Citations
All
Search in:AllTitleAbstractAuthor name
Publications
(3K+)
Patents
Grants
Pathways
Clinical trials
Publication
Journal: Journal of General Physiology
June/18/2009
Abstract
The ClC family encompasses two classes of proteins with distinct transport functions: anion channels and transporters. ClC-type transporters usually mediate secondary active anion-proton exchange. However, under certain conditions they assume slippage mode behavior in which proton and anion transport are uncoupled, resulting in passive anion fluxes without associated proton movements. Here, we use patch clamp and intracellular pH recordings on transfected mammalian cells to characterize exchanger and slippage modes of human ClC-4, a member of the ClC transporter branch. We found that the two transport modes differ in transport mechanisms and transport rates. Nonstationary noise analysis revealed a unitary transport rate of 5 x 10(5) s(-1) at +150 mV for the slippage mode, indicating that ClC-4 functions as channel in this mode. In the exchanger mode, unitary transport rates were 10-fold lower. Both ClC-4 transport modes exhibit voltage-dependent gating, indicating that there are active and non-active states for the exchanger as well as for the slippage mode. ClC-4 can assume both transport modes under all tested conditions, with exchanger/channel ratios determined by the external anion. We propose that binding of transported anions to non-active states causes transition from slippage into exchanger mode. Binding and unbinding of anions is very rapid, and slower transitions of liganded and non-liganded states into active conformations result in a stable distribution between the two transport modes. The proposed mechanism results in anion-dependent conversion of ClC-type exchanger into an anion channel with typical attributes of ClC anion channels.
Publication
Journal: Journal of General Physiology
December/12/2013
Abstract
Lysosomes must maintain an acidic luminal pH to activate hydrolytic enzymes and degrade internalized macromolecules. Acidification requires the vacuolar-type H(+)-ATPase to pump protons into the lumen and a counterion flux to neutralize the membrane potential created by proton accumulation. Early experiments suggested that the counterion was chloride, and more recently a pathway consistent with the ClC-7 Cl(-)/H(+) antiporter was identified. However, reports that the steady-state luminal pH is unaffected in ClC-7 knockout mice raise questions regarding the identity of the carrier and the counterion. Here, we measure the current-voltage characteristics of a mammalian ClC-7 antiporter, and we use its transport properties, together with other key ion regulating elements, to construct a mathematical model of lysosomal pH regulation. We show that results of in vitro lysosome experiments can only be explained by the presence of ClC-7, and that ClC-7 promotes greater acidification than Cl(-), K(+), or Na(+) channels. Our models predict strikingly different lysosomal K(+) dynamics depending on the major counterion pathways. However, given the lack of experimental data concerning acidification in vivo, the model cannot definitively rule out any given mechanism, but the model does provide concrete predictions for additional experiments that would clarify the identity of the counterion and its carrier.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
May/6/2004
Abstract
The human muscle chloride channel ClC-1 has a 398-amino acid carboxyl-terminal domain that resides in the cytoplasm and contains two CBS (cystathionine-beta-synthase) domains. To examine the role of this region, we studied various carboxyl-terminal truncations by heterologous expression in mammalian cells, whole-cell patch clamp recording, and confocal imaging. Channel constructs lacking parts of the distal CBS domain, CBS2, did not produce functional channels, whereas deletion of CBS1 was tolerated. ClC channels are dimeric proteins with two ion conduction pathways (protopores). In heterodimeric channels consisting of one wild type subunit and one subunit in which the carboxyl terminus was completely deleted, only the wild type protopore was functional, indicating that the carboxyl terminus supports the function of the protopore. All carboxyl-terminal-truncated mutant channels fused to yellow fluorescent protein were translated and the majority inserted into the plasma membrane as revealed by confocal microscopy. Fusion proteins of cyan fluorescent protein linked to various fragments of the carboxyl terminus formed soluble proteins that could be redistributed to the surface membrane through binding to certain truncated channel subunits. Stable binding only occurs between carboxyl-terminal fragments of a single subunit, not between carboxyl termini of different subunits and not between carboxyl-terminal and transmembrane domains. However, an interaction with transmembrane domains can modify the binding properties of particular carboxyl-terminal proteins. Our results demonstrate that the carboxyl terminus of ClC-1 is not necessary for intracellular trafficking but is critical for channel function. Carboxyl termini fold independently and modify individual protopores of the double-barreled channel.
