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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 83 No. 3 March 2000, pp. 1502-1509
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
1Kresge Hearing Research Laboratory of the South, Department of Otorhinolaryngology and Biocommunication; 2Neuroscience Center, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center; and 3Tulane Cancer Center and Environmental Health Sciences, Tulane University Medical School, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112
Chen, Chu,
Margarett
S. Parker,
Anthony P. Barnes,
Prescott Deininger, and
Richard P. Bobbin.
Functional Expression of Three P2X2 Receptor Splice
Variants From Guinea Pig Cochlea. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 1502-1509, 2000. ATP has been suggested to
act as a neurotransmitter or a neuromodulator in the cochlea. The
responses to ATP in different cell types of the cochlea vary in terms
of the rate of desensitization and magnitude, suggesting that there may
be different subtypes of P2X receptors distributed in the cochlea.
Recently three ionotropic P2X2 receptor splice variants,
P2X2-1, P2X2-2, and P2X2-3, were
isolated and sequenced from a guinea pig cochlear cDNA library. To test
the hypothesis that these different splice variants could be expressed
as functional homomeric receptors, the three P2X2 receptor
variants were individually and transiently expressed in human embryonic
kidney cells (HEK293). The biophysical and pharmacological properties
of these receptors were characterized using the whole cell patch-clamp
technique. Extracellular application of ATP induced an inward current
in HEK293 cells containing each of the three splice variants in a
dose-dependent manner indicating the expression of homomeric receptors.
Current-voltage (I-V) relationships for the ATP-gated
current show that the three subtypes of the P2X2 receptor
had a similar reversal potential and an inward rectification index
(I50 mV/I
50
mV). However, the ATP-induced currents in cells expressing
P2X2-1 and P2X2-2 variants were large and
desensitized rapidly whereas the current in those cells expressing the
P2X2-3 variant was much smaller and desensitized slower.
The order of potency to ATP agonists was 2-MeSATP > ATP >
,
-MeATP for all three expressed splice variants. The ATP receptor antagonists suramin and PPADS reduced the effects of ATP on
all three variants. Results demonstrate that three P2X2 splice variants from guinea pig cochlea, P2X2-1,
P2X2-2, and P2X2-3, can individually form
nonselective cation receptor channels when these subunits are expressed
in HEK293 cells. The distinct properties of these P2X2
receptor splice variants may contribute to the differences in the
response to ATP observed in native cochlear cells.
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