Stretch-activated cation channels in skeletal muscle myotubes from sarcoglycan-deficient hamsters

Author:

Nakamura Tomoe Y.12,Iwata Yuko1,Sampaolesi Maurilio1,Hanada Hironori1,Saito Naohiro3,Artman Michael24,Coetzee William A.24,Shigekawa Munekazu1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular Physiology, National Cardiovascular Center Research Institute, Suita, Osaka 565-8565;

2. Pediatric Cardiology and

3. Research Institute, Kowa Company, Higashimurayama, Tokyo 189-0022, Japan; and

4. Physiology and Neurosciences, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York 10016

Abstract

Deficiency of δ-sarcoglycan (δ-SG), a component of the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex, causes cardiomyopathy and skeletal muscle dystrophy in Bio14.6 hamsters. Using cultured myotubes prepared from skeletal muscle of normal and Bio14.6 hamsters (J2N-k strain), we investigated the possibility that the δ-SG deficiency may lead to alterations in ionic conductances, which may ultimately lead to myocyte damage. In cell-attached patches (with Ba2+ as the charge carrier), an ∼20-pS channel was observed in both control and Bio14.6 myotubes. This channel is also permeable to K+ and Na+ but not to Cl. Channel activity was increased by pressure-induced stretch and was reduced by GdCl3 (>5 μM). The basal open probability of this channel was fourfold higher in Bio14.6 myotubes, with longer open and shorter closed times. This was mimicked by depolymerization of the actin cytoskeleton. In intact Bio14.6 myotubes, the unidirectional basal Ca2+ influx was enhanced compared with control. This Ca2+ influx was sensitive to GdCl3, signifying that stretch-activated cation channels may have been responsible for Ca2+ influx in Bio14.6 hamster myotubes. These results suggest a possible mechanism by which cell damage might occur in this animal model of muscular dystrophy.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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