Publication
Journal: Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN
August/31/2010
Abstract
Barttin is an accessory subunit that modifies protein stability, subcellular distribution, and voltage-dependent gating of ClC-K chloride channels expressed in renal and inner ear epithelia. ClC-K channels are double-barreled channels with two identical protopores that may be opened by individual or common gating processes. Using heterologous expression in mammalian cells and patch-clamp recordings, we studied the effects of barttin on gating of rat ClC-K1 and human ClC-Ka. In the absence of barttin, rClC-K1 channels displayed two gating processes with distinct kinetics and voltage dependence. A fast gating process, activated by membrane hyperpolarization, opens and closes individual rClC-K1 protopores. In addition, slow common gating steps, stimulated by membrane depolarization, act on both protopores together. Coexpression of barttin results in voltage-independent open probabilities of the common gate, causing increased channel activity at physiologic potentials. In contrast to rClC-K1, human ClC-Ka is functional only when coexpressed with barttin. Single-channel recordings of hClC-Ka/barttin show double-barreled channels with fast protopore gating without apparent cooperative gating steps. These findings demonstrate that barttin stimulates chloride flux through ClC-K channels by modifying cooperative gating of the double-barreled channels and highlight a physiologic role for gating of epithelial ClC chloride channels.
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
January/14/2008
Abstract
CLC Cl(-)/H(+) exchangers are homodimers with Cl(-)-binding and H(+)-coupling residues contained within each subunit. It is not known whether the transport mechanism requires conformational rearrangement between subunits or whether each subunit operates as a separate exchanger. We designed various cysteine substitution mutants on a cysteine-less background of CLC-ec1, a bacterial CLC exchanger of known structure, with the aim of covalently linking the subunits. The constructs were cross-linked in air or with exogenous oxidant, and the cross-linked proteins were reconstituted to assess their function. In addition to conventional disulfides, a cysteine-lysine cross-bridge was formed with I(2) as an oxidant. The constructs, all of which contained one, two, or four cross-bridges, were functionally active and kinetically competent with respect to Cl(-) turnover rate, Cl(-)/H(+) exchange stoichiometry, and H(+) pumping driven by a Cl(-) gradient. These results imply that large quaternary rearrangements, such as those known to occur for "common gating" in CLC channels, are not necessary for the ion transport cycle and that it is therefore likely that the transport mechanism is carried out by the subunits working individually, as with "fast gating" of the CLC channels.
Publication
Journal: Biophysical Journal
January/4/2006
Abstract
Mammalian ClC-type chloride channels have large cytoplasmic carboxy-terminal domains whose function is still insufficiently understood. We investigated the role of the distal part of the carboxy-terminus of the muscle isoform ClC-1 by constructing and functionally evaluating two truncation mutants, R894X and K875X. Truncated channels exhibit normal unitary conductances and anion selectivities but altered apparent anion binding affinities in the open and in the closed state. Since voltage-dependent gating is strictly coupled to ion permeation in ClC-1 channels, the changed pore properties result in different fast and slow gating. Full length and truncated channels also differed in methanethiosulphonate (MTS) modification rate constants of an engineered cysteine at position 231 near the selectivity filter. Our data demonstrate that the carboxy-terminus of ClC channels modifies the conformation of the outer pore vestibule.
Publication
Journal: The American journal of physiology
February/27/1995
Abstract
cDNA encoding a Cl- channel was isolated from a rabbit gastric library, sequenced, and expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The predicted protein (898 amino acids, relative molecular mass 98,433 Da) was overall 93% similar to the rat brain ClC-2 Cl- channel. However, a 151-amino acid stretch toward the COOH-terminus was 74% similar to ClC-2 with six amino acids deleted. Two new potential protein kinase A (PKA) phosphorylation sites (also protein kinase C phosphorylation sites) were introduced. cRNA-injected Xenopus oocytes expressed a Cl- channel that was active at pHtrans 3 and had a linear current-voltage (I-V) curve and a slope conductance of 29 +/- 1 pS at 800 mM CsCl. A fivefold Cl- gradient caused a rightward shift in the I-V curve with a reversal potential of +30 +/- 3 mV, indicating anion selectivity. The selectivity was I->> Cl->> NO3-. The native and recombinant Cl- channel were both activated in vitro by PKA catalytic subunit and ATP. The electrophysiological and regulatory properties of the cloned and the native channel were similar. The cloned protein may be the Cl- channel involved in gastric HCl secretion.
