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Publication : Altered calcium channel currents in Purkinje cells of the neurological mutant mouse leaner.

First Author  Lorenzon NM Year  1998
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  18
Issue  12 Pages  4482-9
PubMed ID  9614225 Mgi Jnum  J:47984
Mgi Id  MGI:1261389 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.18-12-04482.1998
Citation  Lorenzon NM, et al. (1998) Altered calcium channel currents in Purkinje cells of the neurological mutant mouse leaner. J Neurosci 18(12):4482-9
abstractText  Mutations of the alpha(1A) calcium channel subunit have been shown to cause such human neurological diseases as familial hemiplegic migraine, episodic ataxia-2, and spinocerebellar ataxia 6 and also to cause the murine neurological phenotypes of tottering and leaner. The leaner phenotype is recessive and characterized by ataxia with cortical spike and wave discharges (similar to absence epilepsy in humans) and a gradual degeneration of cerebellar Purkinje and granule cells. The mutation responsible is a single-base substitution that produces truncation of the normal open reading frame beyond repeat IV and expression of a novel C-terminal sequence. Here, we have used whole-cell recordings to determine whether the leaner mutation alters calcium channel currents in cerebellar Purkinje cells, both because these cells are profoundly affected in leaner mice and because they normally express high levels of alpha(1A). In Purkinje cells from normal mice, 82% of the whole-cell current was blocked by 100 nM omega-agatoxin-IVA. In Purkinje cells from homozygous leaner mice, this omega-agatoxin-IVA- sensitive current was 65% smaller than in control cells. Although attenuated, the omega-agatoxin-IVA-sensitive current in homozygous leaner cells had properties indistinguishable from that of normal Purkinje neurons. Additionally, the omega-agatoxin-IVA-insensitive current was unaffected in homozygous leaner mice. Thus, the leaner mutation selectively reduces P-type currents in Purkinje cells, and the alpha(1A) subunit and P-type current appear to be essential for normal cerebellar function.
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