%0 Journal Article %T Cloning and expression of a zebrafish SCN1B ortholog and identification of a species-specific splice variant %A Amanda J Fein %A Laurence S Meadows %A Chunling Chen %A Emily A Slat %A Lori L Isom %J BMC Genomics %D 2007 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2164-8-226 %X Two ¦Â1-like subunit mRNAs from zebrafish, scn1ba_tv1 and scn1ba_tv2, arise from alternative splicing of scn1ba. The deduced amino acid sequences of Scn1ba_tv1 and Scn1ba_tv2 are identical except for their C-terminal domains. The C-terminus of Scn1ba_tv1 contains a tyrosine residue similar to that found to be critical for ankyrin association and Na+ channel modulation in mammalian ¦Â1. In contrast, Scn1ba_tv2 contains a unique, species-specific C-terminal domain that does not contain a tyrosine. Immunohistochemical analysis shows that, while the expression patterns of Scn1ba_tv1 and Scn1ba_tv2 overlap in some areas of the brain, retina, spinal cord, and skeletal muscle, only Scn1ba_tv1 is expressed in optic nerve where its staining pattern suggests nodal expression. Both scn1ba splice forms modulate Na+ currents expressed by zebrafish scn8aa, resulting in shifts in channel gating mode, increased current amplitude, negative shifts in the voltage dependence of current activation and inactivation, and increases in the rate of recovery from inactivation, similar to the function of mammalian ¦Â1 subunits. In contrast to mammalian ¦Â1, however, neither zebrafish subunit produces a complete shift to the fast gating mode and neither subunit produces complete channel inactivation or recovery from inactivation.These data add to our understanding of structure-function relationships in Na+ channel ¦Â1 subunits and establish zebrafish as an ideal system in which to determine the contribution of scn1ba to electrical excitability in vivo.Voltage gated Na+ channel ¦Â1 (Scn1b) subunits are multi-functional proteins that participate in inter- and intra-cellular communication on multiple time scales via modulation of electrical signal transduction and cell adhesion [1,2]. ¦Â1 subunits modulate Na+ currents [3], regulate the level of Na+ channel cell surface expression [4], and participate in cell adhesive interactions that lead to changes in cell migration [5], cellular aggregation [6], cyto %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/8/226