Publication
Journal: Journal of General Physiology
May/20/2004
Abstract
Opening of CLC chloride channels is coupled to the translocation of the permeant anion. From the recent structure determination of bacterial CLC proteins in the closed and open configuration, a glutamate residue was hypothesized to form part of the Cl--sensitive gate. The negatively charged side-chain of the glutamate was suggested to occlude the permeation pathway in the closed state, while opening of a single protopore of the double-pore channel would reflect mainly a movement of this side-chain toward the extracellular pore vestibule, with little rearrangement of the rest of the channel. Here we show that mutating this critical residue (Glu166) in the prototype Torpedo CLC-0 to alanine, serine, or lysine leads to constitutively open channels, whereas a mutation to aspartate strongly slowed down opening. Furthermore, we investigated the interaction of the small organic channel blocker p-chlorophenoxy-acetic acid (CPA) with the mutants E166A and E166S. Both mutants were strongly inhibited by CPA at negative voltages with a >200-fold larger affinity than for wild-type CLC-0 (apparent KD at -140 mV approximately 4 micro M). A three-state linear model with an open state, a low-affinity and a high-affinity CPA-bound state can quantitatively describe steady-state and kinetic properties of the CPA block. The parameters of the model and additional mutagenesis suggest that the high-affinity CPA-bound state is similar to the closed configuration of the protopore gate of wild-type CLC-0. In the E166A mutant the glutamate side chain that occludes the permeation pathway is absent. Thus, if gating consists only in movement of this side-chain the mutant E166A should not be able to assume a closed conformation. It may thus be that fast gating in CLC-0 is more complex than anticipated from the bacterial structures.
Publication
Journal: The American journal of physiology
June/26/1997
Abstract
We investigate the intrarenal expression of two recently cloned chloride channels, rClC-K1 and rClC-K2, by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction on single microdissected tubules from the rat kidney and by immunohistochemistry using a polyclonal antibody that recognizes both highly homologous channels. Both rClC-K1 and rClC-K2 mRNAs were detected in outer medullary late proximal tubules (S3), papillary ascending thin limbs (ATL), and outer medullary (MTAL) and cortical (CTAL) thick ascending limbs, distal tubules (DCT), and cortical, outer medullary, and inner medullary collecting ducts. Indirect immunofluorescence studies demonstrated that the rClC-K proteins were restricted to the basolateral membranes from ATL, DCT, and collecting ducts cells, whereas CTAL and MTAL exhibited a more diffuse basal staining. When rats were dehydrated, a condition which increased the expression of rClC-K1 in cortex and medulla, a weak cytoplasmic staining was found in late proximal tubule cells. Thus these results demonstrate that rat kidney ClC-K channels are predominantly located in the basolateral membranes from cells of the late segments of the renal tubule where most of chloride reabsorption takes place.
Publication
Journal: Anticancer Research
January/17/2011
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Glioblastoma is a type of highly malignant primary brain tumour. By means of ion excretion and the associated obligatory water loss, glioma cells can change shapes and undergo extensive migration and invasion. This study investigated the effects of inhibition of ion excretion in glioma cells.
METHODS
The expression of chloride channels (ClCs) and metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) was studied in two human glioma cell lines (STTG1 and U251-MG). The effects of ClC inhibition with chlorotoxin (a ClC-3 inhibitor), 5-nitro-2-3-phenylpropylamino benzoic acid (NPPB) (a non-specific ClC inhibitor), and ClC-3 siRNA knockdown were studied.
RESULTS
Both STTG1 and U251-MG cells expressed ClC family members ClC-2, -3, -4, -5, -6 and -7, as well as MMP-2. Glioma cell invasion was markedly but not completely inhibited by ClC-3 and MMP-2 siRNA knockdown, and by chlorotoxin treatment. Addition of chlorotoxin to siRNA-treated glioma cells only slightly increased the suppression of invasion. In contrast, invasion was completely blocked by the non-specific ClC blocker NPPB.
