The response of NaV1.3 sodium channels to ramp stimuli: multiple components and mechanisms

Author:

Estacion Mark123,Waxman Stephen G.123

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut;

2. Center for Neuroscience and Regeneration Research, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut; and

3. Rehabilitation Research Center, Veterans Affairs Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, Connecticut

Abstract

NaV1.3 voltage-gated sodium channels have been shown to be expressed at increased levels within axotomized dorsal root ganglion neurons and within injured axons within neuromas and have been implicated in neuropathic pain. Like a number of other sodium channel isoforms, NaV1.3 channels produce a robust response to slow ramplike stimuli. Here we show that the response of NaV1.3 to ramp stimuli consists of two components: an early component, dependent upon ramp rate, that corresponds to a window current that is dependent upon closed-state inactivation; and a second component at more depolarized potentials that is correlated with persistent current which is detected for many tens of milliseconds after the start of a depolarizing pulse. We also assessed the K354Q NaV1.3 epilepsy-associated mutant channel, which is known to display an enhanced persistent current and demonstrate a strong correlation with the second component of the ramp response. Our results show that a single sodium channel isoform can produce a ramp response with multiple components, reflecting multiple mechanisms, and suggest that the upregulated expression of NaV1.3 in axotomized dorsal root ganglion neurons and enhanced ramp current in K354Q mutant channels can contribute in several ways to hyperexcitability and abnormal spontaneous firing that contribute to hyperexcitability disorders, such as epilepsy and neuropathic pain.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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