Kurt G. Beam
University of Colorado Denver
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Featured researches published by Kurt G. Beam.
The Journal of General Physiology | 2009
Roger A. Bannister; Isaac N. Pessah; Kurt G. Beam
The term excitation-coupled Ca2+ entry (ECCE) designates the entry of extracellular Ca2+ into skeletal muscle cells, which occurs in response to prolonged depolarization or pulse trains and depends on the presence of both the 1,4-dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR) in the plasma membrane and the type 1 ryanodine receptor in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membrane. The ECCE pathway is blocked by pharmacological agents that also block store-operated Ca2+ entry, is inhibited by dantrolene, is relatively insensitive to the DHP antagonist nifedipine (1 μM), and is permeable to Mn2+. Here, we have examined the effects of these agents on the L-type Ca2+ current conducted via the DHPR. We found that the nonspecific cation channel antagonists (2-APB, SKF 96356, La3+, and Gd3+) and dantrolene all inhibited the L-type Ca2+ current. In addition, complete (>97%) block of the L-type current required concentrations of nifedipine >10 μM. Like ECCE, the L-type Ca2+ channel displays permeability to Mn2+ in the absence of external Ca2+ and produces a Ca2+ current that persists during prolonged (∼10-second) depolarization. This current appears to contribute to the Ca2+ transient observed during prolonged KCl depolarization of intact myotubes because (1) the transients in normal myotubes decayed more rapidly in the absence of external Ca2+; (2) the transients in dysgenic myotubes expressing SkEIIIK (a DHPR α1S pore mutant thought to conduct only monovalent cations) had a time course like that of normal myotubes in Ca2+-free solution and were unaffected by Ca2+ removal; and (3) after block of SR Ca2+ release by 200 μM ryanodine, normal myotubes still displayed a large Ca2+ transient, whereas no transient was detectable in SkEIIIK-expressing dysgenic myotubes. Collectively, these results indicate that the skeletal muscle L-type channel is a major contributor to the Ca2+ entry attributed to ECCE.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Gennady Cherednichenko; Rui Zhang; Roger A. Bannister; Valeriy Timofeyev; Ning Li; Erika B. Fritsch; Wei Feng; Genaro Barrientos; Nils Helge Schebb; Bruce D. Hammock; Kurt G. Beam; Nipavan Chiamvimonvat; Isaac N. Pessah
Triclosan (TCS), a high-production-volume chemical used as a bactericide in personal care products, is a priority pollutant of growing concern to human and environmental health. TCS is capable of altering the activity of type 1 ryanodine receptor (RyR1), but its potential to influence physiological excitation–contraction coupling (ECC) and muscle function has not been investigated. Here, we report that TCS impairs ECC of both cardiac and skeletal muscle in vitro and in vivo. TCS acutely depresses hemodynamics and grip strength in mice at doses ≥12.5 mg/kg i.p., and a concentration ≥0.52 μM in water compromises swimming performance in larval fathead minnow. In isolated ventricular cardiomyocytes, skeletal myotubes, and adult flexor digitorum brevis fibers TCS depresses electrically evoked ECC within ∼10–20 min. In myotubes, nanomolar to low micromolar TCS initially potentiates electrically evoked Ca2+ transients followed by complete failure of ECC, independent of Ca2+ store depletion or block of RyR1 channels. TCS also completely blocks excitation-coupled Ca2+ entry. Voltage clamp experiments showed that TCS partially inhibits L-type Ca2+ currents of cardiac and skeletal muscle, and [3H]PN200 binding to skeletal membranes is noncompetitively inhibited by TCS in the same concentration range that enhances [3H]ryanodine binding. TCS potently impairs orthograde and retrograde signaling between L-type Ca2+ and RyR channels in skeletal muscle, and L-type Ca2+ entry in cardiac muscle, revealing a mechanism by which TCS weakens cardiac and skeletal muscle contractility in a manner that may negatively impact muscle health, especially in susceptible populations.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Jose M. Eltit; Roger A. Bannister; Ong Moua; Francisco Altamirano; P.M. Hopkins; Isaac N. Pessah; Tadeusz F. Molinski; Jose R. Lopez; Kurt G. Beam; Paul D. Allen
