Journal
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue 21, Pages 7258-7268Publisher
SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3582-09.2010
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Funding
- National Institutes of Health
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Episodic ataxia type 2 (EA2) is a hereditary cerebellar ataxia associated with mutations in the P/Q-type voltage-gated calcium (Ca2+) channels. Therapeutic approaches for treatment of EA2 are very limited. Presently, the potassium (K+) channel blocker 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) constitutes the most promising treatment, although its mechanism of action is not understood. Here we show that, in contrast to what is commonly believed, therapeutic concentrations of 4-AP do not increase the inhibitory drive of cerebellar Purkinje cells. Instead, 4-AP restores the severely diminished precision of pacemaking in Purkinje cells of EA2 mutant mice by prolonging the action potential and increasing the action potential after hyperpolarization. Consistent with this mode of action, the therapeutic efficacy of 4-AP was comparable, and not additive, to chlorzoxazone, an activator of Ca2+-dependent K+ channels that also restores the precision of Purkinje cell pacemaking. The likely target of 4-AP at the concentrations used are the K(v)1 family of K+ channels, possibly the K(v)1.5 subtype. Because at higher concentrations 4-AP blocks a large array of K+ channels and is a proconvulsant, use of selective K(v)1 channel blockers is likely to be a safer substitute for treatment of cerebellar ataxia.
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