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Vol. 282, Issue 1, 172-180, 1997
Department of Physiology, Loyola University Medical Center, Maywood, Illinois
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Abstract |
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The mechanisms of Pb++ block and unblock of L-type
Ca++ channel currents were measured using ventricular
myocytes or the cloned channel. The cloned channel was expressed in
either Xenopus laevis oocytes or human embryonic kidney
cells (HEK 293, stable transfectants). The threshold for
Pb++ block was 1 nM, and the apparent IC50
value was 152 nM in oocytes and 169 nM in HEK 293 cells.
Pb++ block was dependent on the composition of the external
recording solution but not dependent on the subunit composition of the
channel. Pb++ block was voltage dependent, with little
block observed at negative test potentials using low concentrations of
Pb++. Strong depolarizations (>+100 mV) reversed
Pb++ block, allowing measurement of reblock kinetics.
Reblock was fast (
= 11 msec), as measured during a +20-mV test
pulse. Simple washout did not completely reverse Pb++
block, especially after exposure to concentrations of >100 nM. Full
recovery could only be observed after treatment with heavy metal
antidotes such as meso-2,3-dimercaptosuccinic acid,
2,3-dimercapto-1-propanesulfonic acid and EDTA. These results suggest
that Pb++ blocks voltage-gated Ca++ channels by
two mechanisms and that full reversal of lead block requires chelator
treatment.
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Introduction |
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Lead continues to
be an environmental hazard, contaminating food, air and water supplies
(Davis et al., 1993
). This raises public concern because
what were once considered safe levels have been proved to cause
neurotoxicity, especially in children (Angle, 1993
). The threshold for
toxicity is now considered to be when blood levels are > 10 µg/dl (0.5 µM) (Cory-Slechta, 1995
; Davis et al., 1993
).
Lead toxicity can be successfully treated with chelators such as EDTA,
DMSA and DMPS (Angle, 1993
; Aposhian, 1983
); DMSA appears to be the
drug of choice due to its effectiveness and lower toxicity (Aposhian
et al., 1995
; Graziano et al., 1992
).
The mechanism or mechanisms by which Pb++ causes
neurotoxicity are poorly understood. Pb++ does not
participate in redox reactions, but it can form complexes with
sulfhydryl, amine and carboxyl groups, thereby allowing for high-affinity binding to proteins (Goering, 1993
). Pb++ can
bind to the metal binding sites of metallothioneins and to proteins
with E-F hand motifs such as calmodulin. In many cases, Pb++ can mimic the action of Ca++ ;
Pb++ can activate Ca++ -dependent protein
kinase C (Markovac and Goldstein, 1988
), troponin C (Chao et
al., 1990
) and Ca++ -activated K+ channels
(Oortgiesen et al., 1993
). Pb++ can also act as
an antagonist, blocking Ca++ permeation through
voltage-gated Ca++ channels. In contrast, Pb++
does not block Na+ or K+ channels
(Büsselberg et al., 1991
; Reuveny and Narahashi,
1991
). Because Ca++ is a key second messenger, it seems
likely that Pb++ causes neurotoxicity by disrupting
Ca++ homeostasis (Simons, 1993
).
Lead block of voltage-gated Ca++ channels has been studied
in a number of cell types (for a review, see Audesirk, 1993
).
Voltage-gated Ca++ channels are multisubunit complexes
(Perez-Reyes and Schneider, 1994
). The alpha-1 subunit
contains the pore, the voltage-sensor, and most of the drug binding
sites. The genes for six alpha-1 subunits have been cloned.
On the basis of sequence identity, these alpha-1 subunits
can be divided into two subfamilies: (1) L-type, alpha-1S
(skeletal), alpha-1C (cardiac and brain) and alpha-1D (neuroendocrine); and (2) non-L-type,
alpha-1A (brain P/Q-type), alpha-1B (brain
N-type) and alpha-1E (brain R-type). Purification studies
have shown that skeletal and cardiac muscle L-type and neuronal N-type
channels also possess common alpha-2-delta subunits and a specific beta subunit. Four beta
subunit genes have been cloned (Perez-Reyes and Schneider, 1994
).
Coexpression studies have shown that beta subunits can
increase the functional expression of alpha-1 and modulate
the biophysical properties of the channel (Perez-Reyes and Schneider,
1994
). Coexpression with alpha-2-delta also
increases functional expression and modifies the pharmacological
properties of the cloned channel (Mikami et al., 1989
;
Shistik et al., 1995
; Wei et al., 1995
).
