Title : IgG from patients with Lambert-Eaton syndrome blocks voltage-dependent calcium channels - Kim_1988_Science_239_405 |
Author(s) : Kim YI , Neher E |
Ref : Science , 239 :405 , 1988 |
Abstract :
Lambert-Eaton syndrome, an autoimmune disorder frequently associated with small-cell carcinoma of the lung, is characterized by impaired evoked release of acetylcholine from the motor nerve terminal. Immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies from patients with the syndrome, applied to bovine adrenal chromaffin cells, reduced the voltage-dependent calcium channel currents by about 40 percent. When calcium was administered directly into the cytoplasm, however, the IgG-treated cells exhibited normal exocytotic secretion, as assayed by membrane capacitance measurement. Measurement with the fluorescent calcium indicator fura-2 indicated that the IgG treatment reduced potassium-stimulated increase in free intracellular calcium concentration. The pathogenic IgG modified neither kinetics of calcium channel activation nor elementary channel activity, suggesting that a reduction in the number of functional calcium channels underlies the IgG-induced effect. Therefore, Lambert-Eaton syndrome IgG reacts with voltage-dependent calcium channels and blocks their function, a phenomenon that can account for the presynaptic impairment characteristic of this disorder. |
PubMedSearch : Kim_1988_Science_239_405 |
PubMedID: 2447652 |
Kim YI, Neher E (1988)
IgG from patients with Lambert-Eaton syndrome blocks voltage-dependent calcium channels
Science
239 :405
Kim YI, Neher E (1988)
Science
239 :405