5 channel
| Disease | Nav1.4 C-terminal associated mutations | Experimental results | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hyperkalaemic periodic paralysis | M1592V | (Rojas et al. [ | |
| Normokalaemic periodic paralysis | M1592V | (Xiuhai et al. [ | |
| Potassium-aggravated myotonia (Myo) | Q1633E | (Kubota et al. [ | |
| Paramyotonia Congenita (PMC) | F1705I | (Groome et al. [ |
Ca2+ regulatory effects on Nav1.4 and Nav1.5 studied in heterologous expression systems
| Experimental platform | Pipette buffer (mM concentrations unless otherwise stated)[ | Shifts[ | Shifts[ | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 [Ca2+] | X [Ca2+] | Activation | Inactivation | Activation | Inactivation | |||||
|
|
|
| τfast |
|
|
| τfast | |||
| Nav1.5 (tsA201; Tan et al. [ | 10 EGTA | 1 µM Ca2+ (1.0 EGTA/0.9 CaCl2)[ | NIL | - | NIL | ?Reduced | NIL | - | ?Depol | Reduced |
| Nav1.4 (HEK293; Deschenes et al. [ | 10 BAPTA[ | - | - | - | - | - | NIL[ | NIL[ | NIL[ | |
| 0 BAPTA | 504 nM Ca2+ (3.7 CaCl2/5 BAPTA)4 | - | NIL | ?Depol | - | - | NIL | Hyper[ | NIL | |
| Nav1.5 (HEK293; Deschenes et al. [ | 0 BAPTA | 504 nM Ca2+ (3.7 CaCl2/5 BAPTA)4 | - | - | - | NIL | - | NIL | NIL | NIL |
| Nav1.5 (tsA201; Wingo et al. [ | 20 BAPTA | 0–250 nM Ca2+ (0–13.4 CaCl2/20 BAPTA). 1 µM and 10 µM Ca2+ (0.9 CaCl2 or 1.0 CaCl2/1.0 BAPTA)[ | NIL | Depol[ | NIL | - | - | NIL | - | |
| Nav1.4 (CHO-K1; Young and Caldwell [ | 5 EGTA | - | - | - | - | NIL | Hyper | Hyper[ | NIL | |
| Nav1.4 (CHO-K1; Young and Caldwell [ | 10 µM Ca2+ (5 EGTA/4.9 CaCl2)[ | NIL | NIL | NIL | NIL | - | Hyper | NIL | NIL | |
| Nav1.4 (HEK293; Young and Caldwell [ | 5 EGTA | 10 µM Ca2+ (5 EGTA/ 4.9 CaCl2) | - | - | - | - | - | NIL | NIL | NIL |
| Nav1.5 (CHO-K1; Young and Caldwell [ | 5 EGTA | 10 µM Ca2+ (5 EGTA/4.9 CaCl2)[ | NIL | NIL | NIL | NIL | - | Hyper | NIL | NIL |
| Nav1.4 (tsA201; Shah et al. [ | 20 BAPTA | 1 µM Ca2+ (1.0 BAPTA/0.9 CaCl2) | - | - | Depol[ | - | - | - | - | - |
| Nav1.5 (HEK293; Biswas et al. [ | 20 BAPTA | 10 µM Ca2+ (1.0 BAPTA/1.0 CaCl2) 16 | NIL | NIL | Depol | Increased | NIL[ | NIL15 | Depol15 | - |
| Nav1.5 (HEK293; Biswas et al. [ | 0.5 µM Ca2+ (5 BAPTA/ 4 CaCl2)[ | NIL15 | NIL15 | NIL15 | - | |||||
| Nav1.5 (tsA201; Potet et al. [ | 20 BAPTA | 10 µM Ca2+ (1.0 BAPTA/1.0 CaCl2) | - | - | Depol[ | NIL | ||||
| Nav1.5 (tsA201; Chagot et al. [ | 20 BAPTA | 1 µM Ca2+ (1.0 BAPTA/0.9 CaCl2). | Depol[ | |||||||
| Nav1.5 (tsA201; Sarhan et al. [ | 10 BAPTA | 10 µM Ca2+ (1.0 BAPTA/1.0 CaCl2) | - | - | Depol[ | NIL | - | - | - | - |
