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Volume 16, Number 16,
Issue of August 15, 1996
pp. 4903-4913
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Reduction of Calcium Currents by Lambert-Eaton Syndrome Sera:
Motoneurons Are Preferentially Affected, and L-Type Currents Are
Spared
Kelly D. García and
Kurt G. Beam
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Colorado State University,
Fort Collins, Colorado 80523
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Previous work has demonstrated that Lambert-Eaton syndrome (LES)
antibodies reduce calcium currents in non-neuronal cells and sensory
neurons and reduce the amplitude of extracellularly recorded currents
at mouse motor nerve terminals. We compared effects of LES sera on
whole-cell currents of cultured nerve and muscle. LES sera more
strongly reduced calcium currents in motoneurons than in sensory
neurons. Motoneuronal potassium currents were unaffected. The sera
minimally affected calcium currents in skeletal and cardiac muscle. In
motoneurons, both low voltage-activated (LVA) and high
voltage-activated (HVA) components of calcium current were decreased,
demonstrating that the sera targeted more than one calcium channel
type. The HVA current remaining in LES-treated motoneurons was little
affected by micromolar -conotoxin MVIIC but was reduced >70% by
micromolar nimodipine. This pharmacological profile contrasts with
untreated cells and suggests that LES sera primarily spare L-type
currents in motoneurons.
Key words:
calcium channels;
calcium currents;
motoneurons;
Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome;
neuromuscular transmission;
transmitter release
INTRODUCTION
Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LES) is an
autoimmune disorder characterized by decreased neurotransmitter release
at the neuromuscular junction (Elmqvist and Lambert, 1968 ; Lambert and
Elmqvist, 1971 ). Ultrastructural analysis has revealed that motoneurons
from LES patients have fewer active zones, which are less well
organized, and contain fewer active zone particles (Fukunaga et al.,
1982 ). Because active zones are the sites of neurotransmitter release
and the active zone particles are thought to include the calcium
channels necessary for neurotransmitter release (Couteaux and
Pecot-Dechavassine, 1970 ; Heuser et al., 1979 ), it is widely accepted
that LES antibodies target presynaptic calcium channels (Fukunaga et
al., 1982 ). To test this hypothesis, the effects of LES antibodies on
radiocalcium fluxes or calcium currents have been examined in a number
of systems. The antibodies reduce calcium influx in small-cell lung
carcinoma (Roberts et al., 1985 ), rat anterior pituitary (Login et al.,
1987 ), adrenal chromaffin (Kim and Neher, 1988 ; Viglione et al., 1992 ),
neuroblastoma (Peers et al., 1990 ; Grassi et al., 1994 ), rat thyroid
cell line (Kim et al., 1993 ) and dorsal root ganglion (DRG) cells
(García et al., 1996 ). Recently, it has been shown that LES
antibodies decrease mixed sodium and calcium currents at the nerve
terminals of mice (Smith et al., 1995 ). Mice are an appropriate model,
because the disease can be transferred passively to them (Fukunaga et
al., 1983 ; Kim, 1986 ). However, the effects of LES antibodies on
isolated calcium currents in motoneurons have not been examined. Here,
we describe such experiments on murine motoneurons, which is
particularly important because associated proteins, rather than the
calcium channels per se, might be the critical antigenic target
(Leveque et al., 1992 ).
Neurons contain a variety of calcium channel types that can be divided
into low voltage-activated (LVA) or T-type channels and high
voltage-activated (HVA) channels (Nowycky et al., 1985 ). HVA channels
can be subdivided on the basis of molecular, biophysical, and
pharmacological properties and include L, N, P, O, Q, and R channels
(Nowycky et al., 1985 ; Fox et al., 1987 ; Mintz et al., 1992 ; Regan et
al., 1992 ; Olivera et al., 1994 ; Randall and Tsien, 1995 ). Previous
experiments have not examined thoroughly the types of calcium channels
affected or spared by LES antibodies. Furthermore, the calcium channel
makeup of motoneurons is likely to be different from other cell types
examined previously. It is especially important to characterize the
types of calcium channels affected by LES antibodies in motoneurons,
because the specific channel type or types critical for
neurotransmitter release seem to vary between synapses (Hirning et al.,
1988 ; Stanley and Goping, 1991 ; Turner et al., 1993 ; Wheeler et al.,
1994 ) and the type or types that govern transmitter release at the
mammalian neuromuscular junction remain unclear. Based on
pharmacological criteria, N, P, and Q channels all have been suggested
to be important. A critical role for P-type channels was argued on the
basis of the blocking of neuromuscular transmission in mice by a
polyamine fraction of funnel-web spider venom (Uchitel et al., 1992 ).
