[HTML][HTML] Two pacemaker channels from human heart with profoundly different activation kinetics

A Ludwig, X Zong, J Stieber, R Hullin, F Hofmann… - The EMBO …, 1999 - embopress.org
A Ludwig, X Zong, J Stieber, R Hullin, F Hofmann, M Biel
The EMBO journal, 1999embopress.org
Cardiac pacemaking is produced by the slow diastolic depolarization phase of the action
potential. The hyperpolarization-activated cation current (I f) forms an important part of the
pacemaker depolarization and consists of two kinetic components (fast and slow). Recently,
three full-length cDNAs encoding hyperpolarization-activated and cyclic nucleotide-gated
cation channels (HCN1–3) have been cloned from mouse brain. To elucidate the molecular
identity of cardiac pacemaker channels, we screened a human heart cDNA library using a …
Cardiac pacemaking is produced by the slow diastolic depolarization phase of the action potential. The hyperpolarization-activated cation current (I f) forms an important part of the pacemaker depolarization and consists of two kinetic components (fast and slow). Recently, three full-length cDNAs encoding hyperpolarization-activated and cyclic nucleotide-gated cation channels (HCN1–3) have been cloned from mouse brain. To elucidate the molecular identity of cardiac pacemaker channels, we screened a human heart cDNA library using a highly conserved neuronal HCN channel segment and identified two cDNAs encoding HCN channels. The hHCN2 cDNA codes for a protein of 889 amino acids. The HCN2 gene is localized on human chromosome 19p13. 3 and contains eight exons spanning∼ 27 kb. The second cDNA, designated hHCN4, codes for a protein of 1203 amino acids. Northern blot and PCR analyses showed that both hHCN2 and hHCN4 are expressed in heart ventricle and atrium. When expressed in HEK 293 cells, either cDNA gives rise to hyperpolarization-activated cation currents with the hallmark features of native I f. hHCN2 and hHCN4 currents differ profoundly from each other in their activation kinetics, being fast and slow, respectively. We thus conclude that hHCN2 and hHCN4 may underlie the fast and slow component of cardiac I f, respectively.
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