Previous studies have established that voltage-gated Ca++
channels can be blocked by low (µM) concentrations of
Pb++. Washout-resistant block, termed "irreversible
inhibition" (Audesirk, 1993
), has been noted before but not studied
in detail. Because Ca++ channels are highly regulated by
protein kinases and Pb++ is capable of activating protein
kinase C at very low concentrations (nM), it is possible that the
observed block was not due to a direct effect of Pb++ on
the channel. Because the cloned L-type Ca++ channel is not
regulated by protein kinases (Zong et al., 1995
), we were
able to study the direct effects of Pb++ on
Ca++ channel activity. We describe the toxicological effect
of Pb++ on L-type Ca++ channels,
pharmacological relief of block and some biophysical properties of
Pb++ block and unblock and show that there are two types of
block: one is reversed by washing with lead-free solutions, whereas the second type requires treatment with lead antidotes such as DMSA or
EDTA.
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Materials and Methods |
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Materials.
High purity lead acetate (99.999%) was purchased
from Aldrich Chemical Co. (Milwaukee, WI). It was dissolved in water at
a concentration of 10 mM. Serial dilutions were freshly prepared and
then diluted 1:100 in the bath solution to give the indicated concentration. In contrast to lead chloride (Matthews et
al., 1993
), no white precipitate was observed in any of the lead
acetate solutions. The concentration of free Pb++ in the
bath solution was not determined, but it may either be lower than
expected due to binding to ligands in the bath solution or higher due
to Pb++ contamination of the reagents (Matthews et
al., 1993
; Simons, 1993
). All other chemicals were purchased from
Aldrich or Sigma (St. Louis, MO).
Oocyte expression. Capped cRNAs were synthesized in vitro using T7 RNA polymerase and the mMESSAGE mMACHINE kit (Ambion, Austin, TX). The concentration of cRNA was measured spectrophotometrically. The production of full-length cRNA transcripts was verified after electrophoretic separation on a denaturing agarose gel.
Oocytes were prepared from the South African clawed frog Xenopus laevis (Nasco, Fort Atkinson, WI) using standard techniques. Briefly, ovarian lobes were removed surgically from the frog. The lobes were torn into small clusters and then transferred into Ca++ -free OR solution composed of 82.5 mM NaCl, 2.5 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl2 and 5 mM HEPES, pH 7.6. Defolliculation was performed by shaking in Ca++ -free OR solution containing 2 mg/ml collagenase (Type 1A, Sigma). Healthy defolliculated oocytes (stage V-VI) were manually selected and then allowed to recover (>2 hr) in SOS medium (100 mM NaCl, 2 mM KCl, 1.8 mM CaCl2, 1 mM MgCl2, 5 mM HEPES, pH 7.6, 2.5 mM pyruvic acid and 50 µg/ml gentamicin). Each oocyte was injected with 50 nl of cRNA (5 ng for alpha-1, 2.5 ng for beta and 2.5 ng for alpha-2) diluted in 0.1 M KCl or water. Injection was performed using a Drummond Nanoject pipette injector (Parkway, PA) attached to a Narashige micromanipulator (Tokyo, Japan) under a dissecting microscope. To express alpha-1 alone, the amount of the cRNA was increased to 15 ng/oocyte. Oocytes were incubated at 19°C with SOS medium in glass petri dishes and were ready for electrophysiological recording after 2 days. L-type Ca++ channel currents were stable for
2 weeks.
Electrophysiological analysis of injected oocytes.
Oocytes
were voltage-clamped using a two-microelectrode voltage-clamp amplifier
(OC-725B, Warner Instrument Corp., Hampden, CT). Pipettes were made
from glass capillaries (#6010, A-M Systems, Everett, WA), using a Model
P-97 Flaming-Brown pipette puller (Sutter Instrument Co., Novato, CA).
Voltage and current electrodes (1.8-2.6-M
tip resistance) were
filled with 3 M KCl. The oocytes were impaled in SOS solution, and then
the bath solution was exchanged with a solution of 10 mM
Ba(OH)2, 80 mM NaOH, 1 mM KOH and 5 mM HEPES, adjusted to
pH 7.4 with methanesulfonate (Lory et al., 1990
). Because
methanesulfonic acid may bind Pb++, experiments were
repeated using 10 mM BaCl2, 90 mM NaCl, 2 mM KCl and 5 mM
HEPES, pH 7.4. Similar results were obtained, and the data were pooled.