However, divergent results have been reported for the effects of a
peptide, -AgaIVa, which now is used widely as the spider venom
component specific for P-channels at nanomolar concentrations (Mintz et
al., 1992 ). Thus, Hong and Chang (1995) reported that murine
neuromuscular transmission was blocked by 10 nM
-AgaIVa but was almost unaffected by 300 µM
of the cone shell venom -CTx MVIIC. By contrast, Bowersox et al.
(1995) found that a complete block required a much higher concentration
(~300 nM) of synthetic -AgaIVa (SNX-290) and
a much lower concentration (1 µM) of synthetic
-CTx MVIIC (SNX-230). Thus, these studies make it uncertain whether
P or Q channels are involved, because near-micromolar concentrations of
-AgaIVa and -CTx MVIIC block both P and Q channels. Adding
further to the controversy, early work demonstrated that the N-channel
toxin, -CgTx GVIA, did not affect murine neuromuscular transmission
(Yoshikami et al., 1989 ), whereas a more recent report showed
significant reduction of nerve-evoked muscle contractions in rats by 3 nM of the toxin (Rossoni et al., 1994 ).
We report here that LES sera from four patients significantly reduce
calcium currents in murine motoneurons. Comparatively, these sera cause
a lesser decrease in calcium currents in DRG neurons (previously
reported by García et al., 1996 ) and have little effect on
muscle. Within motoneurons, voltage-gated potassium channels are not
affected, both LVA and HVA calcium currents are decreased, and the HVA
calcium current remaining in LES serum-treated motoneurons is mostly
L-type.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Motoneuron cultures. The procedures used for the
preparation of motoneuron cultures were similar to those reported
previously (Mynlieff and Beam, 1992a ,b). So that they could be
identified, neonatal murine motoneurons were labeled retrogradely with
a suspension of 2.5 mg/ml
1,1 -dioctadecyl-3,3,3 3 -tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate (diI;
Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR), 20% ethanol, and 80% rodent Ringer
with 0.1% bovine serum albumin. Each mouse pup was anesthetized with
Metofane, and the diI suspension was injected into all four limbs.
After being returned to its mother for several hours (9-11) to allow
the dye to label motoneuronal cell bodies, the pup was anesthetized and
decapitated, and the spinal cord was removed in oxygenated rodent
Ringer (in mM): 146 NaCl, 5 KCl, 2 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, 10 HEPES,
and 11 glucose, pH 7.4. Care was used to dissect away the meninges and
any attached DRGs to ensure that the culture was not contaminated with
labeled sensory cells. The spinal cord was cut into small pieces (<1
mm3) and placed in 0.5 ml of a 0.1% Type XI
trypsin and 0.01% DNase I (both from Sigma, St. Louis, MO) solution in
PIPES-buffered saline (in mM): 120 NaCl, 5 KCl, 1 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, 25 glucose,
and 20 piperazine-N,N -bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid), pH 7.0. After 15-20 min of incubation at 35°C, the tissue was rinsed with
neural basal medium containing B27 supplement (Life Technologies, Grand
Island, NY), 100 µg/ml streptomycin, and 60 µg/ml penicillin and
triturated with a fire-polished pipette. The cells were plated on 35 mm
dishes that had been coated overnight by exposure to
poly-L-lysine (4-15 kDa; 1 mg/ml in 0.15 M boric acid, pH 8.4). Serum from either normal
humans or one of the LES patients was dialyzed (exclusion of 100 kDa)
for 24 hr against culture medium at a sample/dialysate ratio of
~1:100 with one dialysate change at ~8 hr (García et al.,
1996 ). Dialyzed serum was added to the culture medium at ~1:20
dilution at the time of cell plating. Cells were recorded from after
being maintained overnight in a humidified atmosphere of 95% air/5%
CO2 at 37°C.
Ionic currents. The whole-cell patch-clamp configuration
(Hamill et al., 1981 ) was used to record ionic currents at room
temperature (20°C) with a Dagan 3900 patch-clamp amplifier (Dagan
Corporation, Minneapolis, MN) equipped with a 3911 whole-cell expander.
The patch electrodes (3-4 M ) were made from soda lime glass and
coated with wax to reduce capacitance. Linear components of leak and
capacitive currents were removed from test currents by digital
subtraction of scaled control currents elicited by 20 mV
hyperpolarizations from the holding potential ( 80 mV). Currents were
filtered electronically at 1 kHz (8 pole Bessel filter) before sampling
by the computer. To normalize for differences in total membrane area,
current densities were calculated by dividing total current by the
linear capacitance of the cell. Data are expressed as mean ± SEM.