Malignant hyperthermia (MH) susceptibility is a dominantly inherited disorder in which volatile anesthetics trigger aberrant Ca2+ release in skeletal muscle and a potentially fatal rise in perioperative body temperature. Mutations causing MH susceptibility have been identified in two proteins critical for excitation–contraction (EC) coupling, the type 1 ryanodine receptor (RyR1) and CaV1.1, the principal subunit of the L-type Ca2+ channel. All of the mutations that have been characterized previously augment EC coupling and/or increase the rate of L-type Ca2+ entry. The CaV1.1 mutation R174W associated with MH susceptibility occurs at the innermost basic residue of the IS4 voltage-sensing helix, a residue conserved among all CaV channels [Carpenter D, et al. (2009) BMC Med Genet 10:104–115.]. To define the functional consequences of this mutation, we expressed it in dysgenic (CaV1.1 null) myotubes. Unlike previously described MH-linked mutations in CaV1.1, R174W ablated the L-type current and had no effect on EC coupling. Nonetheless, R174W increased sensitivity of Ca2+ release to caffeine (used for MH diagnostic in vitro testing) and to volatile anesthetics. Moreover, in CaV1.1 R174W-expressing myotubes, resting myoplasmic Ca2+ levels were elevated, and sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) stores were partially depleted, compared with myotubes expressing wild-type CaV1.1. Our results indicate that CaV1.1 functions not only to activate RyR1 during EC coupling, but also to suppress resting RyR1-mediated Ca2+ leak from the SR, and that perturbation of CaV1.1 negative regulation of RyR1 leak identifies a unique mechanism that can sensitize muscle cells to MH triggers.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006
David C. Sheridan; Hiroaki Takekura; Clara Franzini-Armstrong; Kurt G. Beam; Paul D. Allen; Claudio F. Perez
We have defined regions of the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor (RyR1) essential for bidirectional signaling with dihydropyridine receptors (DHPRs) and for the organization of DHPR into tetrad arrays by expressing RyR1–RyR3 chimerae in dyspedic myotubes. RyR1–RyR3 constructs bearing RyR1 residues 1–1681 restored wild-type DHPR tetrad arrays and, in part, skeletal-type excitation–contraction (EC) coupling (orthograde signaling) but failed to enhance DHPR Ca2+ currents (retrograde signaling) to WT RyR1 levels. Within this region, the D2 domain (amino acids 1272–1455), although ineffective on its own, dramatically enhanced the formation of tetrads and EC coupling rescue by constructs that otherwise are only partially effective. These findings suggest that the orthograde signal and DHPR tetrad formation require the contributions of numerous RyR regions. Surprisingly, we found that RyR3, although incapable of supporting EC coupling or tetrad formation, restored a significant level of Ca2+ current, revealing a functional interaction with the skeletal muscle DHPR. Thus, our data support the hypotheses that (i) the structural/functional link between RyR1 and the skeletal muscle DHPR requires multiple interacting regions, (ii) the D2 domain of RyR1 plays a key role in stabilizing this interaction, and (iii) a form of retrograde signaling from RyR3 to the DHPR occurs in the absence of direct protein–protein interactions.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Alexander Polster; Stefano Perni; Hicham Bichraoui; Kurt G. Beam
Significance Voltage-gated calcium channels are essential for diverse cellular functions. For example, CaV1.1 channels trigger skeletal muscle contraction and CaV1.2 channels regulate neural gene expression in response to neuronal activity. Thus, it is important to understand the cellular mechanisms that regulate delivery of these channels to the plasma membrane and that govern calcium movements via the membrane-inserted channels. Here we show that the cellular adapter protein “Stac3” participates in both processes. Specifically, Stac3 binds to both CaV1.1 and CaV1.2. This binding is essential for efficient delivery of CaV1.1 to the plasma membrane, but not for CaV1.2. However, binding of Stac3, or the related protein Stac2, to CaV1.2 causes a dramatic slowing of inactivation, thereby increasing calcium entry via CaV1.2. Excitation–contraction (EC) coupling in skeletal muscle depends upon trafficking of CaV1.1, the principal subunit of the dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR) (L-type Ca2+ channel), to plasma membrane regions at which the DHPRs interact with type 1 ryanodine receptors (RyR1) in the sarcoplasmic reticulum. A distinctive feature of this trafficking is that CaV1.1 expresses poorly or not at all in mammalian cells that are not of muscle origin (e.g., tsA201 cells), in which all of the other nine CaV isoforms have been successfully expressed. Here, we tested whether plasma membrane trafficking of CaV1.1 in tsA201 cells is promoted by the adapter protein Stac3, because recent work has shown that genetic deletion of Stac3 in skeletal muscle causes the loss of EC coupling. Using fluorescently tagged constructs, we found that Stac3 and CaV1.1 traffic together to the tsA201 plasma membrane, whereas CaV1.1 is retained intracellularly when Stac3 is absent. Moreover, L-type Ca2+ channel function in tsA201 cells coexpressing Stac3 and CaV1.1 is quantitatively similar to that in myotubes, despite the absence of RyR1. Although Stac3 is not required for surface expression of CaV1.2, the principle subunit of the cardiac/brain L-type Ca2+ channel, Stac3 does bind to CaV1.2 and, as a result, greatly slows the rate of current inactivation, with Stac2 acting similarly. Overall, these results indicate that Stac3 is an essential chaperone of CaV1.1 in skeletal muscle and that in the brain, Stac2 and Stac3 may significantly modulate CaV1.2 function.