Data were acquired at 2000 Hz using the pCLAMP system (Digidata 1200 and pCLAMP 6.0, Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA) and filtered at 400 or 1000 Hz (#902 Frequency Devices, Haverhill, MA).
Generation of a stably transfected HEK 293 cell.
The cDNA
insert encoding the alpha-1 subunit was subcloned into the
expression vector pRC/CMV (InVitrogen, San Diego, CA). This vector
contains a neomycin resistance gene, which allows for selection of
transfected cells with geneticin (G418; GIBCO, Grand Island, NY). HEK
293 cells (1 × 106 cells in a 100-mm culture dish)
were transfected with 10 µg of alpha-1 cDNA using
lipofectamine (GIBCO). At 24 hr after transfection, the cells were
suspended in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with
G418 (0.4 g/L) and fetal bovine serum (10%). Individual colonies were
isolated and plated onto 24-well plates. The clones were expanded and
then analyzed for alpha-1 protein expression using
dihydropyridine binding assays with the ligand (+)-[3H]PN200-110 (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL).
Single-point assays were done as described previously
(Perez-Reyes et al., 1992
). Cell clone A20, which expressed
100 fmol of binding sites/mg of membrane protein, was selected for
further study. Results were also obtained using cell clone LCa10; this
cell line is a subclone of HCa
1
2-2
(Perez-Reyes et al., 1994
). During passage in culture, HCa
1
2-2 lost expression of
beta-2. A single cell was recloned, expanded and
characterized. Polymerase chain reaction using beta-specific primers confirmed the lack of beta-2 mRNA expression.
Results using the two alpha-1-transfected cell lines were
identical and have been pooled.
Electrophysiological analysis of HEK 293-transfected cells.
HEK 293 cells were plated onto coverslips and cultured for
1 to 5 days before electrophysiological studies. Cells were grown in
Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 0.4 g/L G418,
10% fetal bovine serum, 100 units/ml penicillin and 100 µg/ml
streptomycin. To minimize dialysis of the cell and Ca++
channel rundown, we used the perforated patch technique with amphotericin B (Rae et al., 1991
). Amphotericin B was
freshly dissolved (30 mg/ml) in dimethylsulfoxide. This stock was
diluted to 0.24 mg/ml into a typical internal pipette solution that
contained 55 mM CsCl, 75 mM CsSO4, 10 mM MgCl2,
0.1 mM EGTA and 10 mM HEPES, pH adjusted to 7.2 with CsOH (Perez-Reyes
et al., 1994
). Pipette tips were briefly dipped into this
internal solution and then backfilled with the same solution plus
amphotericin B. The external Tyrode solution contained 140 mM NaCl, 6 mM KCl, 2 mM CaCl2, 10 mM glucose and 5 mM HEPES, pH 7.4. The recording solution contained 10 mM BaCl2 solution (or 2 mM CaCl2 for ventricular myocytes), 140 mM TEA chloride, 5 mM CsCl, 1 mM MgCl2, 5 mM glucose and 10 mM HEPES, pH
adjusted to 7.4 with TEA-OH (Perez-Reyes et al., 1994
).
Preliminary experiments used the following recording solution: 10 mM
BaCl2, 130 mM aspartic acid, 130 mM NMG, 10 mM
aminopyridine, 1 mM MgCl2, 10 mM glucose and 10 mM HEPES,
pH adjusted to 7.3 with aspartic acid (de Leon et al.,
1995
).
. After gigaseal
formation, perforation of the patch was monitored by following the
increase in size of a capacitative transient induced by a 5-mV test
pulse. The amplitude of this transient was used to calculate access
resistance as previously described (Rae et al., 1991
.
During this period, the external solution was replaced with 10 mM
BaCl2 solution. Cell capacitance was measured by
integrating the charging current during a 10-mV hyperpolarizing pulse
(holding potential,
80 mV). Data were not included from experiments
in which the access resistance was >10 M
or when cells had
processes or connections to other cells.
Rat ventricular myocytes were prepared as described previously (Lew
et al., 1991Data analysis. All experiments began by recording of control currents (~5 min). Only cells with stable currents were used for analysis. All test compounds were diluted in external solution and then perfused into the bath at a rate of 2 to 4 ml/min. The perfusion rate varied between experiments but was similar between solutions in any single experiment. The bath chamber had a volume of .15 ml. The bath was continuously perfused throughout the experiment. Experiments were conducted at room temperature, 22° to 24°C.
