Trafficking of Cardiac Ion Channels


Book Description

Protein sorting and trafficking are regulated by well-conserved mechanisms. These allow a distinctive set of resident proteins to be present in the correct subcellular organelle, which is required for proper cell functioning. Voltage-gated ion channels, as responsible for cardiomyocyte action potential, must be properly localized. They participate in cell excitability and electrical coupling, ensuring uninterrupted and rhythmic heart beating. Ion channel complexes comprise one or more pore-forming α subunits, associated β subunits, and additional proteins. Channel localization and function are regulated by the β subunits and associated proteins, such as cytoskeletal elements, cell-adhesion molecules, and adaptors. These influence protein targeting, anchoring, and retention in specific surface domains along the cardiomyocyte sarcolemma, such as intercalated discs, T-tubules, or the lateral membrane. Alterations in ion channel trafficking are the cause of channelopathies associated with inherited arrhythmias leading to sudden death. An outstanding question is how these molecular alterations lead to disease. In this volume, scientists share their vision to understand how cardiac ion channel trafficking is regulated and how it may become altered, leading to channelopathies that often turn into deadly arrhythmias. Data generated can be translated to a clinical context, hopefully turning into approaches to help prevention and treatment, which is of utmost importance, both medically and socially.




Ion Channel Trafficking and Cardiac Arrhythmias


Book Description

A well-adjusted expression of cardiac ion channels at the sarcolemma is of crucial importance for normal action potential formation and thus cardiac function. The cellular processes that transport channel proteins from the endoplasmic reticulum towards specified regions on the sarcolemmal membrane, and subsequently take them from the plasma membrane to the protein degradation machinery are commonly known as trafficking. The research field recognizes that aberrant channel trafficking stands at the basis of many congenital and acquired arrhythmias. The collection of papers in this eBook provides state-of-the-art insight into the world of ion channel trafficking research.




Ion Channel Trafficking and Cardiac Arrhythmias


Book Description

A well-adjusted expression of cardiac ion channels at the sarcolemma is of crucial importance for normal action potential formation and thus cardiac function. The cellular processes that transport channel proteins from the endoplasmic reticulum towards specified regions on the sarcolemmal membrane, and subsequently take them from the plasma membrane to the protein degradation machinery are commonly known as trafficking. The research field recognizes that aberrant channel trafficking stands at the basis of many congenital and acquired arrhythmias. The collection of papers in this eBook provides state-of-the-art insight into the world of ion channel trafficking research.




Insights Into Assembly and Trafficking of the Cardiac Small-conductance, Calcium-activated Potassium Channel (SK2)


