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Voltage-Gated Ion Channels in Health and Disease jdk3 Principles of Neural Science, chapter 9
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Page 1: lectSides05.ppt

Voltage-Gated Ion Channels inHealth and Disease

jdk3

Principles of Neural Science, chapter 9

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Voltage-Gated Ion Channels inHealth and Disease

I. Multiple functions of voltage-gated ion channels

III. Neurological diseases involving voltage-gated ion channels

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Squid Giant Axon According to Hodgkin & Huxley

But....

Only Two Types of Voltage-Gated Ion Channels are Required to Generate the Action Potential

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Mammalian Neurons Have Several Types of Voltage-Gated Ion Channels

Why do neurons need so many types of voltage-gated ion channels?

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I. Ca++ as a Second Messenger

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[Ca++]i Can Act as a Regulator of VariousBiochemical Processes

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e.g., modulation of enzyme activity, gene expression, and channel gating; initiation of transmitter release

[Ca++]i

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II. Fine Control of Membrane Excitability

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Early Computers Were Made of Thousands ofIdentical Electronic Components

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ENIAC’s Computational Power Relied on the Specificity of Connections Between Different Identical Elements

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Electronic Devices Are Made of a Variety of Specialized Elements With Specialized Functional Properties

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Each Class of Neuron Expresses a Subset of the Many Different Types ofVoltage-Gated Ion Channels, Resulting in a Unique Set of

Excitability Properties

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Each Class of Voltage-Gated Ion ChannelHas a Unique Distribution Within the

Nervous System

e.g., consider a single gene that encodesvoltage-gated K+ channels

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Variation of Alternative Splicing of pre-mRNA From One Gene Results in Regional Variation in Expression of Four

Different Isoforms of a Voltage-Gated K+ Channel

PNS Fig 6-14

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HVA Channels Affect Spike-ShapeLVA Channels Affect Spike-Encoding

Time

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Neurons Differ in Their Responsiveness to Excitatory Input

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Thalamocortical Relay NeuronsBurst Spontaneously

HCN currentT-type Ca++ current

PNS, Fig 9-11

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Synaptic Input Can Modulate a Neuron’sExcitability Properties by Modulating

Voltage-Gated Ion Channels

RestingFollowing

Synaptic Stimulation

PNS, Fig 13-11C

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Neurons Vary as Much in Their Excitability Properties as in Their Shapes

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Ion Channel Distributions Differ Not Only Between Neurons, but also

Between Different Regions of an Individual Neuron

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Input

Integrative

Conductile

Output

Each Functional Zone of the Neuron Has a Special Complement of Voltage-Gated Ion Channels

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Dendrites Are NOT Just Passive CablesMany Have Voltage-Gated Channels That Can Modulate

the Spread of Synaptic Potentials

PNS, Fig 8-5

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Distribution of Four Types of Dendritic Currents inThree Different Types of CNS Neurons

(S = soma location)

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Voltage-Gated Ion Channels inHealth and Disease

I. Multiple functions of voltage-gated ion channels

III. Neurological diseases involving voltage-gated ion channels

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How Voltage-Gated Ion ChannelsGo Bad

● Mutations● Autoimmune diseases● Defects in transcription● Mislocation within the cell

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Various Neurological Diseases Are Caused by Malfunctioning Voltage-Gated Ion Channels

● Acquired neuromyotonia● Andersen’s syndrome● Becker’s myotonia● Episodic ataxia with

myokymia● Familial hemiplegic migraine● Generalized epilepsy with

febrile seizures

● Hyperkalemic periodic paralysis● Malignant hyperthermia● Myasthenic syndrome● Paramyotonia congenita● Spinocerebellar ataxia● Thompson’s myotonia

Na+, K+, Ca++, Cl-

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Phenotypic Variability

Mutations in the Same GeneLead to Different Symptoms

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Different Point Mutations in the Same α-Subunit Lead to Three Different Classes of Symptoms

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Genetic Variability

Mutations in Different GenesLead to Similar Symptoms

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Mutations in Either α or β-SubunitsCan Lead to Similar Symptoms

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Myotonic Muscle is Hyperexcitable

Vm Vm

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Mutations in Voltage-Gated Cl- Channels in Skeletal Muscle Can Result in Myotonia

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Mutations in Voltage-Gated Na+ Channels in Skeletal Muscle Can Also Result in Myotonia

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Mutations Often Affect Gating Functions

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Many of These Point Mutations Affect Kinetics orVoltage-Range of Inactivation

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Increasing Degree of Persistent Inactivation Can Move the Muscle Fiber from Hyperexcitable to Inexcitable

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Voltage-Gated Na+ Channels in Skeletal Muscle Can Have Point Mutations That Lead to:

Potassium Aggravated MyotoniaParamyotonia Congenita Hyperkalemic Periodic Paralysis

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e.g., Voltage-Gated Na+ Channels Found in the CNS And Those Found in Skeletal Muscle

Are Encoded by Different Genes

Regional Differences in Gene ExpressionAccount for Much of the Specificity of

Ion Channel Diseases

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Mutations in Na+ Channels in the CNSGive Rise to Epilepsy - Not to Myotonia

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Understanding Ion Channel Subunit Structure Helps to Explain Aspects of

Heritability of Disease

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•Pharmacological block of 50% of Cl- channels produces no symptoms.

•Heterozygotes with 50% normal Cl- channel gene product are symptomatic (autosomal dominant myotonia congenita).

Paradox

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Because Cl- Channels are Dimers, Only 25 % of Heterozygotic Channels are Normal

Mutant

Wild Type

Genes Channels

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