The effect of lead was calculated by averaging the plateau current from three or more traces taken after steady-state block had been achieved. Current amplitudes and exponential fits were calculated using the pCLAMP software program Clampfit (Axon Instruments). The average data were fit using a sigmoidal dose-response equation (bottom fixed at 0) using Prism software (GraphPAD, San Diego, CA). The IC50 values were calculated from these fits. Pooled data are expressed as mean ± S.E.M. Statistical significance was evaluated with a paired Student's t test (SigmaPlot, Jandel Scientific, San Rafael, CA).| |
Results |
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Figure 1 shows current traces recorded from cells
before and after exposure to 1 and 10 µM Pb++ and then
after washout. Inward Ca++ currents in rat ventricular
myocytes are blocked by low concentrations of Pb++ (fig.
1A). This current is through L-type Ca++ channels (Bean,
1989
). The minimum subunit composition of these channels is
alpha-1C, alpha-2 and beta-2
(Perez-Reyes and Schneider, 1994
). Expression of the cloned
alpha-1C subunit alone induces dihydropyridine-sensitive
currents that can be measured with Ba++ as the charge
carrier (Mikami et al., 1989
). Pb++ also blocks
inward Ba++ currents through channels composed of
alpha-1C alone, expressed in either X. laevis
oocytes (fig. 1B) or HEK 293 cells (fig. 1C). Because it has been
previously shown that currents from the cloned channel are not
regulated by protein kinases (Zong et al., 1995
), and hence
more stable, we selected these for further study.
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Lead dose response was measured by adding lead acetate to the bath
solution and then measuring the block of cloned L-type currents
expressed in oocytes (fig. 2A). Preliminary experiments suggested that block of alpha-1C expressed alone in HEK 293 cells was less sensitive to block than
alpha-1C-beta currents in oocytes (fig. 2B).
Because beta subunits alter channel gating (Perez-Reyes and
Schneider, 1994
), we tested the hypothesis that subunit composition may
alter Pb++ block. Oocytes were injected with cRNA for
alpha-1C, alpha-1C-beta-2, alpha-1C-beta-4 or
alpha-1C-alpha-2-delta-beta-2.
Despite large differences in the resulting current amplitudes
(Perez-Reyes et al., 1992
; Wei et al., 1995
),
Pb++ blocked the currents with equal potency; therefore,
pooled data were used for dose-response analysis (fig. 2A;
IC50 = 152 ± 87 nM). L-type currents recorded from
ventricular myocytes were also blocked to a similar extent.
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Figure 2B shows Pb++ block of alpha-1-induced currents in HEK 293 cells. We tested the hypothesis that the bath solution used for HEK 293 cell experiments was chelating Pb++. Lead was a much more potent blocker in 10 mM BaCl2 solutions containing TEA (IC50 = 169 nM) than in solutions containing both NMG and aspartic acid (IC50 = 23 µM). Therefore, low concentrations of Pb++ blocked the cloned L-type channel in both expression systems and L-type channels in situ.
Two protocols were used to measure Pb++ dose responses: (1)
where increasing concentrations of Pb++ were tested
sequentially and (2) where there was a washout with control solution
between Pb++ exposures (fig. 3). Figure 3
shows that Pb++ block was fast and quickly reversed by
washout, allowing for many concentrations to be tested. It is common
for L-type Ca++ channel currents to rundown (McDonald
et al., 1994
). In contrast, currents recorded from
alpha-1C-injected oocytes displayed very little rundown
(0.23% per minute, n = 22; see figs. 5 and 6). We also
noticed that the extent of recovery was dependent on Pb++
concentration. Thus, a component of Pb++ block was
resistant to washout, or "irreversible" under the time scale of
these experiments (Audesirk, 1993
). To quantify this component, we
compared the currents after washout to the original pre-Pb++ control and then calculated the amount of washout
resistant block (fig. 3B). Significant washout-resistant block could be
measured after exposure to concentrations as low as 10 nM
Pb++ (8.7 ± 2.7, n = 8).
