CHANNELS, RECEPTORS, AND ELECTRICAL SIGNALING |
Modeling of Single Non-Inactivating Na Channels:
Evidence for Two Open and Several Fast Inactivated States
Yu-Kai The 1, Jacqueline Fernandes 2, M. Oana Popa 2, Alexi K. Alekov 2, Jens Timmer 1 and Holger Lerche 2*
1 Institut für Physik
2 Neurologische Klinik und Abteilung für Angewandte Physiologie
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: holger.lerche{at}uni-ulm.de.
Submitted on August 29, 2005
Revised on September 29, 2005
Accepted on 19 December 2005
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Abstract |
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Voltage-gated Na+ -channels play a fundamental role for the excitability of nerve and muscle cells. Defects in fast Na+ -channel inactivation can cause hereditary muscle diseases with hyper- or hypoexcitability of the sarcolemma. To explore the kinetics and gating mechanisms of non-inactivating muscle Na channels on a molecular level, we analyzed single channel currents from wild-type and five mutant Na+ channels. The mutations were localized in different protein regions which have been previously shown to be important for fast inactivation (D3-D4-linker, D3/S4-S5, D4/S4-S5, D4/S6) and exhibited distinct grades of defective fast inactivationwith certain levels of persistent Na+ currents caused by late channel reopenings. Different gating schemes were fitted to the data using hidden Markov models with a correction for time interval omission and compared statistically. For all investigated channels including the wild-type two open states were necessary to describe our data. Whereas for the wild-type one inactivated state was sufficient to fit its single channel behavior, modeling of the mutants with impaired fast inactivation revealed evidence for several inactivated states. We propose a single gating scheme with two open and three inactivated states to describe the behavior all five examined mutants that allows for a biological interpretation of the collected data - based on previous investigations in voltage-gated Na+ and K+ channels.
Key Words:
Na channel, hidden Markov model, maximum likelihood, patch-clamp technique, single channel recordings