Skeletal muscle sodium channel gating in mice deficient in myotonic dystrophy protein kinase |
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Authors: | Mounsey J P Mistry D J Ai C W Reddy S Moorman J R |
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Affiliation: | Department of Internal Medicine (Cardiovascular Division), The Cardiovascular Research Center University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA. pmounsey@virginia.edu |
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Abstract: | Myotonic dystrophy, a progressive autosomal dominant disorder, is associated with an expansion of a CTG repeat tract located in the 3'-untranslated region of a serine/threonine protein kinase, DMPK. DMPK modulates skeletal muscle Na channels in vitro, and thus we hypothesized that mice deficient in DMPK would have altered muscle Na channel gating. We measured macroscopic and single channel Na currents from cell-attached patches of skeletal myocytes from mice heterozygous (DMPK(+/-)) and homozygous (DMPK(-/-)) for DMPK loss. In DMPK(-/-) myocytes, Na current amplitude was reduced because of reduced channel number. Single channel recordings revealed Na channel reopenings, similar to the gating abnormality of human myotonic muscular dystrophy (DM), which resulted in a plateau of Na current. The gating abnormality deteriorated with increasing age. In DMPK(+/-) muscle there was reduced Na current amplitude and increased Na channel reopenings identical to those in DMPK(-/-) muscle. Thus, these mouse models of complete and partial DMPK deficiency reproduce the Na channel abnormality of the human disease, providing direct evidence that DMPK deficiency underlies the Na channel abnormality in DM. |
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