CONCLUSIONS
ClCs are crucial in glioma cell migration and invasion. Blockade of a single ClC, however, is not sufficient to achieve complete inhibition of glioma cell invasion, suggesting that any future therapy should be targeted at pharmacological blockade of multiple ClCs.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
December/18/2002
Abstract
Volume-sensitive osmolyte and anion channels (VSOACs) are activated upon cell swelling in most vertebrate cells. Native VSOACs are believed to be a major pathway for regulatory volume decrease (RVD) through efflux of chloride and organic osmolytes. ClC-3 has been proposed to encode native VSOACs in Xenopus laevis oocytes and in some mammalian cells, including cardiac and vascular smooth muscle cells. The relationship between the ClC-3 chloride channel, the native volume-sensitive osmolyte and anion channel (VSOAC) currents, and cell volume regulation in HeLa cells and X. laevis oocytes was investigated using ClC-3 antisense. In situ hybridization in HeLa cells, semiquantitative and real-time PCR, and immunoblot studies in HeLa cells and X. laevis oocytes demonstrated the presence of ClC-3 mRNA and protein, respectively. Exposing both cell types to hypotonic solutions induced cell swelling and activated native VSOACs. Transient transfection of HeLa cells with ClC-3 antisense oligonucleotide or X. laevis oocytes injected with antisense cRNA abolished the native ClC-3 mRNA transcript and protein and significantly reduced the density of native VSOACs activated by hypotonically induced cell swelling. In addition, antisense against native ClC-3 significantly impaired the ability of HeLa cells and X. laevis oocytes to regulate their volume. These results suggest that ClC-3 is an important molecular component underlying VSOACs and the RVD process in HeLa cells and X. laevis oocytes.
Publication
Journal: BMC Genomics
November/4/2008
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Bordetella petrii is the only environmental species hitherto found among the otherwise host-restricted and pathogenic members of the genus Bordetella. Phylogenetically, it connects the pathogenic Bordetellae and environmental bacteria of the genera Achromobacter and Alcaligenes, which are opportunistic pathogens. B. petrii strains have been isolated from very different environmental niches, including river sediment, polluted soil, marine sponges and a grass root. Recently, clinical isolates associated with bone degenerative disease or cystic fibrosis have also been described.
RESULTS
In this manuscript we present the results of the analysis of the completely annotated genome sequence of the B. petrii strain DSMZ12804. B. petrii has a mosaic genome of 5,287,950 bp harboring numerous mobile genetic elements, including seven large genomic islands. Four of them are highly related to the clc element of Pseudomonas knackmussii B13, which encodes genes involved in the degradation of aromatics. Though being an environmental isolate, the sequenced B. petrii strain also encodes proteins related to virulence factors of the pathogenic Bordetellae, including the filamentous hemagglutinin, which is a major colonization factor of B. pertussis, and the master virulence regulator BvgAS. However, it lacks all known toxins of the pathogenic Bordetellae.
CONCLUSIONS
The genomic analysis suggests that B. petrii represents an evolutionary link between free-living environmental bacteria and the host-restricted obligate pathogenic Bordetellae. Its remarkable metabolic versatility may enable B. petrii to thrive in very different ecological niches.
Publication
Journal: Molecular Biology of the Cell
September/5/2011
Abstract
Incomplete lysosomal acidification in microglia inhibits the degradation of fibrillar forms of Alzheimer's amyloid β peptide (fAβ). Here we show that in primary microglia a chloride transporter, ClC-7, is not delivered efficiently to lysosomes, causing incomplete lysosomal acidification. ClC-7 protein is synthesized by microglia but it is mistargeted and appears to be degraded by an endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation pathway. Activation of microglia with macrophage colony-stimulating factor induces trafficking of ClC-7 to lysosomes, leading to lysosomal acidification and increased fAβ degradation. ClC-7 associates with another protein, Ostm1, which plays an important role in its correct lysosomal targeting. Expression of both ClC-7 and Ostm1 is increased in activated microglia, which can account for the increased delivery of ClC-7 to lysosomes. Our findings suggest a novel mechanism of lysosomal pH regulation in activated microglia that is required for fAβ degradation.