Least-squares fits were computed with NFIT software (Island Software,
Galveston, TX).
To measure calcium currents, recording electrodes contained (in
mM):140 Cs-aspartate, 5 MgCl2, 10 Cs2 EGTA, and 10 HEPES, pH 7.4; the extracellular recording medium contained 10 CaCl2, 145 tetraethylammonium-chloride
(TEA-Cl), tetrodotoxin (TTX; 0.003 for muscle cells, 0.0005 for
motoneurons), and 10 HEPES, pH 7.4. To measure potassium currents,
recording electrodes contained (in mM): 140 KCl,
5 MgCl2, 10 K2 EGTA, and 10 HEPES, pH 7.4; the external solution contained 146 NaCl, 5 KCl, 2 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, 0.001 TTX,
and 10 HEPES, pH 7.4.
Nimodipine was made up as a 10 mM stock solution
in ethanol. Stock solutions of 0.5 mM -CTx
MVIIC were prepared by dissolving the peptide in distilled water with 1 mg/ml bovine serum albumin and stored in aliquots at 20°C. Stock
solutions were diluted to final concentrations on the day of use in the
external solution used for measuring calcium currents. For population
studies, cultures were placed in the solutions containing either
-CTx MVIIC or nimodipine 1.5 hr before recording. In perfusion
experiments, small wells were created that isolated cells in each
culture dish. After the currents from a cell under control conditions
were recorded, the well was perfused with drug solution (>6× volume
exchange).
RESULTS
Serum was obtained from four patients (Patients I, II, III, and
IV) diagnosed as having LES. Patient IV was diagnosed also as having
myasthenia gravis by virtue of having antibodies characteristic of both
conditions (Leys et al., 1989 ). Spinal cords containing motoneurons
labeled by intramuscular injection (Honig and Hume, 1986 ) of diI were
dissociated and incubated overnight with serum from either normal
individuals or from one of the four patients. Serum was added to the
culture medium at a 1:20 dilution, which results in an immunoglobulin
concentration approximately equivalent to that circulating in adult
human blood (Isselbacher et al., 1980 ). Although the majority of
recordings (>80%) was from diI-labeled cells, some data were from
cells identified as motoneurons on the basis of size and morphology
(Smith et al., 1986 ; Milligan et al., 1994 ; Mynlieff and Beam,
1994 ).
Calcium currents obtained from control serum- and LES
serum-treated motoneurons
Calcium currents were elicited with 300 msec depolarizing pulses
from a holding potential of 80 mV to test potentials from 50 to +50
mV at 10 mV intervals. Figure 1 compares currents from a
motoneuron treated with control serum (left) and a
motoneuron treated with LES serum (right). In both the
control and LES-treated cells, the calcium currents displayed LVA and
HVA components. However, at all test potentials the calcium currents in
the LES-treated motoneuron were much smaller than those in the control
motoneuron. Moreover, the sustained HVA component (+10 mV) represented
a larger fraction of the total current in LES-treated cells than in
control cells (sustained equaled 55% of total current in control as
compared with 66, 74, 65, and 72% in Patients I-IV, respectively).
Additionally, the HVA component of current from cells treated with LES
serum seemed to have a slower time course of activation, although the
small size of the currents made a detailed quantitative analysis
difficult.
Fig. 1.
Voltage-activated calcium currents in a motoneuron
treated with serum from a control individual (left) and a
motoneuron treated with serum from LES Patient II (right).
Representative calcium currents were elicited by 300 msec depolarizing
pulses to test potentials between 40 and +30 mV at 10 mV intervals.
LVA and HVA calcium currents are present in both control and treated
cells. Note the prominent transient and sustained components of HVA
current in the control motoneuron and that the HVA current in the LES
serum-treated cell is predominantly sustained.
[View Larger Version of this Image (23K GIF file)]
Calcium currents were recorded from five groups of motoneurons to
quantify the effects of LES serum: a control group that was treated
with control serum and four test groups, each of which was treated with
serum from one of the four LES patients (Fig. 2). The
amplitude of current was divided by cell capacitance and expressed as
current density (pA/pF) to normalize for variability in cell size.
Current densities recorded from individual cells were averaged for each
of the five groups. Currents from the control cells displayed LVA and
HVA components similar to those described previously in neonatal murine
motoneurons (Mynlieff and Beam, 1992a ). In particular, the amplitude of
the maximal HVA current (~5 pA/pF) was almost identical to that found
by Mynlieff and Beam. Average current densities were smaller at all
test potentials in the LES serum-treated cells, with the largest
reductions for Patients II and IV. At both 20 and +20 mV (approximate
potentials eliciting peak LVA and HVA currents, respectively), the
reduction of current amplitude was statistically significant
(p < 0.05) for all four patients.