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Experiments were performed to test the efficacy of heavy metal
poisoning antidotes, such as EDTA or DMSA (Aposhian, 1983
; Angle, 1993
;
Aposhian et al., 1995
), to reverse the Pb++
block of L-type channels. To mimic the clinical situation, we first
induced Pb++ block and then tried to reverse block using a
solution containing both antidote and Pb++. Figure
4 shows that DMSA, DMPS and EDTA could fully reverse Pb++ block, even when very high (>10 µM) concentrations
of Pb++ were used. All three drugs caused a small
stimulation relative to control activity (DMSA, 112 ± 2%,
n = 14; EDTA, 117% ± 3%, n = 7; and
DMSA, 118%, n = 2). This stimulation may be due to the
presence of Pb++ in the reagents used (Simons, 1993
).
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We also tested the effect of the antidotes on the washout-resistant component of Pb++ block. Oocytes were treated with a high concentration (100 µM) of Pb++, washed with control solution and then treated with Pb++ plus EDTA (fig. 5). As shown above, washout alone did not completely restore the currents to control levels; however, treatment with Pb++ plus EDTA did. The concentration of Pb++ used in these experiments was >600-fold higher than the apparent IC50 value. This raises the possibility that a small contamination could be causing the observed block. For example, Pb++ may have accumulated in the cell, or on the recording chamber, and then slowly released during the control wash. To rule out these possibilities, we conducted experiments using 100 nM Pb++ (fig. 6). Representative current traces are shown in figure 6A. Because DMSA causes a small stimulation of currents, this experiment contains three control washes (representative experiment is shown in fig. 6B). The first control was used to establish the base-line current and to measure the stimulation by DMSA over control. The second control is the washout of Pb++, and the steady-state value was compared with control-1 to determine the washout-resistant inhibition. The third control is the washout after a short treatment (5 min) with 10 µM DMSA. If Pb++ accumulation, or contamination, was causing the washout-resistant inhibition, then this third control would have returned to the value measured during control-2 (75 ± 4%, n = 4, fig. 6C). This was not the case; control-3 activity returned to 91 ± 3% of control-1. The deviation from 100% is presumably due to channel rundown.
Figure 7 shows average current-voltage relationships
measured in oocytes (fig. 7A) and transfected HEK 293 cells (fig. 7B) in either the absence or presence of Pb++. The percent
inhibition observed at each test potential was averaged and then
plotted (fig. 7, C and D). Very little block by 1 µM Pb++
was observed when the test potential was near threshold (
20 mV).
Pb++ was a more effective blocker during pulses to higher
potentials. Although less pronounced, voltage-dependent block was also
observed at higher Pb++ concentrations (10 µM; fig. 7C).
Similar voltage-dependent block was observed in HEK 293 cells (fig.
7D).
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Strong depolarizations have been shown to enhance L-type channel gating
(Pietrobon and Hess, 1990
) and to reverse Cd++ block of
Ca++ currents from frog sympathetic neurons (Thévenod
and Jones, 1992
). Our hypothesis was that Pb++ was an open
channel blocker, similar to Cd++, and that strong
depolarizations may remove block. Voltage protocols contained the
following three depolarizations: (1) a control test pulse to +20 mV,
(2) a depolarizing pulse of varying amplitude and (3) a second test
pulse. Between the depolarizations was a short (10 msec) repolarization
to
80 mV. Due to the large oocyte capacitance, these experiments were
performed using only transfected HEK 293 cells. Figure
8A shows that the middle pulse had little (slight
inhibition) or no effect on control currents. Figure 8B shows the
currents recorded in the presence of Pb++. Larger currents
were measured in the second test pulse when the interpulse potential
was >50 mV. To quantify this increase, peak currents were measured in
the second test pulse and then divided by the current remaining at the
end of the first test pulse. Figure 8C plots this postpulse-to-prepulse
current ratio as a function of the depolarizing test potential.
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The ability of strong depolarizations to remove Pb++ block
allows for measurement of Pb++ blocking kinetics during the
second test pulse. Figure 8D shows an overlay of currents measured
during control (first test pulse, episode 1), in the presence of
Pb++ (second test pulse, after +40 mV depolarization,
episode 1) and after a strong depolarization in the presence of
Pb++ (second test pulse, after +160 mV depolarization,
episode 13). Control currents displayed very little decay over this
time period. In contrast, currents taken in the presence of
Pb++ did decay (currents in first test pulse, fig. 7B).