Publication
Journal: Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN
July/23/2007
Abstract
Inactivation of the chloride channel cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) causes cystic fibrosis (CF). Although CFTR is expressed in the kidney, no overwhelming renal phenotype has been documented in patients with CF. This study investigated the expression, subcellular distribution, and processing of CFTR in the kidney; used various mouse models to assess the role of CFTR in proximal tubule (PT) endocytosis; and tested the relevance of these findings in patients with CF. The level of CFTR mRNA in mouse kidney approached that found in lung. CFTR was located in the apical area of PT cells, with a maximal intensity in the straight part (S3) of the PT. Fractionation showed that CFTR co-distributed with the chloride/proton exchanger ClC-5 in PT endosomes. Cftr(-/-) mice showed impaired (125)I-beta(2)-microglobulin uptake, together with a decreased amount of the multiligand receptor cubilin in the S3 segment and a significant loss of cubilin and its low molecular weight (LMW) ligands into the urine. Defective receptor-mediated endocytosis was found less consistently in Cftr(DeltaF/DeltaF) mice, characterized by a large phenotypic heterogeneity and moderate versus mice that lacked ClC-5. A significant LMW proteinuria (and particularly transferrinuria) also was documented in a cohort of patients with CF but not in patients with asthma and chronic lung inflammation. In conclusion, CFTR inactivation leads to a moderate defect in receptor-mediated PT endocytosis, associated with a cubilin defect and a significant LMW proteinuria in mouse and human. The magnitude of the endocytosis defect that is caused by CFTR versus ClC-5 loss likely reflects functional heterogeneity along the PT.
Publication
Journal: Biophysical Journal
December/8/2003
Abstract
ClC-4 and ClC-5 are mammalian ClC isoforms with unique ion conduction and gating properties. Macroscopic current recordings in heterologous expression systems revealed very small currents at negative potentials, whereas a substantially larger instantaneous current amplitude and a subsequent activation were observed upon depolarization. Neither the functional basis nor the physiological impact of these channel features are currently understood. Here, we used whole-cell recordings to study pore properties of human ClC-4 channels heterologously expressed in tsA201 or HEK293 cells. Variance analysis demonstrated that the prominent rectification of the instantaneous macroscopic current amplitude is due to a voltage-dependent unitary current conductance. The single channel amplitudes are very small, i.e., 0.10 +/- 0.02 pA at +140 mV for external Cl(-) and internal I(-). Conductivity and permeability sequences were determined for various external and internal anions, and both values increase for anions with lower dehydration energies. ClC-4 exhibits pore properties that are distinct from other ClC isoforms. These differences can be explained by assuming differences in the size of the pore narrowing and the electrostatic potentials within the ion conduction pathways.
Publication
Journal: Pflugers Archiv European Journal of Physiology
August/23/2010
Abstract
Bestrophin-1, mainly analyzed in overexpression experiments, functions as Ca(2+)-dependent Cl(-) channel. Analysis of endogenously expressed bestrophin-1 suggested an influence on intracellular Ca(2+). The aim of the study is to analyze the influence of endogenously expressed bestrophin-1 on Ca(2+) homeostasis. Primary cultures of retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells were established from wild-type and bestrophin-1-deficient mice. Intracellular free Ca(2+) ([Ca(2+)](i)) was recorded by Ca(2+) imaging; through immunocytochemistry and differential centrifugation, subcellular localization of bestrophin-1 was analyzed. RPE cells of bestrophin-1-deficient mice showed higher levels of resting [Ca(2+)](i) than cells from wild-type mice. In cells from knockout mice and wild-type mice, ATP led to increases in [Ca(2+)](i) subsequent to phospholipase C activation. ATP-induced Ca(2+) in bestrophin-1-deficient mice rose faster and decayed slower. In cells from wild-type mice, ATP led to [Ca(2+)](i) increase via depletion of Ca(2+) from thapsigargin-sensitive stores. In cells from bestrophin-1-deficient mice, ATP-dependent increase in [Ca(2+)](i) resulted in 40% of cells from depletion of bafilomycin-sensitive and in 60% from thapsigargin-sensitive Ca(2+) stores. After differential centrifugation, bestrophin-1 was found in fractions enriched of ClC-3 Cl channel and myosin-7A. Co-localization analysis of bestrophin-1, with beta-catenin or pan-cadherin, in fresh sections of porcine retina, revealed bestrophin-1 in the basolateral membrane. A portion of endogenously expressed bestrophin-1,localized in the endoplasmic reticulum, influenced uptake of Ca(2+) into Ca(2+) stores. Therefore, bestrophin-1 possibly conducts Cl(-) as counter ion for Ca(2+) uptake into cytosolic Ca(2+) stores.