Fig. 2.
Peak calcium current density plotted as a function
of test potential in control (circles) and LES
serum-treated (squares) motoneurons. Average
current density was smaller at each test potential for cells
treated with serum from each of the four LES patients than for cells
treated with control serum. The reduction in current was least
substantial for cells treated with serum from Patient I
(n = 11) and Patient III (n = 8) and
greatest for cells treated with serum from Patient II
(n = 11) and Patient IV (n = 10).
[View Larger Version of this Image (30K GIF file)]
Calcium conductances from control serum- and LES
serum-treated motoneurons
In addition to comparing current densities at specific test
potentials, we also fitted the peak current-voltage relationship of
individual cells as the sum of current through two populations of
channels, each activating in accord with a Boltzmann function
(García et al., 1996 ). These fits yielded a maximal conductance
of the LVA and HVA components of current, which were averaged for each
group of cells (Fig. 3). LVA and HVA maximal calcium
conductances for LES serum-treated motoneurons were decreased,
respectively, by 60 and 64% for Patient I, 90 and 91% for
Patient II, 80 and 82% for Patient III, and 80 and 73% for
Patient IV.
Fig. 3.
Maximal LVA (GmaxL)
and HVA (GmaxH) calcium conductances for
treated and control motoneurons. Calcium conductances were calculated
by least-squares fitting of the experimental data with the
equation:
in which V is the test potential,
VR is the calcium current reversal
potential, GmaxL and
GmaxH are the maximal LVA and HVA
conductances, respectively, Vb1 and
Vb2 are potentials for half-maximal
activation, and k1 and
k2 are related to the steepness of the
voltage dependence of activation. Reductions in both
GmaxL and GmaxH
were statistically significant (p < 0.05) for
motoneurons treated with serum from any of the four patients. Following
are average values ± SEM for VR,
Vb1, k1,
Vb2, and k2,
respectively: control 66.1 (8.2), 27.3 (2.6), 10.5 (1.5), 13.8 (2.9),
and 5.5 (0.7); Patient I 60.0 (9.2), 27.5 (2.4), 10.2 (1.3), 13.1 (2.9), and 3.9 (0.6); Patient II 84.0 (11.3), 33.2 (6.0), 8.7 (2.1),
7.8 (5.5), and 5.2 (3.0); Patient III 70.3 (8.1), 34.2 (5.0), 9.7 (2.4), 8.3 (1.8), and 7.6 (2.7); Patient IV 66.1 (5.7), 25.1 (4.8),
6.5 (1.8), 6.2 (2.4), and 5.8 (1.6).
[View Larger Version of this Image (18K GIF file)]
To determine whether serum-induced changes in calcium currents could
have resulted from effects of LES sera on motoneuron growth, cell size
was estimated from measurements of whole-cell capacitance. Averaged
capacitances were similar for experimental (26.8 ± 2.9 pF,
n = 41) and control (23.2 ± 1.6 pF,
n = 17) cells, indicating that the effects of LES
antibodies on whole-cell current were not a secondary result of altered
cell growth. Additionally, in three cultures in which serum from
Patients I or II was used, the percentage of cell survival was
determined by counting the number of cells at time of recording
relative to the number of cells plated. This ratio was not appreciably
different between cells treated with control (47, 57, and 59%) or LES
(42, 54, and 62%) serum.
Potassium currents from control serum- and LES
serum-treated motoneurons
Because LES sera decreased both the LVA and HVA components of
calcium currents, we examined potassium currents to determine whether
the serum affected more than one family of voltage-gated ion channels
in motoneurons. For these experiments, as well as those on calcium
currents in muscle cells (see below), diminishing stocks prevented
examination of the effects of sera from all of the patients. As in the
case of calcium currents, the potassium currents were measured over a
wide range of test potentials (Fig. 4, inset)
and normalized to cell capacitance. Figure 4 compares averaged
current-voltage relationships for control and serum-treated
motoneurons. For strong depolarizations, the average potassium current
densities in motoneurons treated with serum from Patients III
(open squares) or IV (filled
triangles) were slightly smaller or larger than control,
respectively. However, these differences in average current density
were not statistically significant for either patient.
Fig. 4.
