Hunter Biology Research in Featured Cover Article at Journal of Physiology - Biology
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Hunter Biology Research in Featured Cover Article at Journal of Physiology

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Action potential generation is governed by the opening, inactivation, and recovery of voltage-gated sodium channels.  A channel’s fast inactivation particle mediates both onset of inactivation upon membrane depolarization and rapid recovery upon repolarization.  The cover-featured Journal of Physiology article from Mitch Goldfarb’s lab describes a novel inactivation particle housed within an accessory channel subunit (A-type FHF protein) mediating rapid-onset, long-term inactivation of several sodium channels.  The channel-intrinsic and tethered FHF-derived particles compete for induction of inactivation, causing channels to progressively accumulate into the long-term refractory state during multiple depolarization cycles. A short peptide corresponding to the FHF particle can reproduce channel long-term inactivation and inhibit repetitive firing of cerebellar granule neurons. A-type FHFs may therefore serve to modulate action potential generation, and small molecules that mimic the FHF peptide particle may have utility in managing clinical disorders of cellular hyperexcitability.

 

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 14 December 2010 12:26 )