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Query: UMLS:C0024591 (
malignant hyperthermia
)
2,353
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
General anaesthetics exhibit a relatively close relationship between their pharmacological potency and their lipid solubility and may thus act by non-specific perturbation of biomembranes. However, more recent data on anaesthetic action suggests that inhalational drugs such as halothane bind directly to hydrophobic protein domains, thereby modulating important receptor functions. In support of this protein theory of anaesthetic action our native gel analysis presented here shows that halothane induces oligomerization of the
skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor
(RyR) 1 Ca(2+)-release channel, but not its cardiac RyR-2 isoform. Thus, inhalational anaesthetics are not only able to influence protein-protein interactions directly but also appear to differentiate between protein isoforms and/or configurations. This suggests that distinct peptide binding sites exist for these pharmacological agents. In addition, similar mutations in the RyR-2 isoform, which would trigger an episode of
malignant hyperthermia
in skeletal muscle fibres via abnormal RyR-1 isoforms, would probably not induce an increase in cardiac Ca(2+)-release upon administration of halothane.
...
PMID:Isoform-specific interactions between halothane and the ryanodine receptor Ca(2+)-release channel: implications for malignant hyperthermia and the protein theory of anaesthetic action. 1064 91
We have investigated if cultivated muscle cells from
malignant hyperthermia
(MH) patients can be distinguished pharmacologically from controls. Muscle specimens from four individuals carrying the Gly2435Arg mutation of the
skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor
protein (RYR1) and from four controls were used to culture myotubes. Resting intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) of MH myotubes was similar to controls. However, when ryanodine 0.5 mumol litre-1 was added, the kinetics of the increase in the calcium signals in MH and control cells were significantly different; the time for half maximum increase was mean 197 (SD 131) s for MH cells and 474 (61) s for controls (n = 80 cells each). On average, the area under the MH response curves was twice the control value. These results give rise to hopes that the phenotype of MH can be characterized using cultured human muscle and that a culture-based test for MH susceptibility may eventually be developed.
...
PMID:Malignant hyperthermia causing Gly2435Arg mutation of the ryanodine receptor facilitates ryanodine-induced calcium release in myotubes. 1070 Jul 82
Malignant hyperthermia
susceptibility (MHS), a skeletal muscle disorder, is mostly inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. Exposure of susceptible individuals to volatile halogenated anaesthetics can lead to a MH episode resulting in irreversible tissue damages or to the patient's death if not immediately reversed by dantrolene treatment. A MH episode is characterised by a combination of hyperthermia, skeletal muscle rigidity and hypermetabolism. Porcine stress syndrome has proved to be a valuable model for physiopathological studies of MHS.
Malignant hyperthermia
syndrome is associated with a failure of the calcium homeostasis in muscular fibres. Dysfunction of the calcium channels: the ryanodine receptor (RyR) and the dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR), which are involved in the release of the Ca2+ stored in sarcoplasmic reticulum has been clearly demonstrated. A biochemical test based on the analysis of the in vitro contracture response of muscular fibres to caffeine and halothane was developed to define the MHS status of patients. Although the genetic analysis of MHS has beneficiated from recent progresses, genetic testing is still far to answer to all testing situations. If in swine, hyperthermia syndrome was always associated with a unique mutation of the
RyR1
gene, genetic analysis is far more complicated in human: i) more than 20 different MHS mutations in the
RyR1
gene have been described; ii) a mutation of the gene encoding the dihydropyridine receptor has been identified; iii) 4 other potential MHS loci have been reported.
...
PMID:[Biology of malignant hyperthermia: a disease of the calcium channels of the skeletal muscle]. 1076 Jul 1
Malignant hyperthermia
(MH) is a pharmacogenetic disorder that predisposes to a sometimes fatal hypermetabolic reaction to halogenated anaesthetics. MH is considered to originate from abnormal regulation of skeletal muscle Ca(2+) release. Current diagnosis of MH susceptibility (MHS) relies on in vitro contracture testing (IVCT) of skeletal muscle. The ryanodine receptor (RYR1) encoding the major Ca(2+) release channel in the skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum has been shown to be mutated in a number of MH pedigrees. The large Maori pedigree reported here is the largest MHS pedigree investigated to date and comprises five probands who experienced clinical episodes of MH and 130 members diagnosed by the IVCT. Sequencing of the 15 117 bp RYR1 cDNA in a MHS individual from this pedigree identified a novel C14477T transition that results in a Thr4826 to Ile substitution in the C-terminal region/transmembrane loop of the
skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor
. This is the first mutation in the
RyR1
C-terminal region associated solely with MHS. Although linkage analysis showed strong linkage (max LOD, 11.103 at theta = 0.133) between the mutation and MHS in the pedigree using the standardized European IVCT phenotyping protocol, 22 MHS recombinants were observed. The relationship between the IVCT response and genotype was explored and showed that as IVCT diagnostic cut-off points were made increasingly stringent, the number of MHS discordants decreased with complete concordance between the presence or absence of the C14477T mutation and MHS and MH normal phenotypes, respectively, using a cut-off of 1.2 g tension at 2.0 mM caffeine and 1.8 g tension at 2.0% halothane. Many MHS pedigrees investigated have been excluded from linkage to the RYR1 gene on the basis of a small number of recombinants; however, the linkage analysis reported here suggests that other recombinant families excluded from linkage to the RYR1 gene may actually demonstrate linkage as the number of members tested within the pedigrees increases. The high number of discordants observed using the standardized diagnostic cut-off points is likely to reflect the presence of a second MHS susceptibility locus in the pedigree.
