Familial idiopathic basal ganglia calcification (IBGC) is a genetic condition with a wide spectrum of neuropsychiatric symptoms, including parkinsonism and dementia. Here, we identified mutations in SLC20A2, encoding the type III sodium-dependent phosphate transporter 2 (PiT2), in IBGC-affected families of varied ancestry, and we observed significantly impaired phosphate transport activity for all assayed PiT2 mutants in Xenopus laevis oocytes. Our results implicate altered phosphate homeostasis in the etiology of IBGC.
The molecular basis of the thermal sensitivity of temperature-sensitive channels appears to arise from a specific protein domain rather than integration of global thermal effects. Using systematic chimeric analysis, we show that the N-terminal region that connects ankyrin repeats to the first transmembrane segment is crucial for temperature sensing in heat-activated vanilloid receptor channels. Changing this region both transformed temperature-insensitive isoforms into temperature-sensitive channels and significantly perturbed temperature sensing in temperature-sensitive wild-type channels. Swapping other domains such as the transmembrane core, the C terminus, and the rest of the N terminus had little effect on the steepness of temperature dependence. Our results support that thermal transient receptor potential channels contain modular thermal sensors that confer the unprecedentedly strong temperature dependence to these channels. chimera | temperature gating | temperature jump | thermosensation | pain T he ability to sense temperature is vital to living organisms. In mammals, the neural input on ambient temperature results from specialized groups of neurons that project to the skin. The transducers involve ion channels known as transient receptor potential (TRP) channels (1, 2), which constitute an array of biological thermometers responsive over a broad temperature gradient from noxious cold to noxious hot (3).The molecular mechanism by which temperature changes induce channel opening is not yet known, but the phenomenological tools to analyze the system are known from classical thermodynamic theory. The probability of channel opening follows a Boltzmann relationship to temperature. The enthalpy change (ΔH) between closed and open determines the slope sensitivity of the curve, whereas the entropy change (ΔS) affects its midpoint (T 1∕2 ). The term "threshold" is also commonly used in studies of temperature-sensitive channels to represent the change in temperature required for the response to be larger than the noise level of the recording. Changes in threshold could occur by changes in ∆H or T 1∕2 or the recording noise level.Thermodynamic analyses reveal that thermal TRP channels undergo large enthalpy changes, which accounts for their high temperature sensitivity (4-8). The opening of TRPV1, for example, involves an activation enthalpy of approximately 100 kcal/mol (7), five times the enthalpy change for ligand-or voltage-dependent gating [Q 10 ∼ 2-3 (ref. 9), equivalent to an enthalpy of approximately 20 kcal/mol]. If the free energy change were determined by enthalpy alone, the rate of gating would be very slow because the barrier would be too high. However, thermal TRP channels have evolved to have tightly coupled enthalpy and entropy changes so that the free energy change is relatively small (7). The threshold of activation summarizes the influence of all the temperature-insensitive processes that can regulate gating including the membrane potential (5, 6, 10) and any other allosteric sources such as li...
Many ion channel genes have been associated with human genetic pain disorders. Here we report two large Chinese families with autosomal-dominant episodic pain. We performed a genome-wide linkage scan with microsatellite markers after excluding mutations in three known genes (SCN9A, SCN10A, and TRPA1) that cause similar pain syndrome to our findings, and we mapped the genetic locus to a 7.81 Mb region on chromosome 3p22.3-p21.32. By using whole-exome sequencing followed by conventional Sanger sequencing, we identified two missense mutations in the gene encoding voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.9 (SCN11A): c.673C>T (p.Arg225Cys) and c.2423C>G (p.Ala808Gly) (one in each family). Each mutation showed a perfect cosegregation with the pain phenotype in the corresponding family, and neither of them was detected in 1,021 normal individuals. Both missense mutations were predicted to change a highly conserved amino acid residue of the human Nav1.9 channel. We expressed the two SCN11A mutants in mouse dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons and showed that both mutations enhanced the channel's electrical activities and induced hyperexcitablity of DRG neurons. Taken together, our results suggest that gain-of-function mutations in SCN11A can be causative of an autosomal-dominant episodic pain disorder.
Thermal TRP channels are important for thermal sensation and nociception, but their gating mechanisms have remained elusive. With optically generated submillisecond temperature steps from 22°C to >60°C, we have directly measured the activation and deactivation kinetics of TRPV1 channels, and from the measurements we determined the energetics of thermal gating. We show that activation by temperature follows single exponential time courses. It occurs in a few milliseconds and is significantly faster than activation by agonists. The gating has characteristics of a melting process involving large compensatory enthalpy (>100 kcal/mol) and entropy changes with little free energy change. The reaction path is asymmetrical with temperature mainly driving the opening while the closing has nominal but negative temperature dependence (i.e., sensitivity to cold). Both voltage and agonists alter the slope of the temperature-dependent gating curve as well as shifting the midpoint. However, compared to the energetic effect of temperature on gating, the effect of voltage is small. Our data on the interdependence between voltage and direct temperature responses are not fit to a model involving independent stimuli but instead support a temperature-sensing mechanism that is coupled to charge movement or agonist binding.
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