This decay was greater after a strong depolarization. In analogy to
Thévenod and Jones, we interpret this decay as due to
Pb++ blocking of open channels. Exponential fits to the
data indicate that Pb++ reblocks with a
value of 11 msec. This rate was both voltage (during a 0- mV test pulse
= 17 msec) and concentration dependent (at a 3-fold lower concentration of
Pb++, the reblock
was 17 msec at +20 mV and 42 msec at
0 mV).
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Discussion |
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Lead is a potent blocker of L-type Ca++ channels,
inhibiting both native and cloned channels with an IC50 of
150 nM. Similar total lead concentrations (500 nM) in blood are
considered to be the threshold for toxicity (Cory-Slechta, 1995
; Davis
et al., 1993
). It has been noted that the concentration of
free Pb++ in plasma is much lower than the total blood
concentration (Audesirk, 1993
). Similarly, free Pb++
concentrations in vitro may be either much lower than
expected due to binding to buffer components or higher due to
contamination of reagents (Matthews et al., 1993
; Simons,
1993
). For example, we found that the potency of Pb++ block
depended on the composition of the bath solution. Both solutions
contained 10 mM BaCl2, but one contained TEA and the other
contained NMG and aspartic acid. It is likely that Pb++ was
buffered by aspartic acid. Despite these uncertainties in the free
Pb++ concentration, our results clearly show that
Pb++ has a very high affinity for L-type channels.
Ca++ influx via voltage-gated Ca++
channels is a highly regulated event. Cardiac L-type channels are
regulated by both cAMP-dependent protein kinase and protein kinase C
(McDonald et al., 1994
). Pb++ can stimulate
protein kinase activity (Markovac and Goldstein, 1988
); therefore,
direct effects of Pb++ on the channel can be obscured by
its effects on kinases. We avoided this problem by using the cloned
alpha-1C, which is not regulated by protein kinases as
observed in situ (Zong et al., 1995
).2
Simple washout of Pb++ did not completely reverse the block
of L-type Ca++ channels. During our dose-response analysis,
we noticed a difference between protocols in which Pb++ was
added sequentially and protocols that included a wash.
Washout-resistant block has been reported previously in studies using
rat dorsal root ganglion neurons (Büsselberg et al.,
1994
) and snail neurons (Audesirk, 1993
). This lack of recovery was
termed "irreversible inhibition" and surprisingly was not dose
dependent (Audesirk, 1993
). In contrast, we found that
washout-resistant block was dose dependent, following a similar dose
response as the total block. We show for the first time that complete
recovery of currents required treatment with heavy metal antidotes,
such as DMSA, DMPS and EDTA. The ability of these antidotes to recover
100% of the original channel activity indicates that this
washout-resistant inhibition is not simply due to channel rundown. A
clinical implication of these findings is that some Pb++
targets will continue to be blocked after removal of Pb++
and that full reversal of lead poisoning requires treatment.
Numerous heavy metals, including Pb++, block voltage-gated
Ca++ channels (Audesirk, 1993
; McDonald et al.,
1994
). Heavy metal block has been studied because it provides (1) a
toxicological description of heavy metal action, (2) a basis for
classifying channel subtypes and (3) clues on the structure-function
relationships of the channel. In many studies, the blocked currents are
subtracted from the control currents to infer block of channel subtypes
that differ in their inactivation rates (Audesirk and Audesirk, 1993
). Our studies indicate that Pb++ block occurs during the
pulse, thereby complicating this type of analysis. Studies with
Pb++ have established that it is selective for
voltage-gated Ca++ channels, with little effect on
Na+ or K+ channels (Büsselberg et
al., 1991
; Reuveny and Narahashi, 1991
). Unlike Ni++,
Pb++ does not appear to be very selective among the various
voltage-gated Ca++ channels, blocking low- and
high-threshold channels with similar potency (Audesirk, 1993
).