...
PMID:A novel ryanodine receptor mutation and genotype-phenotype correlation in a large malignant hyperthermia New Zealand Maori pedigree. 1088 2
Ca2+ inward current and fura-2 Ca2+ transients were simultaneously recorded in porcine myotubes. Myotubes from normal pigs and cells from specimens homozygous for the Arg615Cys (
malignant hyperthermia
) mutation of the
skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor
RyR1
were investigated. We addressed the question whether this mutation alters the voltage dependence of Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The time course of the total flux of Ca2+ into the myoplasm was estimated. Analysis showed that the largest input Ca2+ flux occurred immediately after depolarization. Amplitude and time course of the Ca2+ flux at large depolarizations were not significantly different in the Arg615Cys myotubes. Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum was activated at more negative potentials than the L-type Ca2+ conductance. In the controls, the potentials for half-maximal activation V 1/2 were -9.0mV and 16.5 mV, respectively. In myotubes expressing the Arg615Cys mutation, Ca2+ release was activated at significantly lower depolarizing potentials (V = -23.5 mV) than in control myotubes. In contrast, V of conductance activation (13.5 mV) was not significantly different from controls. The specific shift in the voltage dependence of Ca2+ release caused by this mutation can be well described by altering a voltage-independent reaction of the ryanodine receptor that is coupled to the voltage-dependent transitions of the L-type Ca2+ channel.
...
PMID:Malignant hyperthermia mutation Arg615Cys in the porcine ryanodine receptor alters voltage dependence of Ca2+ release. 1092 99
Central core disease (CCD) and nemaline myopathy (NM) are congenital myopathies for which differential diagnosis is often based on the presence either of cores or rods. Missense mutations in the
skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor
gene (RYR1) have been identified in some families with CCD. Mutations in the alpha-tropomyosin and alpha-actin genes have been associated with most dominant forms of NM. Analysis of the RYR1 cDNA in a French family identified a novel Y4796C mutation that lies in the C-terminal channel-forming domain of the
RyR1
protein. This mutation was linked not only to a severe and penetrant form of CCD, but also to the presence of rods in the muscle fibres and to the
malignant hyperthermia
susceptibility (MHS) phenotype. The Y4796C mutation was introduced into a rabbit RYR1 cDNA and expressed in HEK-293 cells. Expression of the mutant RYR1 cDNA produced channels with increased caffeine sensitivity and a significantly reduced maximal level of Ca(2+) release. Single-cell Ca(2+) analysis showed that the resting cytoplasmic level was increased by 60% in cells expressing the mutant channel. These data support the view that the rate of Ca(2+) leakage is increased in the mutant channel. The resulting chronic elevation in myoplasmic concentration is likely to be responsible for the severe expression of the disease. Haplotyping analysis indicated that the mutation arose as a neomutation in the proband. This first report of a neomutation in the RYR1 gene has strong implications for genetic linkage studies of MHS or CCD, two diseases characterized by a genetic heterogeneity.
...
PMID:An autosomal dominant congenital myopathy with cores and rods is associated with a neomutation in the RYR1 gene encoding the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor. 1106 19
Dantrolene is a skeletal muscle relaxant which acts by inhibiting intracellular Ca(2+) release from sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). It is used primarily in the treatment of
malignant hyperthermia
(MH), a pharmacogenetic sensitivity to volatile anesthetics resulting in massive intracellular Ca(2+) release. Determination of the site and mechanism of action of dantrolene should contribute to the understanding of the regulation of intracellular Ca(2+) release in skeletal muscle. Photoaffinity labeling of porcine SR with [(3)H]azidodantrolene, a photoactivatable analogue of dantrolene, has identified a 160 kDa SR protein with immunologic cross-reactivity to
skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor
(RyR) as a possible target [Palnitkar et al. (1999) J. Med. Chem. 42, 1872-1880]. Here we demonstrate specific, AMP-PCP-enhanced, [(3)H]azidodantrolene photolabeling of both the RyR monomer and a 160 or 172 kDa protein in porcine and rabbit SR, respectively. The 160/172 kDa protein is shown to be the NH(2)-terminus of the RyR cleaved from the monomer by an endogenous protease activity consistent with that of n-calpain. MALDI-mass spectrometric analysis of the porcine 160 kDa protein identifies it as the 1400 amino acid NH(2)-terminal fragment of the skeletal muscle RyR reportedly generated by n-calpain [Shevchenko et al. (1998) J. Membr. Biol. 161, 33-34]. Immunoprecipitation of solubilized, [(3)H]azidodantrolene-photolabeled SR protein reveals that the cleaved 160/172 kDa protein remains associated with the C-terminal, 410 kDa portion of the RyR. [(3)H]Dantrolene binding to both the intact and the n-calpain-cleaved channel RyR is similarly enhanced by AMP-PCP. n-Calpain cleavage of the RyR does not affect [(3)H]dantrolene binding in the presence of AMP-PCP, but depresses drug binding in the absence of nucleotide. These results demonstrate that the NH(2)-terminus of the RyR is a molecular target for dantrolene, and suggest a regulatory role for both n-calpain activity and ATP in the interaction of dantrolene with the RyR in vivo.
