Impairment of skeletal muscle adenosine triphosphate-sensitive K+ channels in patients with hypokalemic periodic paralysis

被引:79
|
作者
Tricarico, D
Servidei, S
Tonali, P
Jurkat-Rott, K
Camerino, DC
机构
[1] Univ Bari, Fac Pharm, Dept Pharmacobiol, Pharmacol Unit, I-70126 Bari, Italy
[2] Univ Cattolica Sacro Cuore, Fac Med Agostino Gemelli, Neurol Inst, I-00168 Rome, Italy
[3] Univ Ulm, Allgemeine Physiol Abt, D-89081 Ulm, Germany
来源
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION | 1999年 / 103卷 / 05期
关键词
D O I
10.1172/JCI4552
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
The adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-sensitive K+ (K-ATP) channel is the most abundant K+ channel active in the skeletal muscle fibers of humans and animals. In the present work, we demonstrate the involvement of the muscular K-ATP channel in a skeletal muscle disorder known as hypokalemic periodic paralysis (HOPP), which is caused by mutations of the dihydropyridine receptor of the Ca2+ channel. Muscle biopsies excised from three patients with HOPP carrying the R528H mutation of the dihydropyridine receptor showed a reduced sarcolemma K-ATP current that was not stimulated by magnesium adenosine diphosphate (MgADP; 50-100 mu M) and was partially restored by cromakalim. In contrast, large K-ATP currents stimulated by MgADP were recorded in the healthy subjects. At channel level, an abnormal K-ATP channel showing several subconductance states was detected in the patients with HOPP. None of these were surveyed in the healthy subjects. Transitions of the K-ATP channel between subconductance states were also observed after in vitro incubation of the rat muscle with low-K+ solution. The lack of the sarcolemma K-ATP current observed in these patients explains the symptoms of the disease, i.e., hypokalemia, depolarization of the fibers, and possibly the paralysis following insulin administration.
引用
收藏
页码:675 / 682
页数:8
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