Normalized, peak potassium current density as a
function of test potential in motoneurons treated with control serum
(circles; n = 13), serum from Patient III
(squares; n = 8), or serum from Patient IV
(triangles; n = 8). At high potentials,
average potassium currents were slightly smaller than control for
motoneurons treated with serum from Patient III and slightly greater
for motoneurons treated with serum from Patient IV. However, these
changes were not statistically significant. The inset shows
a representative family of control potassium currents elicited by test
potentials of 30 to 60 mV at 10 mV intervals.
[View Larger Version of this Image (25K GIF file)]
Effects of LES sera on calcium currents recorded from cardiac
muscle and skeletal muscle
Because LES sera have been reported to reduce calcium
currents in a variety of cell types (see introductory remarks) and
because neuromuscular weakness is a hallmark of the disease, we
investigated the possibility that the sera affect calcium currents in
cardiac or skeletal muscle cells via the use of protocols like those
for the motoneurons. Averaged calcium current densities in cardiac
myocytes treated with serum from Patients II or III were not
significantly different from control at either low or high voltages
(Fig. 5A). In contrast, serum from Patient IV
significantly decreased the HVA calcium current density. The presence
or absence of differences in current density were paralleled by
differences in the maximal conductances, determined as described above
for motoneurons. Thus, the maximal HVA calcium conductance was reduced
for cells treated with serum from Patient IV but not for cells treated
with serum from Patients II and III (Fig. 5B). Maximal LVA
calcium conductance was unaffected by serum from any of the three
patients. Although HVA currents were reduced in amplitude by serum from
Patient IV, the kinetics were similar to those observed in control
cells (Fig. 5C). As for cardiac myocytes, serum from Patient
III had little effect on calcium currents in skeletal myotubes, whereas
that from Patient IV caused a reduction in the HVA component of current
(Fig. 6A). The kinetics and voltage
dependence of HVA calcium currents in skeletal myotubes treated with
serum from Patient IV were similar to those of control myotubes (Fig.
6B) and to HVA currents described previously in skeletal
myotubes (Beam and Knudson, 1988 ).
Fig. 5.
Comparison of calcium currents in cardiac myocytes
treated with control or LES sera. A, Normalized, peak
current-voltage relationships from control (n = 20)
cardiomyocytes and cardiomyocytes treated with serum from Patients II
(n = 12), III (n = 14), or IV
(n = 14). The LVA current ( 20 mV) was not altered
significantly by serum from any of the three patients; the only
statistically significant (p < 0.05) decrease
in HVA current (+20 mV) was for cells treated with serum from Patient
IV. B, Average maximal LVA
(GmaxL) and HVA
(GmaxH) calcium conductances for control
and LES serum-treated cardiac myocytes. Differences in conductance were
statistically significant only for cells treated with serum from
Patient IV. C, Representative calcium currents evoked by
test potentials ranging from 20 to +30 mV at 10 mV intervals.
[View Larger Version of this Image (29K GIF file)]
Fig. 6.
Effects of LES serum on calcium currents in
skeletal myotubes. A, Normalized, peak current density
versus voltage relationship for myotubes treated with control serum
(circles; n = 12) or serum
(squares) from Patient III (n = 14) or IV
(n = 14). Changes in LVA current were not significant.
The decrease in HVA current was significant for Patient IV but not for
Patient III. For Patient IV, GmaxH
(determined as described in Fig. 3) was 0.21 ± 0.06 nS/pF
compared with 0.30 ± 0.08 nS/pF in control. B,
Representative current traces from a control (left) and
Patient IV serum-treated (right) skeletal myotube at test
potentials of 30, 20, 10, 20, and 30 mV. Serum from Patient IV
had no obvious effect on voltage dependence or kinetics of calcium
current.
[View Larger Version of this Image (25K GIF file)]
Pharmacology of residual calcium currents in LES
serum-treated motoneurons
Compared with control, calcium currents measured
from motoneurons treated with LES serum decayed little during the test
pulses, especially at high potentials (Fig. 1), which is reminiscent of
L-type calcium current (Bean, 1989 ; Hess, 1990 ). Additionally, only
serum from Patient IV significantly altered calcium currents in muscle,
which are primarily L-type (Bean, 1989 ; Hess, 1990 ). These observations
suggest that a large portion of the residual calcium current in
serum-treated motoneurons may be carried by L-type channels. To further
examine the nature of the residual calcium current in LES serum-treated
motoneurons, we used pharmacological methods. Nimodipine (10 µM) was selected because it is an L-channel
antagonist (Fox et al., 1987 ; McCarthy and TanPiengco, 1992 ), and
-CTx MVIIC (5 µM) was selected because it
blocks current via a number of different types of HVA calcium channels
(including N, P, and Q) but spares L-type calcium current (Hillyard et
al., 1992 ).
