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Nav1.3 and FGF14 are primary determinants of the TTX-sensitive sodium current in mouse adrenal chromaffin cells

Authors :
Pedro L. Martinez-Espinosa
Xiao-Ming Xia
Christopher J. Lingle
Chengtao Yang
Source :
The Journal of General Physiology
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Rockefeller University Press, 2021.

Abstract

Martinez-Espinosa et al. show that FGF14 and the voltage-dependent Na+ channel Nav1.3 are the main regulators of rapidly inactivating currents and Nav channel availability in mouse adrenal chromaffin cells. Their results uncover a role for FGF14 in regulating Nav channel function.<br />Adrenal chromaffin cells (CCs) in rodents express rapidly inactivating, tetrodotoxin (TTX)-sensitive sodium channels. The resulting current has generally been attributed to Nav1.7, although a possible role for Nav1.3 has also been suggested. Nav channels in rat CCs rapidly inactivate via two independent pathways which differ in their time course of recovery. One subpopulation recovers with time constants similar to traditional fast inactivation and the other ∼10-fold slower, but both pathways can act within a single homogenous population of channels. Here, we use Nav1.3 KO mice to probe the properties and molecular components of Nav current in CCs. We find that the absence of Nav1.3 abolishes all Nav current in about half of CCs examined, while a small, fast inactivating Nav current is still observed in the rest. To probe possible molecular components underlying slow recovery from inactivation, we used mice null for fibroblast growth factor homology factor 14 (FGF14). In these cells, the slow component of recovery from fast inactivation is completely absent in most CCs, with no change in the time constant of fast recovery. The use dependence of Nav current reduction during trains of stimuli in WT cells is completely abolished in FGF14 KO mice, directly demonstrating a role for slow recovery from inactivation in determining Nav current availability. Our results indicate that FGF14-mediated inactivation is the major determinant defining use-dependent changes in Nav availability in CCs. These results establish that Nav1.3, like other Nav isoforms, can also partner with FGF subunits, strongly regulating Nav channel function.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15407748 and 00221295
Volume :
153
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of General Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....273b4c101367f04e9e63711a2a96b40d