Nature, Vol.380, No.6569, 72-75, 1996
Enhanced Dihydropyridine Receptor-Channel Activity in the Presence of Ryanodine Receptor
Excitation-contraction coupling in skeletal muscle involves a voltage sensor in the plasma membrane which, in response to depolarization, causes an intracellular calcium-release channel to open. The skeletal isoform of the ryanodine receptor (RyR-1) functions as the Ca2+-release channel(1-3) and the dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR) functions as the voltage sensor and also as an L-type Ca2+ channel(4,5). Here we examine the possibility that there is a retrograde signal from RyR-1 to the DHPR, using myotubes from mice homozygous for a disrupted RyR-1 gene (dyspedic mice)(3). As expected, we find that there is no excitation-contraction coupling in dyspedic myotubes, but we also find that they have a roughly 30-fold reduction in L-type Ca2+-current density. Injection of dyspedic myotubes with RyR-1 complementary DNA restores excitation-contraction coupling and causes the density of L-type Ca2+ current to rise towards normal. Despite the differences in Ca2+-current magnitude, measurements of charge movement indicate that the density of DHPRs is similar in dyspedic and RyR-1-expressing myotubes. Our results support the possibility of a retrograde signal hy which RyR-1 enhances the function of DHPRs as Ca2+ channels.
Keywords:DYSGENIC SKELETAL-MUSCLE;STEM-CELL LINES;COMPLEMENTARY-DNA;RELEASE CHANNEL;CALCIUM CURRENT;PERCHLORATE;EXPRESSION