As one approach for examining the pharmacology of the residual current
in LES serum-treated motoneurons, the motoneurons were incubated with
either nimodipine or -CTx MVIIC for at least 1.5 hr before
recording. In control serum-treated motoneurons, incubation with either
10 µM nimodipine (Fig.
7A) or 5 µM -CTx
MVIIC (Fig. 7B) did not seem to alter either voltage
dependence or kinetics dramatically (compare with Fig. 1). Figure
7C illustrates the effects of nimodipine and -CTx MVIIC
on peak current-voltage relationships in motoneurons treated with
control serum (top), serum from Patient II
(middle), or serum from Patient III (bottom). The
circles plot average densities of the calcium currents from motoneurons
not exposed to the calcium channel blockers. In control serum-treated
motoneurons, -CTx MVIIC (triangles) reduced the maximal
HVA current by 70% (n = 7), whereas
nimodipine (squares) caused only an 18% decrease
(n = 8). By contrast, -CTx MVIIC essentially had no
effect on the HVA calcium that remained in motoneurons treated with
serum from Patients II and III (n = 9 for both),
whereas nimodipine caused a large reduction in the residual HVA
current; at +10 mV, the reduction was 70% for Patient II
(n = 7) and 73% for Patient III (n = 8).
Fig. 7.
Representative calcium currents elicited at test
potentials of 30, 20, 10, 10, 20, and 30 mV from motoneurons
incubated in control serum and either 10 µM
nimodipine (A) or 5 µM -CTx MVIIC
(B). C, Averaged, peak current density versus
test potential in control and test serum-treated motoneurons that had
been incubated 1.5 hr in medium with 10 µM
nimodipine (squares), 5 µM -CTx
MVIIC (triangles), or without antagonist
(circles; data replotted from Fig. 2). In control
serum-treated motoneurons, LVA current was decreased significantly
(65%) by nimodipine but not by -CTx MVIIC.
[View Larger Version of this Image (24K GIF file)]
In addition to prolonged bath application, acute perfusion of the
calcium channel antagonists also was examined in control and Patient II
serum-treated motoneurons. HVA current in control serum-treated
motoneurons was decreased substantially by perfusion with -CTx MVIIC
but little affected by nimodipine (Fig. 8A).
By contrast, in LES serum-treated motoneurons the HVA current was
greatly reduced by perfusion with nimodipine (Fig. 8B,
left) but not with -CTx MVIIC (Fig. 8B,
right, average reduction of 3 ± 5%;
n = 4). Even after a 15 min application of -CTx
MVIIC, the decrease was only 26 and 36% in two experiments, and much
of this decrease may have been a consequence of time-dependent rundown.
Figure 8C shows the averaged normalized current as a
function of time for control serum-treated motoneurons
(left) and motoneurons treated with serum from Patient II
(right). For control serum-treated motoneurons, maximal HVA
current was reduced after 4 min perfusion with -CTx MVIIC by 56 ± 7% (n = 3) but <10% by nimodipine
(n = 2). In motoneurons treated with serum from Patient
II, the HVA current was not affected significantly by perfusion with
-CTx MVIIC but was reduced >95% by perfusion with nimodipine
(n = 2).
Fig. 8.
Effects of acute perfusion of calcium channel
blockers on control serum- and Patient II serum-treated motoneurons.
Calcium currents were evoked at +10 mV in control serum-treated
motoneurons (A) or Patient II serum-treated motoneurons
(B) 1 min before and 5 min after acute perfusion with 10 µM nimodipine (left) or 5 µM -CTx MVIIC (right).
C, Normalized peak calcium current at +10 mV is plotted with
respect to time for motoneurons treated with control serum
(left) or serum from Patient II (right) and
exposed to either nimodipine (squares) or -CTx MVIIC
(triangles). The circles plot peak current as a
function of time in control serum-treated motoneurons not exposed to
either antagonist (n = 7).
[View Larger Version of this Image (24K GIF file)]
In summary, it seems that LES serum completely abolishes
motoneuronal calcium currents from channels sensitive to 5 µM -CTx MVIIC. However, LES serum may have
even broader specificity for motoneuronal calcium channels than -CTx
MVIIC because (1) LES sera also reduce LVA calcium current (Fig. 2),
(2) the average reduction in HVA current density is larger for LES sera
(Fig. 2) than for -CTx MVIIC (Fig. 7C), and (3) the
kinetics of calcium current in control serum-treated cells incubated
with -CTx MVIIC (Fig. 7B) seems to differ from that in
LES serum-treated motoneurons (Fig. 1). Despite this rather broad
specificity, LES serum seems to spare motoneuronal L-type currents.