Publication
Journal: Journal of General Physiology
March/17/2009
Abstract
CLC-ec1, a bacterial homologue of the CLC family's transporter subclass, catalyzes transmembrane exchange of Cl(-) and H(+). Mutational analysis based on the known structure reveals several key residues required for coupling H(+) to the stoichiometric countermovement of Cl(-). E148 (Glu(ex)) transfers protons between extracellular water and the protein interior, and E203 (Glu(in)) is thought to function analogously on the intracellular face of the protein. Mutation of either residue eliminates H(+) transport while preserving Cl(-) transport. We tested the role of Glu(in) by examining structural and functional properties of mutants at this position. Certain dissociable side chains (E, D, H, K, R, but not C and Y) retain H(+)/Cl(-) exchanger activity to varying degrees, while other mutations (V, I, or C) abolish H(+) coupling and severely inhibit Cl(-) flux. Transporters substituted with other nonprotonatable side chains (Q, S, and A) show highly impaired H(+) transport with substantial Cl(-) transport. Influence on H(+) transport of side chain length and acidity was assessed using a single-cysteine mutant to introduce non-natural side chains. Crystal structures of both coupled (E203H) and uncoupled (E203V) mutants are similar to wild type. The results support the idea that Glu(in) is the internal proton-transfer residue that delivers protons from intracellular solution to the protein interior, where they couple to Cl(-) movements to bring about Cl(-)/H(+) exchange.
Publication
Journal: Genes to Cells
February/10/2003
Abstract
BACKGROUND
CLC-3 is a member of the CLC chloride channel family and is widely expressed in mammalian tissues. To determine the physiological role of CLC-3, we generated CLC-3-deficient mice (Clcn3-/- ) by targeted gene disruption.
RESULTS
Together with developmental retardation and higher mortality, the Clcn3-/- mice showed neurological manifestations such as blindness, motor coordination deficit, and spontaneous hyperlocomotion. In histological analysis, the Clcn3-/- mice showed a pattern of progressive degeneration of the retina, hippocampus and ileal mucosa, which resembled the phenotype observed in cathepsin D knockout mice. The defect of cathepsin D results in a lysosomal accumulation of ceroid lipofuscin containing the mitochondrial F1F0 ATPase subunit c. In immunohistochemistry and Western blot analysis, we found that the subunit c was heavily accumulated in the lysosome of Clcn3-/- mice. Furthermore, we detected an elevation in the endosomal pH of the Clcn3-/- mice.
CONCLUSIONS
These results indicated that the neurodegeneration observed in the Clcn3-/- mice was caused by an abnormality in the machinery which degrades the cellular protein and was associated with the phenotype of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL). The elevated endosomal pH could be an important factor in the pathogenesis of NCL.
Publication
Journal: Journal of General Physiology
January/17/2010
Abstract
Action potential (AP) excitation requires a transient dominance of depolarizing membrane currents over the repolarizing membrane currents that stabilize the resting membrane potential. Such stabilizing currents, in turn, depend on passive membrane conductance (G(m)), which in skeletal muscle fibers covers membrane conductances for K(+) (G(K)) and Cl(-) (G(Cl)). Myotonic disorders and studies with metabolically poisoned muscle have revealed capacities of G(K) and G(Cl) to inversely interfere with muscle excitability. However, whether regulation of G(K) and G(Cl) occur in AP-firing muscle under normal physiological conditions is unknown. This study establishes a technique that allows the determination of G(Cl) and G(K) with a temporal resolution of seconds in AP-firing muscle fibers. With this approach, we have identified and quantified a biphasic regulation of G(m) in active fast-twitch extensor digitorum longus fibers of the rat. Thus, at the onset of AP firing, a reduction in G(Cl) of approximately 70% caused G(m) to decline by approximately 55% in a manner that is well described by a single exponential function characterized by a time constant of approximately 200 APs (phase 1). When stimulation was continued beyond approximately 1,800 APs, synchronized elevations in G(K) ( approximately 14-fold) and G(Cl) ( approximately 3-fold) caused G(m) to rise sigmoidally to approximately 400% of its level before AP firing (phase 2). Phase 2 was often associated with a failure to excite APs. When AP firing was ceased during phase 2, G(m) recovered to its level before AP firing in approximately 1 min. Experiments with glibenclamide (K(ATP) channel inhibitor) and 9-anthracene carboxylic acid (ClC-1 Cl(-) channel inhibitor) revealed that the decreased G(m) during phase 1 reflected ClC-1 channel inhibition, whereas the massively elevated G(m) during phase 2 reflected synchronized openings of ClC-1 and K(ATP) channels. In conclusion, G(Cl) and G(K) are acutely regulated in AP-firing fast-twitch muscle fibers. Such regulation may contribute to the physiological control of excitability in active muscle.