Book Description

Proper mechanical activity of the heart is delicately interrelated with its timely electrical activation. It is the underlying ionic currents in each cell that lead to electrical activity, manifested as the cardiac action potential. In order to have a normal cardiac action potential, a specific number of functional ion channels need to be present on the plasma membrane. Defects in channel assembly or trafficking may lead to abnormalities in the corresponding ionic currents and shape of the action potential, which may lead to cardiac arrhythmias. The most prominent type of arrhythmia is atrial fibrillation (AF), which is associated with a significant increase in the risk of stroke. The incidence of AF is projected to increase three-fold by 2050 and therapeutic options for AF remain suboptimal. Current pharmacological therapies are associated with extracardiac toxicity while catheter ablation is invasive and can be associated with serious adverse events.Our group, as well as others, have previously documented the expression of several isoforms of small-conductance Ca2+ -activated K+ (SK) channels in human and mouse atrial myocytes. SK channels mediate the repolarization phase of the atrial action potential, with little effect on ventricular excitation. Indeed, we have previously documented that SK2 channel knock-out mice are prone to the development of AF. On the other hand, a recent study by Diness JG, et al. suggests that inhibition of Ca2+ activated K+ current may prevent AF. Taken together, these studies underpin the importance of these channels in atria and their potential to serve as a future therapeutic target for AF. Three isoforms of SK channel subunits (SK1, SK2 and SK3) are found to be expressed with SK2 as the most predominant isotype. In the first portion (CHAPTER 2) of this dissertation, I investigate the heteromultimeric formation and the domain necessary for the assembly of three SK channel subunits (SK1-SK3). My biochemical and functional data provides evidence for the formation of heteromultimeric complexes among different SK channel subunits in atrial myocytes. Using an innovative patch-clamp technique, applied here for the first time in cardiac myocytes, I show reduction of I[K,Ca] via inhibition of heteromultimerization. Since SK channels are predominantly expressed in atrial myocytes, specific ligands of the different isoforms of SK channel subunits may offer a unique therapeutic opportunity to directly modify atrial cells without interfering with ventricular myocytes. In addition to having proper subunit assembly and channel formation, there need to be a precise number of channels at specific locations on the plasma membrane. This means that there must be highly regulated sorting and trafficking pathways for ion channels. The importance of these processes is underscored by a number of disease conditions that involve mishandled trafficking of membrane proteins. It is important to note that the complete intracellular trafficking pathways are not known for any single channel. In the subsequent chapters, I identify [alpha]-actinin2 and Filamin A molecules, as important regulators of SK2 channel trafficking. Using various functional methods, including total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIRF-M), I show SK2 channel interacts with FLNA to increase number of channels on the sarcolemma through increasing rate of recycling via recycling endosomes. I also show increased forward trafficking of SK2 as a result of interaction with [alpha]-actinin2 via an early endosomal-mediated trafficking pathway. Insight into the trafficking of SK2 channels may serve as a novel approach to modify SK2 current and atrial excitability without interfering with ventricular activity. The work done advances a new frontier towards understanding membrane localization of ion channels in cardiac muscle and other excitable cells. The demonstration of the mechanisms for targeting, anchoring and cell surface expression of the channel would help further understanding the ion channel function.




Voltage Gated Sodium Channels


Book Description

A number of techniques to study ion channels have been developed since the electrical basis of excitability was first discovered. Ion channel biophysicists have at their disposal a rich and ever-growing array of instruments and reagents to explore the biophysical and structural basis of sodium channel behavior. Armed with these tools, researchers have made increasingly dramatic discoveries about sodium channels, culminating most recently in crystal structures of voltage-gated sodium channels from bacteria. These structures, along with those from other channels, give unprecedented insight into the structural basis of sodium channel function. This volume of the Handbook of Experimental Pharmacology will explore sodium channels from the perspectives of their biophysical behavior, their structure, the drugs and toxins with which they are known to interact, acquired and inherited diseases that affect sodium channels and the techniques with which their biophysical and structural properties are studied.




Handbook of Ion Channels


Book Description

The New Benchmark for Understanding the Latest Developments of Ion Channels Ion channels control the electrical properties of neurons and cardiac cells, mediate the detection and response to sensory stimuli, and regulate the response to physical stimuli. They can often interact with the cellular environment due to their location at the surface of cells. In nonexcitable tissues, they also help regulate basic salt balance critical for homeostasis. All of these features make ion channels important targets for pharmaceuticals. Handbook of Ion Channels illustrates the fundamental importance of these membrane proteins to human health and disease. Renowned researchers from around the world introduce the technical aspects of ion channel research, provide a modern guide to the properties of major ion channels, and present powerful methods for modeling ion channel diseases and performing clinical trials for ion channel drugs. Conveniently divided into five parts, the handbook first describes the basic concepts of permeation and gating mechanisms, balancing classic theories and the latest developments. The second part covers the principles and practical issues of both traditional and new ion channel techniques and their applications to channel research. The third part organizes the material to follow the superfamilies of ion channels. This part focuses on the classification, properties, gating mechanisms, function, and pharmacology of established and novel channel types. The fourth part addresses ion channel regulation as well as trafficking and distribution. The final part examines several ion channel-related diseases, discussing genetics, mechanisms, and pharmaceutical advances.




Structure, Function, and Modulation of Neuronal Voltage-Gated Ion Channels


Book Description

This book discusses voltage-gated ion channels and their importance in drug discovery and development. The book includes reviews of the channel genome, the physiological bases of targeting ion channels in disease, the unique technologies developed for ion channel drug discovery, and the increasingly important role of ion channel screening in cardiac risk assessment. It provides an important reference for research scientists and drug discovery companies.