DISCUSSION
Since the first descriptions of LES as a neuromuscular disorder
(Anderson et al., 1953 ; Lambert et al., 1956 ; Eaton and Lambert, 1957 ),
a number of reports have provided evidence that the disease results
from the production of autoantibodies that act on the presynaptic
terminal (Elmqvist and Lambert, 1968 ; Lambert and Elmqvist, 1971 ;
Cull-Candy et al., 1980 ; Kim, 1986 ). The hypothesis that neuromuscular
weakness results from decreased calcium entry at the nerve terminal was
first proposed to explain why transmitter release in neuromuscular
preparations from LES patients displayed an enhanced sensitivity to
changes in calcium concentration (Elmqvist and Lambert, 1968 ;
Cull-Candy et al., 1980 ). Support for this hypothesis came from
structural studies showing the paucity and disruption of active zones
and active zone particles (putative calcium channels) at nerve
terminals exposed to LES serum (Fukunaga, 1982; Fukuoka et al.,
1987a ,b; Nagel et al., 1988 ). Subsequently, numerous studies have
established a LES serum-induced decrease in calcium influx in a variety
of cells (see introductory remarks). Recently it has been demonstrated
that LES antibodies decrease mixed sodium and calcium currents at mouse
nerve terminals (Smith et al., 1995 ). Here, we provide the first study
directly quantifying the effects of LES sera on isolated calcium
currents in motoneurons. Although the antibodies clearly target more
than one type of calcium channel, their effects display specificity,
because they have little effect on motoneuronal potassium currents and
calcium currents in cardiac and skeletal muscle.
Previous studies have supported the idea that LES effects are
restricted to calcium channels. Thus, potassium currents in DRG cells
(García et al., 1996 ) and sodium currents in chromaffin cells
(Viglione et al., 1992 ) are not altered substantially by LES
antibodies. The present report demonstrates that this is also true for
potassium currents in motoneurons. Potassium currents were of
particular interest because recent studies have raised the possibility
that active zone particles may contain colocalized calcium and
potassium channels (Roberts et al., 1990 ; Robitaille et al., 1993 ). If
this is true for mammalian motoneurons, LES serum-induced destruction
of active zones might result in simultaneous decreases in potassium and
calcium currents. This did not occur in the cultured motoneurons used
in our studies, although potassium and calcium channel colocalization
may depend on the formation of neuromuscular synapses, which does not
occur with the system we have used. Moreover, an additional argument
against destruction of potassium channels in vivo is that
decreased potassium current would tend to prolong the presynaptic
depolarization and thus increase calcium influx, which would lessen the
pathological consequences of destruction of calcium channels.
In various cells (Blandino and Kim, 1993 ; Grassi et al., 1994 ; Johnston
et al., 1994 ; Lennon et al., 1995 ; García et al., 1996 ), LES
antibodies have been shown to decrease currents or immunoprecipitate
binding sites for antagonists associated with a number of calcium
channel types, including LVA (T) and HVA (L, N, P, Q, others?). Our
results demonstrate that in motoneurons, also, LES sera decrease both
LVA and HVA calcium currents. Thus, LES sera do not target exclusively
the channels controlling transmitter release, which is thought to be
controlled by HVA, not LVA, channels (Hirning et al., 1988 ; Uchitel et
al., 1992 ; Turner et al., 1993 ; Rossoni et al., 1994 ; Wheeler et al.,
1994 ).
Although LES antibodies affect more than one type of calcium channel in
motoneurons, the spared current seemed to be predominantly L-type.
Thus, the spared current seemed to have slower activation, had a
transient phase that was small compared with the sustained phase, and
was reduced substantially by a dihydropyridine antagonist. The
sensitivity to the dihydropyridine antagonist contrasted with control
motoneurons, in which micromolar nimodipine blocked 18% of HVA
current. L-type current also represents only 6.6% of HVA calcium
current in rat hypoglassal motoneurons (Umemiya and Berger, 1994 ).
Additionally, 5 µM -CTx MVIIC, which blocks
several types of HVA calcium channels including N, P, and Q (Hillyard
et al., 1992 ; Randall and Tsien, 1995 ), had little effect on the
motoneuronal current spared by LES antibodies, whereas it blocked a
large fraction of HVA current (70%) in control motoneurons. In
conclusion, LES antibodies nearly eliminated the non-L HVA current in
murine motoneurons while sparing significant L-type current. This
conclusion is in agreement with a recent report that a large fraction
of the extracellularly recorded calcium current in mouse motor nerve
terminals exposed to LES antibodies is blocked by dihydropyridines
(Smith et al., 1995 ).