The mechanism by which Pb++ blocks Ca++
channels is poorly understood. Largely based on the observation that
increasing extracellular Ca++ decreased Pb++
block, it was suggested that Pb++ was an open channel
blocker (Büsselberg et al., 1991
). Our results indicate that Pb++ block is very similar to the open
channel blocker Cd++; block is voltage dependent (Chow,
1991
; Swandulla and Armstrong, 1989
) and can be relieved by strong
depolarizations (Thévenod and Jones, 1992
). Single-channel
studies have allowed direct measurement of the rate of Cd++
block and unblock (Lansman et al., 1986
). These studies
found that the rate of unblock was voltage dependent, whereas the rate of block was largely voltage independent. Because these changes occurred in the same voltage range as channel activation, we can infer
that different states of the channel have different affinity for
blocker. By analogy, we predict that the rate of Pb++
unblock is voltage dependent. At potentials of <
20 mV, when most
channels are in the closed state, we predict that Pb++
unblock is faster than block, resulting in little tonic block. At
potentials where channel opening is favored (>+20 mV), we predict that
Pb++ block is faster than unblock, resulting in a
time-dependent block. This would also explain the observed voltage
dependence of Pb++ block. Similar voltage-dependent block
was observed in studies using neurons from Aplysia and rat
dorsal root ganglion (Büsselberg et al., 1991
) but not
rat hippocampus (Audesirk and Audesirk, 1993
). Perhaps the voltage
dependence of block was obscured by the fact that neurons contain
multiple subtypes of Ca++ channels that differ in their
voltage dependence.
Surprisingly, stronger depolarizations (>50 mV) also caused unblock.
We took advantage of this unblock phenomenon to measure reblock
kinetics. We found that the Pb++ block of open channels was
fast (
= 11 msec) and voltage dependent. The mechanism by which
strong depolarizations reduce divalent cation block are not understood.
Strong depolarizations have been shown to alter L-type channel gating
(Pietrobon and Hess, 1990
). Possibly, this depolarization is inducing a
channel conformation with lower affinity for Pb++. A second
possibility is that reverse current flow through the channel knocks
Pb++ off its binding site in the pore. An implication of
this result is that facilitation may be due to unblock of channels by
contaminating divalent cations. In addition, these results provide
another example of how the cloned channel is not regulated in the same
manner as in situ channels.
In addition to blocking Ca++ channels, Pb++ and
Cd++ may permeate these channels (Chow, 1991
; Tomsig and
Suszkiw, 1991
). Perhaps Pb++ permeates the
channel at negative test potentials where the driving force for
Ba++ is high (Erev = +60).
Ca++ channels are multisubunit complexes that contain a
large alpha-1 subunit that forms the pore and several
auxiliary subunits (Perez-Reyes and Schneider, 1994
). Molecular cloning
has revealed that there is a family of at least six related
alpha-1 subunits. One region that is particularly well
conserved among these subtypes is the pore-lining region (Perez-Reyes
and Schneider, 1994
). This region contains glutamate residues that are
thought to form a ring of negative charge. Mutagenesis studies have
shown that mutation of these glutamates alters divalent cation
permeation and block (Parent and Gopalakrishnan, 1995
; Tang et
al., 1993
; Yang et al., 1993
). Due to sequence
conservation between the cloned alpha-1 subunits, we predict
that Pb++ block will be very similar between these
Ca++ channel subtypes. We suggest that the quickly
reversible block represents Pb++ binding to this site. In
contrast, washout-resistant block may be due to Pb++
binding to a second site from which it only slowly dissociates. Pb++ can be removed from the second site by chelators,
indicating that this site is accessible from the extracellular medium.
Recent mutagenesis studies support the hypothesis that there are two divalent cation binding sites in the pore (Parent and Gopalakrishnan, 1995
).
In addition to heart, L-type Ca++ channels are distributed
throughout the brain. In particular, in situ hybridization
has shown that alpha-1C is abundantly expressed in the
hippocampus (Tanaka et al., 1995
). Because our studies show
that subunit composition does not affect Pb++ block, these
results should be applicable to different neuronal subtypes. In
conclusion, L-type Ca++ channels are so susceptible to
Pb++ that they may be blocked during lead poisoning,
contributing to the observed neurotoxicity.
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Acknowledgments |
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We thank Tina Z. Hovance and Don Bers for providing healthy rat ventricular myocytes.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication March 7, 1997.
Received for publication September 4, 1996.
1 This work was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association (E.P.R.). E.P.R. is an Established Investigator of the American Heart Association.
2 E. Perez-Reyes and L. L. Cribbs, unpublished observations.
Send reprint requests to: Edward Perez-Reyes, Ph.D., Department of Physiology, Loyola University Medical Center, Maywood, IL 60153. E-mail eperez{at}luc.edu
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Abbreviations |
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DMSA, meso-2,3-dimercaptosuccinic acid; DMPS, 2,3-dimercapto-1-propanesulfonic acid; TEA, tetraethylammonium; NMG, N-methyl-glucamine; HEPES, 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid; HEK, human embryonic kidney.
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References |
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