The Molecular Determinants of Ionic Regulatory Differences between Brain and Kidney Na+/Ca2+ Exchanger (NCX1) Isoforms

2002 
Abstract The Na+/Ca2+exchanger gene NCX1 undergoes alternative splicing leading to several isoforms that differ in a small portion of the large cytoplasmic loop. This loop is involved in many regulatory processes of NCX1, including ionic regulation by the transported substrates Na+and Ca2+. High intracellular Ca2+ can alleviate intracellular Na+-dependent inactivation in exon A (NCX1.4)-containing isoforms but not in those containing the mutually exclusive exon B (NCX1.3). Giant excised patches fromXenopus oocytes expressing various NCX1 constructs were used to examine the specific amino acids responsible for these observed regulatory differences. Using a chimeric approach, the region responsible was narrowed down to the small central part of exon A (IDDEEYEKNKTF). Replacing the second aspartic acid of this sequence with arginine (the corresponding amino acid in exon B) in an exon A background completely prevented the effect of Ca2+ on intracellular Na+-dependent inactivation. Mutating the second lysine to cysteine (exon B) had a similar, but only partial, effect. The converse double mutant, but neither single mutation alone, introduced into an exon B background (arginine to aspartic acid and cysteine to lysine) was able to restore the NCX1.4 regulatory phenotype. These data demonstrate that aspartic acid 610 and lysine 617 (using the rat NCX1.4 numbering scheme) are critical molecular determinants of the unique Ca2+ regulatory properties of NCX1.4.
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