Thomas E A, Xu R, Petrou S
Howard Florey Institute, University of Melbourne, Parkville 3010, Australia.
Neuroscience. 2007 Jul 29;147(4):1034-46. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2007.05.010. Epub 2007 Jul 2.
Mutations in Na+ channels cause a variety of epilepsy syndromes. Analysis of these mutations shows a range of simultaneous functional consequences, each of which may increase or decrease membrane excitability, making it difficult to predict the combined effect on neuron firing. This may be addressed by building mathematical models of Na+ channel gating and using them in neuron models to predict responses to natural stimuli. The R85C and R85H mutations of the beta1 subunit cause generalized epilepsy syndromes in humans, and an experimental study showed that these mutations shift steady-state activation in the negative direction, which predicts increased excitability, and shift fast inactivation in the negative direction, which predicts decreased excitability. In addition, the R85C also shifts slow inactivation in the negative direction. To predict changes in neuron excitability resulting from these contradictory effects we built Na+ channel models based on our earlier data and on new measurements of the rate of slow inactivation over a range of potentials. Use of these Na+ channel models in simple neuron models revealed that both mutations cause an increase in excitability but the R85H mutation was more excitable. This is due to differences in steady-state slow inactivation and to subtle differences in fast kinetics captured by the model fitting process. To understand the effect of changes in different gating processes and to provide a simple guide for interpreting changes caused by mutations, we performed a sensitivity analysis. Using the wild-type model we shifted each activation curve by +/-5 mV or altered gating rates up or down by 20%. Excitability was most sensitive to changes in voltage dependence of activation, followed by voltage dependence of inactivation and then slow inactivation. By contrast, excitability was relatively insensitive to gating rates.
钠离子通道的突变会引发多种癫痫综合征。对这些突变的分析显示出一系列同时存在的功能后果,每一种后果都可能增加或降低膜兴奋性,这使得难以预测对神经元放电的综合影响。这可以通过构建钠离子通道门控的数学模型并将其用于神经元模型来预测对自然刺激的反应来解决。β1亚基的R85C和R85H突变会在人类中引发全身性癫痫综合征,一项实验研究表明,这些突变使稳态激活向负方向移动,这预示着兴奋性增加,同时使快速失活向负方向移动,这预示着兴奋性降低。此外,R85C还使缓慢失活向负方向移动。为了预测这些相互矛盾的效应所导致的神经元兴奋性变化,我们基于我们早期的数据以及在一系列电位下对缓慢失活速率的新测量结果构建了钠离子通道模型。在简单的神经元模型中使用这些钠离子通道模型发现,这两种突变都会导致兴奋性增加,但R85H突变的兴奋性更高。这是由于稳态缓慢失活的差异以及模型拟合过程所捕捉到的快速动力学的细微差异所致。为了理解不同门控过程变化的影响并为解释突变引起的变化提供一个简单指南,我们进行了敏感性分析。使用野生型模型,我们将每条激活曲线上下移动±5 mV或使门控速率上下改变20%。兴奋性对激活的电压依赖性变化最为敏感,其次是失活的电压依赖性,然后是缓慢失活。相比之下,兴奋性对门控速率相对不敏感。