Several structural domains contribute to the regulation of N-type calcium channel inactivation by the beta 3 subunit.
Department of Physiology and Biophysics. Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology Research Group, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta T2N 4N1, Canada.
Calcium channel beta subunits are essential regulatory elements of the gating properties of high voltage-activated calcium channels. Co-expression with beta(3) subunits typically accelerates inactivation, whereas co-expression with beta(4) subunits results in a slowly inactivating phenotype. Here, we have examined the molecular basis of the differential effect of these two subunits on the inactivation characteristics of Ca(v)2.2 + alpha(2)-delta(1) N-type calcium channels by creating a series of 22 chimeric beta subunits that are based on various combinations of variable and conserved regions of the parent beta subunit isoforms. Our data show that replacement of the N terminus region of beta(4) with a corresponding 14-amino acid stretch of beta(3) sequence accelerates the inactivation kinetics to levels seen with wild type beta(3). A similar kinetic speeding is observed by a concomitant substitution of the second conserved and variable regions, but not when these regions are substituted individually, suggesting that 1) the second variable and conserved regions cooperatively regulate N-type calcium channel inactivation and 2) that there are two redundant mechanisms that allow the beta(3) subunit to accelerate N-type channel inactivation. In contrast with previous reports in Ca(v)2.1 calcium channels, deletion of the C-terminal region of Ca(v)2.2 did not alter the regulation of the channel by wild type and chimeric beta subunits. Hence, the molecular underpinnings of beta subunit regulation of voltage-gated calcium channels appear to vary with calcium channel subtype.
PMID: 14602720 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]