| Nav1.4 (HEK293; Ben-Johny et al. [ | 10 BAPTA | 10 µM Ca2+ (10 HEDTA/5 CaCl2) | Reduced | - | NIL | - | - | - | - | - |
| Nav1.4 (HEK293; Ben-Johny et al. [ | 0.5 EGTA | Activation of co-expressed Cav2.1 | Reduced | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Nav1.4 (HEK293; Ben-Johny et al. [ | Ca2+ uncaging; 1.0 citrate | 0.5–2 µM Ca2+ (1.0 DMN/0.7 CaCl2) 2–8 µM Ca2+ (2 DMN/1.4 CaCl2)[ | Reduced | - | NIL | - | Reduced[ | - | - | - |
| Nav1.5 (HEK293; Ben-Johny et al. [ | 10 BAPTA | 10 µM Ca2+ (10 HEDTA/5 CaCl2) | NIL | - | NIL | - | - | - | - | - |
| Nav1.5 (HEK293; Ben-Johny et al. [ | 0.5 EGTA | Activation of co-expressed Cav2.1 | NIL | - | NIL | |||||
| Nav1.5 (HEK293; Ben-Johny et al. [ | Ca2+ uncaging; 1.0 citrate | 0.5–2 µM Ca2+ (1.0 DMN/0.7 CaCl2) 2–8 µM Ca2+ (2 DMN/1.4 CaCl2) | NIL | - | NIL | |||||
| Nav1.4 ( | Ca2+ uncaging; 1.0 citrate | 0.5–2 µM Ca2+ (1.0 DMN/0.7 CaCl2) 2–8 µM Ca2+ (2 DMN/1.4 CaCl2) | Reduced | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Nav1.5 (guinea-pig ventricular myocytes; Ben-Johny et al. [ | Ca2+ uncaging; 1.0 citrate | 0.5–2 µM Ca2+ (1.0 DMN/0.7 CaCl2) 2–8 µM Ca2+ (2 DMN/1.4 CaCl2) | NIL | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Nav1.5 with Nav1.4 C-terminal (HEK293; Yoder et al. [ | 0.5 EGTA | Activation of co-expressed Cav2.1 | Reduced[ | - | - | - | Reduced | - | - | - |
| Nav1.5 with Nav1.4 C-terminal (HEK293; Yoder et al. [ | Ca2+ uncaging; 1.0 citrate | 0.5–2 µM Ca2+ (1.0 DMN/0.7 CaCl2) 2–8 µM Ca2+ (2 DMN/1.4 CaCl2)[ | Reduced | - | NIL | Reduced | ||||
| Nav1.4 with Nav1.5 C-terminal (HEK293; Yoder et al. [ | 0.5 EGTA | Activation of co-expressed Cav2.1 | NIL[ | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Nav1.4 with Nav1.5 C-terminal (HEK293; Yoder et al. [ | Ca2+ uncaging; 1.0 citrate | 0.5–2 µM Ca2+ (1.0 DMN/0.7 CaCl2) 2–8 µM Ca2+ (2 DMN/1.4 CaCl2) | NIL24 | - | NIL | |||||
| Nav1.5 (rabbit ventricular myocytes; Casini et al. [ | 10 BAPTA | 100 nM Ca2+ (CsCl/10 BAPTA) | NIL | NIL | NIL | NIL | - | - | - | - |
| Nav1.5 (rabbit ventricular myocytes; Casini et al. [ | 500 nM Ca2+ (CsCl/10 BAPTA) | Reduced | NIL | NIL | NIL | - | - | - | - | |
| Nav1.5 (tsA201; Johnson et al. [ | 20 BAPTA | 1.6 µM Ca2+ (5 HEDTA/0.9 Ca2+) | NIL | Increased[ | ||||||
∼100 mM F--containing pipette solutions except: Deschenes et al. [33] apart from C2C12 experiments (Sarhan et al. [17]; Ben-Johny et al. [36]; Yoder et al. [38]; Casini et al. [40]). DMN = DM Nitrophen.