Publication
Journal: Biophysical Journal
September/19/2004
Abstract
ClC chloride channels are voltage-gated transmembrane proteins that have been associated with a wide range of regulatory roles in vertebrates. To accomplish their function, they allow small inorganic anions to efficiently pass through, while blocking the passage of all other particles. Understanding the conduction mechanism of ClC has been the subject of many experimental investigations, but until now, the detailed dynamic mechanism was not known despite the availability of crystallographic structures. We investigate Cl(-) conduction by means of an all-atom molecular dynamics simulation of the ClC channel in a membrane environment. Based on our simulation results, we propose a king-of-the-hill mechanism for permeation, in which a lone ion bound to the center of the ClC pore is pushed out by a second ion that enters the pore and takes its place. Although the energy required to extract the single central ion from the pore is enormous, by resorting to this two-ion process, the largest free energy barrier for conduction is reduced to 4 kcal/mol. At the narrowest part of the pore, residues Tyr-445 and Ser-107 stabilize the central ion. There, the bound ion blocks the pore, disrupting the formation of a continuous water file that could leak protons, possibly preventing the passage of uncharged solutes.
Publication
Journal: Gene
March/2/1999
Abstract
The ortho-cleavage pathways of catechol and 3-chlorocatechol are central catabolic pathways of Pseudomonas putida that convert aromatic and chloroaromatic compounds to tricarboxylic acid (TCA)-cycle intermediates. They are encoded by the evolutionarily related catBCA and clcABD operons, respectively. Expression of the cat and clc operons requires the LysR-type transcriptional activators CatR and ClcR, and the inducer molecules cis,cis-muconate and 2-chloro-cis,cis-muconate. In addition to sequence similarities, CatR and ClcR share functional similarities which allow catR to complement clcR mutants. DNase-I footprinting, DNA bending and in vitro transcription analyses with RNA polymerase mutants indicate that CatR and ClcR activate transcription via a similar mechanism which involves interaction with the C-terminal domain of the alpha-subunit (alpha-CTD) of RNA polymerase. In vitro transcription assays with different regions of the clc promoter indicate that the ClcR dimer bound to the promoter proximal site (the activation binding site) interacts with the alpha-CTD. Gel shift assays and DNase-I footprinting have demonstrated that CatR occupies two adjacent sites proximal to the catBCA promoter in the presence of inducer and an additional binding site within the catB structural gene called the internal binding site (IBS). CatR binds the IBS with low intrinsic affinity that is increased by cooperativity in presence of the two promoter binding sites. Site-directed mutations in the IBS indicate a probable cis-acting repressor function for the IBS. The location of the IBS within the catB structural gene, the cooperativity observed in footprinting studies and phasing studies suggest that the IBS participates in the interaction of CatR with the upstream binding sites by looping out the intervening DNA. Although the core transcriptional activation mechanisms of CatR and ClcR have been conserved, nature has provided some flexibility to respond to different environmental signals in addition to the presence of inducer. Transcriptional fusion studies demonstrate that the expression from the clc promoter is repressed when the cells are grown on succinate, citrate or fumarate and that this repression is ClcR-dependent and occurs at the transcriptional level. The presence of these organic acids did not affect the expression from the cat promoter. In vitro transcription assays demonstrate that the TCA-cycle intermediate, fumarate, directly and specifically inhibits the formation of the clcA transcript. No such inhibition was observed when CatR was used as activator on either the cat or clc template. Since both the catechol and the chlorocatechol pathways feed into the TCA cycle, but only the chlorocatechol pathway is inhibited by fumarate, there is a subtle difference in the regulation of these two pathways where intracellular sensing of a TCA-cycle intermediate leads to a reduction of chloroaromatic degradation.