Biophysical Journal | 2008
Marcin P. Gach; Gennady Cherednichenko; Claudia S. Haarmann; Jose R. Lopez; Kurt G. Beam; Isaac N. Pessah; Clara Franzini-Armstrong; Paul D. Allen
It has been shown that small interfering RNA (siRNA) partial knockdown of the alpha(2)delta(1) dihydropyridine receptor subunits cause a significant increase in the rate of activation of the L-type Ca(2+) current in myotubes but have little or no effect on skeletal excitation-contraction coupling. This study used permanent siRNA knockdown of alpha(2)delta(1) to address two important unaddressed questions. First, does the alpha(2)delta(1) subunit contribute to the size and/or spacing of tetradic particles? Second, is the alpha(2)delta(1) subunit important for excitation-coupled calcium entry? We found that the size and spacing of tetradic particles is unaffected by siRNA knockdown of alpha(2)delta(1), indicating that the visible particle represents the alpha(1s) subunit. Strikingly, >97% knockdown of alpha(2)delta(1) leads to a complete loss of excitation-coupled calcium entry during KCl depolarization and a more rapid decay of Ca(2+) transients during bouts of repetitive electrical stimulation like those occurring during normal muscle activation in vivo. Thus, we conclude that the alpha(2)delta(1) dihydropyridine receptor subunit is physiologically necessary for sustaining Ca(2+) transients in response to prolonged depolarization or repeated trains of action potentials.
Biophysical Journal | 2008
Roger A. Bannister; Henry M. Colecraft; Kurt G. Beam
In skeletal muscle, the L-type voltage-gated Ca(2+) channel (1,4-dihydropyridine receptor) serves as the voltage sensor for excitation-contraction (EC) coupling. In this study, we examined the effects of Rem, a member of the RGK (Rem, Rem2, Rad, Gem/Kir) family of Ras-related monomeric GTP-binding proteins, on the function of the skeletal muscle L-type Ca(2+) channel. EC coupling was found to be weakened in myotubes expressing Rem tagged with enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (YFP-Rem), as assayed by electrically evoked contractions and myoplasmic Ca(2+) transients. This impaired EC coupling was not a consequence of altered function of the type 1 ryanodine receptor, or of reduced Ca(2+) stores, since the application of 4-chloro-m-cresol, a direct type 1 ryanodine receptor activator, elicited myoplasmic Ca(2+) release in YFP-Rem-expressing myotubes that was not distinguishable from that in control myotubes. However, YFP-Rem reduced the magnitude of L-type Ca(2+) current by approximately 75% and produced a concomitant reduction in membrane-bound charge movements. Thus, our results indicate that Rem negatively regulates skeletal muscle EC coupling by reducing the number of functional L-type Ca(2+) channels in the plasma membrane.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013
Roger A. Bannister; Kurt G. Beam
Ca(V)1.1 is the prototype for the other nine known Ca(V) channel isoforms, yet it has functional properties that make it truly atypical of this group. Specifically, Ca(V)1.1 is expressed solely in skeletal muscle where it serves multiple purposes; it is the voltage sensor for excitation-contraction coupling and it is an L-type Ca²⁺ channel which contributes to a form of activity-dependent Ca²⁺ entry that has been termed Excitation-coupled Ca²⁺ entry. The ability of Ca(V)1.1 to serve as voltage-sensor for excitation-contraction coupling appears to be unique among Ca(V) channels, whereas the physiological role of its more conventional function as a Ca²⁺ channel has been a matter of uncertainty for nearly 50 years. In this chapter, we discuss how Ca(V)1.1 supports excitation-contraction coupling, the possible relevance of Ca²⁺ entry through Ca(V)1.1 and how alterations of Ca(V)1.1 function can have pathophysiological consequences. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Calcium channels.