Key: - = not studied; Nil = no effect; depol = depolarizing; hyper = hyperpolarizing shifts in V1/2;
Experiments performed with ±peptide 209–309 (antagonizing Ca2+-calmodulin-Nav1.5 binding), I1908E and L1912R IQ mutant and BrS mutant A1924T (Tan et al. [15]);
Pipette solution Cl− or F− and 0 Ca2+ (0 mM BAPTA) or 504 nM Ca2+ (3.7 mM Ca2+/5 mM BAPTA) gave similar results; further 10 µM KN92/KN93 and 100 nM CaMKII inhibitory autocamtide-2 (AIP) controls included;
Effects of 0 Ca2+ and of calmodulin-1234;
Double alanine IQ mutation hyperpolarized inactivation V1/2 and reduced decay constant relative to WT regardless of calmodulin mutation (Deschenes et al. [33]);
Experiments performed ± peptide 209–309 (antagonizing Ca2+-calmodulin-Nav1.5 binding;)
Depolarizing effect observed at >150 nM, saturated at 1 µM Ca2+, attenuated by EF hand D1790G LQT3 mutation, and abolished by 4× EF hand mutation (Wingo et al. [7]);
Effects of 0 Ca2+;
Effects of calmodulin-1234;
Experiments with 10 µM KN93/KN92, N- and C- terminal calmodulin mutants and Nav1.4/Nav1.5 C-terminal chimeras included;
IQ mutations I1727E and L1736R, showed unchanged channel properties relative to WT; I1727E blocked all effects of calmodulin and calmodulin-1234;
Experiments with 10 µM KN93/KN92, N- and C- terminal calmodulin mutants and Nav1.4/Nav1.5 C-terminal chimeras included (Young and Caldwell [34]);
Single, A1924T, but not double IQ mutation also caused depolarizing V1/2 shift (Shah et al. [13]);
Studies with calmodulin1234 included;
Ca2+ hyperpolarized inactivation V1/2 both in mutants lacking C-terminal and double alanine IQ mutation. Both EF hand LQT3 mutation D1790G and 4X mutation hyperpolarized inactivation V1/2 but were unresponsive to Ca2+ (Biswas et al. [35]);
A1924T mutant showed difference from WT only at 0 Ca2+ (Potet et al. [99]);
EF-2X mutation caused hyper and abolished Ca2+ action (Chagot et al. [10]);
No effect at 0.3 µM Ca2+ (Sarhan et al. [17]);
Time constants of Ca2+ dependent inactivation onset reported for different [Ca2+];
Double alanine IQ mutation caused Ca2+ dependent facilitation; myotonia mutants Q1626E and F1698I showed attenuated Ca2+-dependent inhibition and lesser reduction in Imax than WT. EF hand, D1621A and D1623A, mutations had no effect (Ben-Johny et al. [36]);
WT calmodulin and calmodulin-34 maintained Ca2+ dependent inactivation, calmodulin-12 resulted in loss of such inactivation.;
Nav1.5 mutant without the post IQ motif showed persistent Ca2+ dependent inhibition;
Ca2+ dependent inactivation persisted with Nav1.5 C-terminal domain lacking post IQ segment (Yoder et al. [38]);
Ca2+-calmodulin (but not apo-calmodulin) binding implicated in slowed kinetics of inactivation and accelerated recovery from inactivation, but not in Nav1.5 double mutants involving both sites A and B of II–III linker region.
Figure 5.In vitro assessments of Ca2+-mediated Na+ current modulation in expression systems.
(A) (a) Na+ channels characterized before (i) and following (ii) pipette dialysis with µM Ca2+. (b) Assessment of Ca2+ effects on Na+ current inactivation properties through (i) imposition of voltage steps from varying holding voltages, Vhold, to a fixed test level, for measurement of (ii) corresponding Na+ currents and (iii) plotting fractional current remaining, h∞, at different Vhold. (c) Alterations from normal (black) inactivation properties resulting in (i) reduction in maximum Na+ current or (ii) shift in the dependence of h∞ on Vhold (red). (B) Ca2+-dependent Na+ channel inhibition under Ca2+ photo-uncaging: (a) NaV1.5 peak currents unaffected but NaV1.4 peak currents decline with 10 µM Ca2+ uncaging. Gray dots, peak currents before (b) uncaging. (c) Ca2+-dependent inhibition plotted against Ca2+-step amplitude. (d) corresponding h∞ curves; upwardly scaled h∞ curve (red) similar to that obtained before uncaging (black). ((A)(a),(b) from Figure 1 and (B) from Figure 2 by permission (Ben-Johny et al. [36]).