Publication
Journal: The American journal of physiology
March/22/1998
Abstract
In the Xenopus oocyte heterologous expression system, the electrophysiological characteristics of rabbit ClC-2 current and its contribution to volume regulation were examined. Expressed currents on oocytes were recorded with a two-electrode voltage-clamp technique. Oocyte volume was assessed by taking pictures of oocytes with a magnification of x 40. Rabbit ClC-2 currents exhibited inward rectification and had a halide anion permeability sequence of Cl->> or = Br->>) I->> or = F-. ClC-2 currents were inhibited by 5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino)benzoic acid (NPPB), diphenylamine-2-carboxylic acid (DPC), and anthracene-9-carboxylic acid (9-AC), with a potency order of NPPB>> DPC = 9-AC, but were resistant to stilbene disulfonates. These characteristics are similar to those of rat ClC-2, suggesting rabbit ClC-2 as a counterpart of rat ClC-2. During a 30-min perfusion with hyposmolar solution, current amplitude at -160 mV and oocyte diameter were compared among three groups: oocytes injected with distilled water, oocytes injected with ClC-2 cRNA, and oocytes injected with ClC-2 delta NT cRNA (an open channel mutant with NH2-terminal truncation). Maximum inward current was largest in ClC-2 delta NT-injected oocytes (-5.9 +/- 0.4 microA), followed by ClC-2-injected oocytes (-4.3 +/- 0.6 microA), and smallest in water-injected oocytes (-0.2 +/- 0.2 microA), whereas the order of increase in oocyte diameter was as follows: water-injected oocytes (9.0 +/- 0.2%)>> ClC-2-injected oocytes (5.3 +/- 0.5%)>> ClC-2 delta NT-injected oocytes (1.1 +/- 0.2%). The findings that oocyte swelling was smallest in oocytes with the largest expressed currents suggest that ClC-2 currents expressed in Xenopus oocytes appear to act for volume regulation when exposed to a hyposmolar environment.
Publication
Journal: Oral surgery, oral medicine, oral pathology, oral radiology, and endodontics
April/14/2004
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate surface cleanliness of root canal walls along post space after endodontic treatment using 2 different irrigant regimens, obturation techniques, and post space preparation for adhesive bonding.
METHODS
Forty teeth, divided into 4 groups, were instrumented, using Ni-Ti rotary files, irrigated with NaOCl or NaOCl+EDTA and obturated with cold lateral condensation (CLC) or warm vertical condensation (WVC) of gutta-percha. After post space preparation, etching, and washing procedure, canal walls were observed using a scanning electron microscope (SEM). Amount of debris, smear layer, sealer/gutta-percha remnants, and visibility of open tubules were rated.
RESULTS
Higher amounts of rough debris, large sealer/gutta-percha remnants, thick smear layer, and no visibility of tubule orifices were recorded in all the groups at apical level of post space. At middle and coronal levels areas of clean dentin, alternating with areas covered by thin smear layer, smaller debris, gutta-percha remnants, and orifices of tubules partially or totally occluded by plugs were frequently observed.
CONCLUSIONS
After endodontic treatment, obturation, and post space preparation SEM analysis of canal walls along post space shows large areas (covered by smear layer, debris, and sealer/gutta-percha remnants) not available for adhesive bonding and resin cementation of fiber posts.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Physiology
November/8/2004
Abstract
CLC-3, a member of the CLC family of chloride channels, mediates function in many cell types in the body. The multifunctional calcium-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) has been shown to activate recombinant CLC-3 stably expressed in tsA cells, a human embryonic kidney cell line derivative, and natively expressed channel protein in a human colonic tumour cell line T84. We examined the CaMKII-dependent regulation of CLC-3 in a smooth muscle cell model as well as in the human colonic tumour cell line, HT29, using whole-cell voltage clamp. In CLC-3-expressing cells, we observed the activation of a Cl(-) conductance following intracellular introduction of the isolated autonomous CaMKII into the voltage-clamped cell via the patch pipette. The CaMKII-dependent Cl(-) conductance was not observed following exposure of the cells to 1 microm autocamtide inhibitory peptide (AIP), a selective inhibitor of CaMKII. Arterial smooth muscle cells express a robust CaMKII-activated Cl(-) conductance; however, CLC-3(-/-) cells did not. The N-terminus of CLC-3, which contains a CaMKII consensus sequence, was phosphorylated by CaMKII in vitro, and mutation of the serine at position 109 (S109A) abolished the CaMKII-dependent Cl(-) conductance, indicating that this residue is important in the gating of CLC-3 at the plasma membrane.
load more...