...
PMID:The skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor identified as a molecular target of [3H]azidodantrolene by photoaffinity labeling. 1114 48
Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia type 2 (ARVD2, OMIM 600996) is an autosomal dominant cardiomyopathy, characterized by partial degeneration of the myocardium of the right ventricle, electrical instability and sudden death. The disease locus was mapped to chromosome 1q42--q43. We report here on the physical mapping of the critical ARVD2 region, exclusion of two candidate genes (actinin 2 and nidogen), elucidation of the genomic structure of the cardiac ryanodine receptor gene (RYR2) and identification of RYR2 mutations in four independent families. In myocardial cells, the RyR2 protein, activated by Ca(2+), induces the release of calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum into the cytosol. RyR2 is the cardiac counterpart of
RyR1
, the
skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor
, involved in
malignant hyperthermia
(MH) susceptibility and in central core disease (CCD). The RyR2 mutations detected in the present study occurred in two highly conserved regions, strictly corresponding to those where mutations causing MH or CCD are clustered in the RYR1 gene. The detection of RyR2 mutations causing ARVD2, reported in this paper, opens the way to pre-symptomatic detection of carriers of the disease in childhood, thus enabling early monitoring and treatment.
...
PMID:Identification of mutations in the cardiac ryanodine receptor gene in families affected with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy type 2 (ARVD2). 1115 36
Mutations in the central domain of the
skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor
(RyR) cause
malignant hyperthermia
(MH). A synthetic peptide (DP4) in this domain (Leu-2442-Pro-2477) produces enhanced ryanodine binding and sensitized Ca2+ release in isolated sarcoplasmic reticulum, similar to the properties in MH, possibly because the peptide disrupts the normal interdomain interactions that stabilize the closed state of the RyR (Yamamoto T, El-Hayek R, and Ikemoto N. J Biol Chem 275: 11618-11625, 2000). Here, DP4 was applied to mechanically skinned fibers of rat muscle that had the normal excitation-contraction coupling mechanism still functional to determine whether muscle fiber responsiveness was enhanced. DP4 (100 microM) substantially potentiated the Ca2+ release and force response to caffeine (8 mM) and to low [Mg2+] (0.2 mM) in every fiber examined, with no significant effect on the properties of the contractile apparatus. DP4 also potentiated the response to submaximal depolarization of the transverse tubular system by ionic substitution. Importantly, DP4 did not significantly alter the size of the twitch response elicited by action potential stimulation. These results support the proposal that DP4 causes an MH-like aberration in RyR function and are consistent with the voltage sensor triggering Ca2+ release by destabilizing the closed state of the RyRs.
...
PMID:Effects of a domain peptide of the ryanodine receptor on Ca2+ release in skinned skeletal muscle fibers. 1140 43
The sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca(2+) release channel (
RyR1
) from
malignant hyperthermia
-susceptible (MHS) porcine skeletal muscle has a decreased sensitivity to inhibition by Mg(2+). This diminished Mg(2+) inhibition has been attributed to a lower Mg(2+) affinity of the inhibition (I) site. To determine whether alterations in the Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) affinity of the activation (A) site contribute to the altered Mg(2+) inhibition, we estimated the Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) affinities of the A- and I-sites of normal and MHS
RyR1
. Compared with normal SR, MHS SR required less Ca(2+) to half-maximally activate [(3)H]ryanodine binding (K(A,Ca): MHS = 0.17 +/- 0.01 microM; normal = 0.29 +/- 0.02 microM) and more Ca(2+) to half-maximally inhibit ryanodine binding (K(I,Ca): MHS = 519.3 +/- 48.7 microM; normal = 293.3 +/- 24.2 microM). The apparent Mg(2+) affinity constants of the MHS
RyR1
A- and I-sites were approximately twice those of the A- and I-sites of the normal
RyR1
(K(A,Mg): MHS = 44.36 +/- 4.54 microM; normal = 21.59 +/- 1.66 microM; K(I,Mg): MHS = 660.8 +/- 53.0 microM; normal = 299.2 +/- 24.5 microM). Thus, the reduced Mg(2+) inhibition of the MHS
RyR1
compared with the normal
RyR1
is due to both an enhanced selectivity of the MHS
RyR1
A-site for Ca(2+) over Mg(2+) and a reduced Mg(2+) affinity of the I-site.
...
PMID:Divergent effects of the malignant hyperthermia-susceptible Arg(615)-->Cys mutation on the Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) dependence of the RyR1. 1156 77
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