Log In


Create account or
Reset password
Subscription options
  • Purchase this article...
  • Price: $5
    Purchasing this article will give you full access for the calendar year.
  • Purchase Site Pass...
  • Price: $10
    This will give you access to every article on the site for 24 hours.
  • Online subscription...
  • Price: $95
    Individual online subscriptions give you full online access for the calendar year.
  • Print subscription...
  • Price: $250*
    Individual print subscriptions give you the print journal and full online access for the year.
    *Price outside U.S. and Canada: $475.
Continue reading with a subscription.
A subscription is required for you to read this article in full. If you are a subscriber, you may log in to continue reading.
If you are at an institution or library and believe you should have access, please check with your librarian or administrator (more information).
Problems? Please try these troubleshooting tips.

Commentary

Sodium channels gone wild: resurgent current from neuronal and muscle channelopathies

Stephen C. Cannon, Bruce P. Bean

Published January 4, 2010

Voltage-dependent sodium channels are the central players in the excitability of neurons, cardiac muscle, and skeletal muscle. Hundreds of mutations in sodium channels have been associated with human disease, particularly genetic forms of epilepsy, arrhythmias, myotonia, and periodic paralysis. In this issue of the JCI, Jarecki and colleagues present evidence suggesting that many such mutations alter the gating of sodium channels to produce resurgent sodium current, an unusual form of gating in which sodium channels reopen following an action potential, thus promoting the firing of another action potential (see the related article beginning on page 369). The results of this study suggest a widespread pathophysiological role for this mechanism, previously described to occur normally in only a few types of neurons.

Preview pages

Reset
Page preview
81 Page 80 Back