Figure 6.Na+ current down-regulation in native murine skeletal muscle fibres by altered Ca2+ homeostasis following caffeine induced ryanodine receptor (RyR) activation, abrogated by dantrolene mediated RyR antagonism.
(A)(a) Double pulse protocol from a hyperpolarized prepulse potential V0 to activating voltage V1 followed by further depolarization to fixed depolarized voltage V2, respectively assessing (b) Na+ current activation and subsequent inactivation produced by the voltage step to V1. (B) 2–10 mM caffeine increases integrated background aequorin Ca2+ signal (upper trace) and twitch force (lower trace) in rat fast twitch muscle at 25°C over timecourses dependent upon caffeine concentration. Arrows denote periods of caffeine exposure. (C) Families of loose-patch clamp membrane currents in response to the double pulse protocol before (a, b) and at successive intervals ((i)-(iv)) following introduction (c, d) of caffeine (0.5 mM) before (a, c) and following (b, d) addition of dantrolene (10 µM). Currents expressed as current densities (pA/µm2) through 28–32 µm pipette diameters.((A) from Figure 2 by permission (Fryer & Neering [47]); (B) from Figure 3 by permission (Sarbjit-Singh et al. [48]).
Figure 7.Na+ current reduction in native murine cardiomyocytes by altered Ca2+ homeostasis following ryanodine receptor (RyR) activation by the Epac activator 8-CPT, abrogated by dantrolene mediated RyR antagonism.
(A) Epac-induced wave of elevated cytosolic [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]i) shown in 41.0 × 20.5 µm confocal microscope fluo-3 images taken in successive 65 ms intervals within isolated ventricular myocyte. (B, C) Families of loose-patch clamp ionic current densities in a ventricular preparation; pulse protocol investigating Na+ channel activation and inactivation as in Figure 5A. Na+ currents in response to (B) activation by depolarization to level V1 and (C) following their inactivation, to final level V2 following their inactivation at level V1. Recordings made (a) before pharmacological challenge, (b) in the presence of 8-CPT (1 µM) alone or (c) following further addition of dantrolene, (d) after adding dantrolene alone or (e) combined with 8-CPT. (D) Corresponding dependences of Na+ current activation (top row) and inactivation (bottom row) (mean ± SEM) upon voltage V1 (a) before (open squares) and following introduction of 8-CPT (filled triangles) and 8-CPT and dantrolene combined (filled circles), (b) before (open squares) and following introduction of dantrolene (filled diamonds), (c) before (open squares) and following introduction of a combination of 8-CPT and dantrolene (filled circles).((A) From Figure 8 by permission (Hothi et al. [45]); (B), (C) from Figure 2 and (D) from Figure 4 by permission (Valli et al. [76]).
Figure 8.Altered Na+ current function paralleling Na+ channelopathy occurs in a murine pro-arrhythmic catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia model.
(A) Loose-patch membrane current recordings in (a) WT, (b) Scn5a+/− and (c) RyR2-P2328S/P2328S atria. (B)(a) The resulting maximum peak inward currents (# P < 0.005). (b) Maximum upstroke rates ((dV/dt)max) and (c) waveforms showing conduction delays in left atrial intracellular action potentials. (Adapted from Figure 5 by permission (King et al. [50]).
Figure 9.Ca2+ sensitivity of Nav1.5 accounts for paradoxical effects on Na+ currents of low dose flecainide used in clinical CPVT monotherapy.
Comparisons of murine (a) WT and (b) RyR2-P2328S/P2328S left atria in the presence of 0, 1 and 5 µM flecainide showing: (A) Paradoxical actions of progressively increasing flecainide concentrations on Na+ current activation and inactivation properties in response to families of depolarizing activating steps each succeeded by a step to a constant 95 mV depolarization. (B) (a, b) Maximum peak currents with exposure followed by withdrawal of flecainide. (C) Activation (a,b) and inactivation (c,d) current–voltage relationships and their fits to Boltzmann functions in WT (a,c) and RyR2-P2328S/P2328S (b,d). (D) Similar paradoxical effects shown by membrane currents in response to an 80 mV depolarizing step before and following challenge by the RyR blocker dantrolene (10 µM). ((A), (C)(c,d) from Figure 4 and (B), (C)(a, b) and (D) from Figure 3 by permission (Salvage et al. [67]).