Programs in Cardiovascular Research and Neuroscience, Department of Molecular Pharmacology & Physiology, College of Medicine, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, USA.
Compr Physiol. 2012 Apr;2(2):1269-301. doi: 10.1002/cphy.c110044.
Control and modulation of electrical signaling is vital to normal physiology, particularly in neurons, cardiac myocytes, and skeletal muscle. The orchestrated activities of variable sets of ion channels and transporters, including voltage-gated ion channels (VGICs), are responsible for initiation, conduction, and termination of the action potential (AP) in excitable cells. Slight changes in VGIC activity can lead to severe pathologies including arrhythmias, epilepsies, and paralyses, while normal excitability depends on the precise tuning of the AP waveform. VGICs are heavily posttranslationally modified, with upward of 30% of the mature channel mass consisting of N- and O-glycans. These glycans are terminated typically by negatively charged sialic acid residues that modulate voltage-dependent channel gating directly. The data indicate that sialic acids alter VGIC activity in isoform-specific manners, dependent in part, on the number/location of channel sialic acids attached to the pore-forming alpha and/or auxiliary subunits that often act through saturating electrostatic mechanisms. Additionally, cell-specific regulation of sialylation can affect VGIC gating distinctly. Thus, channel sialylation is likely regulated through two mechanisms that together contribute to a dynamic spectrum of possible gating motifs: a subunit-specific mechanism and regulated (aberrant) changes in the ability of the cell to glycosylate. Recent studies showed that neuronal and cardiac excitability is modulated through regulated changes in voltage-gated Na(+) channel sialylation, suggesting that both mechanisms of differential VGIC sialylation contribute to electrical signaling in the brain and heart. Together, the data provide insight into an important and novel paradigm involved in the control and modulation of electrical signaling.
电信号的控制和调节对正常生理至关重要,尤其是在神经元、心肌细胞和骨骼肌中。可变离子通道和转运体(包括电压门控离子通道[VGIC])的协调活动负责可兴奋细胞中动作电位(AP)的起始、传导和终止。VGIC 活性的微小变化可导致严重的病理,包括心律失常、癫痫发作和瘫痪,而正常兴奋性取决于 AP 波形的精确调谐。VGIC 受到大量翻译后修饰,成熟通道质量的 30%以上由 N-和 O-聚糖组成。这些糖链通常由带负电荷的唾液酸残基终止,这些残基直接调节电压依赖性通道门控。数据表明,唾液酸以特定于异构体的方式改变 VGIC 活性,部分取决于与形成孔的 alpha 和/或辅助亚基结合的通道唾液酸的数量/位置,这些亚基通常通过饱和静电机制起作用。此外,细胞特异性的唾液酸化调节可以明显影响 VGIC 门控。因此,通道唾液酸化可能通过两种机制进行调节,这两种机制共同构成了可能的门控基序的动态谱:亚基特异性机制和细胞糖基化能力的调节(异常)变化。最近的研究表明,神经元和心肌细胞的兴奋性通过电压门控 Na(+)通道唾液酸化的调节变化来调节,这表明两种差异 VGIC 唾液酸化机制都有助于大脑和心脏的电信号传递。总之,这些数据为电信号控制和调节中涉及的一个重要而新颖的范例提供了深入了解。