Textbook of Ion Channels


Book Description

The Textbook of Ion Channels is a set of three volumes providing a wide-ranging reference source on ion channels for students, instructors, and researchers. Ion channels are membrane proteins that control the electrical properties of neurons and cardiac cells, mediate the detection and response to sensory stimuli like light, sound, odor, and taste, and regulate the response to physical stimuli like temperature and pressure. In non-excitable tissues, ion channels are instrumental for the regulation of basic salt balance that is critical for homeostasis. Ion channels are located at the surface membrane of cells, giving them the unique ability to communicate with the environment, as well as the membrane of intracellular organelles, allowing them to regulate internal homeostasis. Ion channels are fundamentally important for human health and diseases, and are important targets for pharmaceuticals in mental illness, heart disease, anesthesia, pain and other clinical applications. The modern methods used in their study are powerful and diverse, ranging from single ion-channel measurement techniques to models of ion channel diseases in animals, and human clinical trials for ion channel drugs. All three volumes give the reader an introduction to fundamental concepts needed to understand the mechanism of ion channels, a guide to the technical aspects of ion channel research, offer a modern guide to the properties of major ion channel families, and include coverage of key examples of regulatory, physiological, and disease roles for ion channels.




Novel Approaches to Target Sodium Channel Trafficking in Cardiomyocytes


Book Description

"The cardiac sodium channel Nav1.5, encoded by the SCN5A gene, plays a crucial role in the electrical activity of the heart. Nav1.5 dysfunction can disrupt this process, leading to arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death. Current pharmacological treatments are limited and restoring Nav1.5 function remains a challenge. We investigated new potential strategies aimed at restoring Nav1.5 dysfunction. In particular, the thesis investigates trafficking pathways as novel therapeutic targets, while exploring their remodeling in the setting of pathological conditions as well as their modulatory effect on Nav1.5 subcellular (re)distribution. Part I focuses on the therapeutic potential of mexiletine in inherited primary electrical disorders. We demonstrated, for the first time in a human model of SCN5A overlap syndrome, the beneficial effects of chronic treatment with therapeutic concentrations of mexiletine. Mechanistically, we confirmed that chronic mexiletine can increase sodium current (INa) by enhancing Nav1.5 membrane localization, in line with its proposed mechanism as a pharmacological chaperone. Part II focuses on inherited disorders affecting Nav1.5-interacting proteins associated with reduced INa, assessing the therapeutic potential of modulating MT dynamics. Using mouse models of Duchenne muscular dystrophy and arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy we studied the impact of reducing MT detyrosination on the (re)distribution of Nav1.5 clusters within the subcellular domains of CMs and showed its beneficial effects on INa density. Overall, findings presented in this thesis have unravelled (part of) the intricate mechanisms involved in Nav1.5 trafficking and offer exciting prospects for future development of targete therapies aimed at preventing arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death."--




Ion Channels: Channel Chemical Biology, Engineering, and Physiological Function


Book Description

Ion Channels, Part C, Volume 653 in the Methods in Enzymology series, highlights new advances in the field with this new volume presenting interesting chapters on a variety of topics, including Nonsense suppression in ion channels, Engineering Ion Channels Using Protein Trans-splicing, Probing Ion Channel Neighborhoods Using APEX, STX based probes for NaVs, ANAP: a versatile, fluorescent probe of ion channel gating and regulation, High Throughput Screens for Small Molecule Ion Channel Modulators, Using toxins to study ion channels, Re/de-constructing ubiquitin regulation of ion channels, Tethered Peptide Toxins for Ion Channels, Voltage-Sensing Phosphatase Molecular Engineering, and more. Additional chapters cover Engineering excitable cells, Stretch and Poke Stimulation of Mechanically-Activated Ion Channels, Optical Control of STIM Channels, High Throughput Electrophysiological Evaluation of Mutant Ion Channels, Evaluating BEST1 Mutations in RPE Stem Cells, Long Read Transcript Profiling of Ion Channel Splice Variants, Permeation of Connexin Channels, Ratiometric pH indicator for melanosomes and lysosomes, and Ion channels in the epithelial cells of the choroid plexus. Provides the authority and expertise of leading contributors from an international board of authors Presents the latest release in the Methods in Enzymology series