LES sera seem to have a much more profound effect on calcium currents
in motoneurons than in other native tissues examined (Fig.
9). For example, serum from Patients I, II, and III
caused a moderate reduction of both LVA and HVA conductance in DRG
neurons (the remaining conductance was 28-46% of control for LVA and
46-57% for HVA). These sera caused a much larger reduction of calcium
conductance in motoneurons (remaining conductance, 10-40% of control
for LVA and 9-36% for HVA). The difference between DRG neurons and
motoneurons was particularly striking for serum from Patient IV (LVA,
81 and 20% in DRGs and motoneurons, respectively; HVA, 91 and 27% in
DRGs and motoneurons, respectively). LES sera have little effect on
muscle calcium channels (Fig. 9). Of the serum examined, only that from
Patient IV had an effect on muscle HVA (L-type) calcium conductance,
and this effect was modest. Thus, our whole-cell current measurements
are in agreement with an earlier study that found no difference in the
waveform of the cardiac action potential in ventricular muscle from
mice injected with LES antibodies (Lang et al., 1988 ). The modest
effect of the serum from Patient IV on muscle L-channels raises the
possibility that some LES patients produce antibodies that cross-react
with muscle. Alternatively, Patient IV was diagnosed as having both LES
and myasthenia gravis (García et al., 1996 ). Thus, the effects
of serum from Patient IV on muscle channels may be a consequence of
neuromuscular inflammation by anti-AChR antibodies (Rash et al., 1976 ;
Maselli et al., 1991).
Fig. 9.
Summary of effects of LES sera on LVA and HVA
calcium conductances in DRG neurons, motoneurons, and cardiac myocytes.
The vertical axis plots the average calcium conductance remaining in
treated cells as a percentage of control.
[View Larger Version of this Image (26K GIF file)]
The result in this paper that LES sera spare L-type channels in
motoneurons seemingly contradicts some earlier reports demonstrating
that LES antibodies affect L-type calcium channels in neuroblastoma X
glioma (Peers et al., 1990 ) and bovine adrenal chromaffin cells
(Blandino and Kim, 1993 ). Perhaps motoneurons express a different
L-channel isoform than do these other tissues, because L-channels are
encoded by at least three genes, and individual genes undergo
alternative splicing (Perez-Reyes et al., 1990 ; Snutch and Reiner,
1992 ). Furthermore, LES sera from different patients may display
differing degrees of cross-reactivity between calcium channel types.
Alternatively, the channel categories affected may depend on the type
of cell examined, as suggested by the data summarized in Figure 9.
LES antibodies seem to interact with a variety of, but not all, calcium
channels. It is possible that the antibodies react with an antigen
common to the 1 subunit of all affected
channels. Calcium channel 1 subunits are
evolutionarily and structurally related, although the non-L channels
(classes A, B, and E) have been hypothesized to be closely related
phylogenetically and to have diverged from L-type channels (classes C,
D, and skeletal) at an early time point (Fujita et al., 1993 ; Zhang et
al., 1993 ). It is equally plausible that the antibodies target an
accessory subunit ( 2/ or ) of
1 or some other channel-associated protein.
One suggested candidate is the protein synaptotagmin (Leveque et al.,
1992 ; Takamori et al., 1994 ), although this idea is controversial
(Hajela and Atchison, 1995 ).
The present work raises another interesting question: why are
motoneurons more profoundly affected? Among the possibilities are that,
in motoneurons, the critical epitopes are more accessible, the targeted
channel(s) comprise a larger fraction of the total, or the rates of
calcium channel biosynthesis and degradation are different. Whatever
the mechanism, the present results, together with previous work
(García et al., 1996 ), show that LES antibodies preferentially
target neurons and more profoundly affect motor than sensory
neurons.
FOOTNOTES
Received April 17, 1996; accepted May 21, 1996.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant NS26416
to K.G.B. We thank Dr. Donald Sanders for the serum samples and Robin
Morris for help with the tissue culture. This work is from a thesis
submitted to the Academic Faculty of Colorado State University in
partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Ph.D. to
K.D.G.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Beam at the above
address.
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K. D. Garcia, L. K. Sprunger, M. H. Meisler, and K. G. Beam
The Sodium Channel Scn8a Is the Major Contributor to the Postnatal Developmental Increase of Sodium Current Density in Spinal Motoneurons
J. Neurosci.,
July 15, 1998;
18(14):
5234 - 5239.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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