Recent genetic and molecular biological analyses have revealed many forms of inherited channelopathies. Homozygous ataxic mice, tottering (tg) and leaner (tg(1a)) mice, have mutations in the P/Q-type Ca2+ channel alpha(1A) subunit gene. Although their clinical phenotypes, histological changes, and locations of gene mutations are known, it remains unclear what phenotypes the mutant Ca2+ channels manifest, or whether the altered channel properties are the primary consequence of the mutations. To address these questions, we have characterized the electrophysiological properties of Ca2+ channels in cerebellar Purkinje cells, where the P-type is the dominant Ca2+ channel, dissociated from the normal, tg, and tg(1a) mice, and compared them with the properties of the wild-type and mutant alpha(1A) channels recombinantly expressed with the alpha(2) and beta subunits in baby hamster kidney cells. The most striking feature of Ca2+ channel currents of mutant Purkinje cells was a marked reduction in current density, being reduced to similar to 60 and similar to 40% of control in tg and tg(1a) mice, respectively, without changes of cell size. The Ca2+ channel currents in the tg Purkinje cells showed a relative increase in non-inactivating component in voltage-dependent inactivation. Besides the same change, those of the tg(1a) mice showed a more distinct change in voltage dependence of activation and inactivation, being shifted in the depolarizing direction by similar to 10 mV, with a broader voltage dependence of inactivation. In the recombinant expression system, the tg channel with a missense mutation (P601L) and one form of the two possible tg(1a) aberrant splicing products, tg(1a) (short) channel, showed a significant reduction in current density, while the other form of the tg(1a) channels, tg(1a) (long), had a current density comparable to the normal control. On the other hand, the shift in voltage dependence of activation and inactivation was observed only for the tg(1a) (long) channel. Comparison of properties of the native and recombinant mutant channels suggests that single tottering mutations are directly responsible for the neuropathic phenotypes of reduction in current density and deviations in gating behavior, which lead to neuronal death and cerebellar atrophy.