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Nav channel mechanosensitivity: Activation and inactivation accelerate reversibly with stretch

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BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
卷 93, 期 3, 页码 822-833

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CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1529/biophysj.106.101246

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Voltage-gated sodium channels (Nav) are modulated by many bilayer mechanical amphiphiles, but whether, like other voltage-gated channels (Kv, HCN, Cav), they respond to physical bilayer deformations is unknown. We expressed human heart Nav1.5 pore alpha-subunit in oocytes (where, unlike alpha Nav1.4, alpha Nav1.5 exhibits normal kinetics) and measured small macroscopic currents in cell-attached patches. Pipette pressure was used to reversibly stretch the membrane for comparison of I-Na(t) before, during, and after stretch. At all voltages, and in a dose-dependent fashion, stretch accelerated the I-Na(t) time course. The sign of membrane curvature was not relevant. Typical stretch stimuli reversibly accelerated both activation and inactivation by similar to 1.4-fold; normalization of peak I-Na(t) followed by temporal scaling (similar to 1.30- to 1.85-fold) resulted in full overlap of the stretch/no-stretch traces. Evidently the rate-limiting outward voltage sensor motion in the Nav1.5 activation path (as in Kv1) accelerated with stretch. Stretch-accelerated inactivation occurred even with activation saturated, so an independently stretch-modulated inactivation transition is also a possibility. Since Nav1.5 channel-stretch modulation was both reliable and reversible, and required stretch stimuli no more intense than what typically activates putative mechanotransducer channels (e. g., stretch-activated TRPC1-based currents), Nav channels join the ranks of putative mechanotransducers. It is noteworthy that at voltages near the activation threshold, moderate stretch increased the peak I-Na amplitude similar to 1.5-fold. It will be important to determine whether stretchmodulated Nav current contributes to cardiac arrhythmias, to mechanosensory responses in interstitial cells of Cajal, to touch receptor responses, and to neuropathic (i. e., hypermechanosensitive) and/or normal pain reception.

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