A sodium channel defect in hyperkalemic periodic paralysis: potassium-induced failure of inactivation

SC Cannon, RH Brown Jr, DP Corey - Neuron, 1991 - cell.com
SC Cannon, RH Brown Jr, DP Corey
Neuron, 1991cell.com
Hyperkalemic periodic analysis (HPP) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by
episodic weakness lasting minutes to days in association with a mild elevation in serum I<+.
In vitro measurements of whole-cell currents in HPP muscle have demonstrated a persistent,
tetrodotoxin-sensitive Na+ current, and we have recently shown by linkage analysis that the
Na+ channel a subunit gene may contain the HPP mutation. In this study, we have made
patch-clamp recordings from cultured HPP myotubes and found a defect in the normal …
Summary
Hyperkalemic periodic analysis (HPP) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by episodic weakness lasting minutes to days in association with a mild elevation in serum I<+. In vitro measurements of whole-cell currents in HPP muscle have demonstrated a persistent, tetrodotoxin-sensitive Na+ current, and we have recently shown by linkage analysis that the Na+ channel a subunit gene may contain the HPP mutation. In this study, we have made patch-clamp recordings from cultured HPP myotubes and found a defect in the normal voltage-dependent inactivation of Na+ channels. Moderate elevation of extracellular K+ favors an aberrant gating mode in a small fraction of the channels that is characterized by persistent reopenings and prolonged dwell times in the open state. The Na+ current, through noninactivating channels, may cause the skeletal muscle weakness in HPP by depolarizing the cell, thereby inactivating normal Na+ channels, which are then unable to generate an action potential. Thus the dominant expression of HPP is manifest by inactivation of the wild-type Na+ channel through the influence of the mutant gene product on membrane voltage.
cell.com