The Journal of General Physiology | 2010
E. Estève; Jose M. Eltit; Roger A. Bannister; Kai Liu; Isaac N. Pessah; Kurt G. Beam; Paul D. Allen; Jose R. Lopez
Bidirectional signaling between the sarcolemmal L-type Ca2+ channel (1,4-dihydropyridine receptor [DHPR]) and the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release channel (type 1 ryanodine receptor [RYR1]) of skeletal muscle is essential for excitation–contraction coupling (ECC) and is a well-understood prototype of conformational coupling. Mutations in either channel alter coupling fidelity and with an added pharmacologic stimulus or stress can trigger malignant hyperthermia (MH). In this study, we measured the response of wild-type (WT), heterozygous (Het), or homozygous (Hom) RYR1-R163C knock-in mouse myotubes to maintained K+ depolarization. The new findings are: (a) For all three genotypes, Ca2+ transients decay during prolonged depolarization, and this decay is not a consequence of SR depletion or RYR1 inactivation. (b) The R163C mutation retards the decay rate with a rank order WT > Het > Hom. (c) The removal of external Ca2+ or the addition of Ca2+ entry blockers (nifedipine, SKF96365, and Ni2+) enhanced the rate of decay in all genotypes. (d) When Ca2+ entry is blocked, the decay rates are slower for Hom and Het than WT, indicating that the rate of inactivation of ECC is affected by the R163C mutation and is genotype dependent (WT > Het > Hom). (e) Reduced ECC inactivation in Het and Hom myotubes was shown directly using two identical K+ depolarizations separated by varying time intervals. These data suggest that conformational changes induced by the R163C MH mutation alter the retrograde signal that is sent from RYR1 to the DHPR, delaying the inactivation of the DHPR voltage sensor.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Alexander Polster; Benjamin R. Nelson; Eric N. Olson; Kurt G. Beam
Significance Recent work showed that absence of the protein Stac3 (SH3 and cysteine-rich domain 3) caused a failure of excitation–contraction (EC) coupling in skeletal muscle but not whether this failure was because the trafficking of other key proteins was altered or because Stac3 plays a direct role in coupling CaV1.1 (the “sensor” of excitation) to RyR1 (type 1 ryanodine receptor, the Ca2+ release channel). Here we show that reduced expression of CaV1.1 could not account for the loss of EC coupling. Ca2+ release was fully restored by WT Stac3 but only marginally by Stac3 bearing a point mutation causing Native American myopathy. Thus, Stac3 seems to be involved directly in the coupling of CaV1.1 to RyR1. In skeletal muscle, conformational coupling between CaV1.1 in the plasma membrane and type 1 ryanodine receptor (RyR1) in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) is thought to underlie both excitation–contraction (EC) coupling Ca2+ release from the SR and retrograde coupling by which RyR1 increases the magnitude of the Ca2+ current via CaV1.1. Recent work has shown that EC coupling fails in muscle from mice and fish null for the protein Stac3 (SH3 and cysteine-rich domain 3) but did not establish the functional role of Stac3 in the CaV1.1–RyR1 interaction. We investigated this using both tsA201 cells and Stac3 KO myotubes. While confirming in tsA201 cells that Stac3 could support surface expression of CaV1.1 (coexpressed with its auxiliary β1a and α2-δ1 subunits) and the generation of large Ca2+ currents, we found that without Stac3 the auxiliary γ1 subunit also supported membrane expression of CaV1.1/β1a/α2-δ1, but that this combination generated only tiny Ca2+ currents. In Stac3 KO myotubes, there was reduced, but still substantial CaV1.1 in the plasma membrane. However, the CaV1.1 remaining in Stac3 KO myotubes did not generate appreciable Ca2+ currents or EC coupling Ca2+ release. Expression of WT Stac3 in Stac3 KO myotubes fully restored Ca2+ currents and EC coupling Ca2+ release, whereas expression of Stac3W280S (containing the Native American myopathy mutation) partially restored Ca2+ currents but only marginally restored EC coupling. We conclude that membrane trafficking of CaV1.1 is facilitated by, but does not require, Stac3, and that Stac3 is directly involved in conformational coupling between CaV1.1 and RyR1.