Na V 1.4 DI-S4 periodic paralysis mutation R222W enhances inactivation and promotes leak current to attenuate action potentials and depolarize muscle fibers

2018
Hypokalemic periodic paralysisis a skeletal muscle disease characterized by episodic weakness associated with low serum potassium. We compared clinical and biophysical effects of R222W, the first hNaV1.4 domain I mutationlinked to this disease. R222W patients exhibited a higher density of fibers with depolarized resting membrane potentials and produced action potentialsthat were attenuated compared to controls. Functional characterization of the R222W mutation in heterologous expressionincluded the inactivation deficient IFM/QQQ background to isolate activation. R222W decreased sodium current and slowed activation without affecting probability. Consistent with the phenotype of muscle weakness, R222W shifted fast inactivation to hyperpolarized potentials, promoted more rapid entry, and slowed recovery. R222W increased the extent of slow inactivation and slowed its recovery. A two-compartment skeletal muscle fiber model revealed that defects in fast inactivation sufficiently explain action potentialattenuation in patients. Molecular dynamics simulations showed that R222W disrupted electrostatic interactions within the gating pore, supporting the observation that R222W promotes omega current at hyperpolarized potentials. Sodium channel inactivation defects produced by R222W are the primary driver of skeletal muscle fiber action potentialattenuation, while hyperpolarization-induced omega current produced by that mutation promotes muscle fiber depolarization.
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