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1.
The ciliate Tetrahymena vorax is normally insensitive to light. However, after uptake of acridine orange, blue light evokes instant backward swimming. The dye accumulates mainly in posterior vacuoles, with half-maximal uptake after 1 min. Illumination for 10 s induced a depolarisation of approximately 15 mV lasting less than 2 s, followed by a sustained hyperpolarisation of approximately 20 mV. Deciliated cells displayed a similar response. The hyperpolarisation was linked to reduced membrane resistance, showed a reversal potential of approximately -55 mV and was blocked by 1 mmol l(-1) TEA. The rate of rise of electrically evoked Ca(2+)-spikes was reduced during the hyperpolarisation, which is compatible with elevated cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration. This suggests that the hyperpolarisation may be caused by activation of Ca(2+)-sensitive K(+) channels. The depolarisation was abolished in Ca(2+)-free medium, whereas the hyperpolarisation was unaffected. Illumination for 2 s, or prolonged stimulation restricted to the anterior part of the cell, induced depolarisation only. Illumination of the posterior part caused delayed hyperpolarisation with no preceding depolarisation. We conclude that the induced backward swimming is associated with Ca(2+) influx through anterior channels, while Ca(2+) released from intracellular stores activates K(+) channels responsible for the delayed hyperpolarisation.  相似文献   

2.
Ionophore A23187-mediated Ca2+-induced oscillations in the conductance of the Ca2+-sensitive K+ channels of human red cells were monitored with ion specific electrodes. The membrane potential was continuously reflected in CCCP-mediated pH changes in the buffer-free medium, changes in extracellular K+ activity were followed with a K+-selective electrode, and changes in the intracellular concentration of ionized calcium were calculated on the basis of cellular 45Ca content. An increased cellular 45Ca content at the successive minima of the oscillations where the K+ channels are closed indicates that the activation of the channels might be a (dCa2+/dt)-sensitive process and that accommodation to enhanced levels of intracellular free calcium may occur. An incipient inactivation of the K+ channels at intracellular ionized calcium levels of about 10 μM and a concurrent membrane potential of about −65 mV was observed. At a membrane potential of about −70 mV and an intracellular concentration of about 2·10−4M no inactivation of K+ channels took place. Inactivation of the K+ channels is suggested to be a compound function of the intracellular level of free calcium and the membrane potential. The observed sharp peak values in cellular 45Ca content support the notion that a necessary component of the oscillatory system is a Ca2+ pump operating with a significant delay in the activation/inactivation process in response to changes in cellular concentration of ionized calcium.  相似文献   

3.
G protein-coupled receptors can be directly modulated by changes in transmembrane voltage in a variety of cell types. Here we show that, while changes in the membrane voltage itself do not induce detectable modifications in the cytosolic Ca2+ concentration, platelet stimulation with thrombin or the PAR-1 and PAR-4 agonist peptides SFLLRN and AYPGKF, respectively, results in Ca2+ release from intracellular stores that is sensitive to the membrane depolarisation. Direct activation of G proteins or phospholipase C by AlF4 and m-3M3FBS, respectively, leads to Ca2+ release that is insensitive to changes in the membrane potential. Thapsigargin-, as well as OAG-induced Ca2+ entry are affected by the membrane voltage, probably as a result of the modification in the driving force for Ca2+ influx; however, hyperpolarisation does not enhance thrombin- or OAG-evoked Ca2+ entry probably revealing the presence of a voltage-sensitive regulatory mechanism. Transmembrane voltage also modulates the activity of the plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase (PMCA) most likely due to a decrease in the phosphotyrosine content of the pump. Thrombin-stimulated platelet aggregation is modulated by membrane depolarisation by a mechanism that is, at least partially, independent of Ca2+. These observations indicate that PAR-1 and PAR-4 receptors are modulated by the membrane voltage in human platelets.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The action of GRF on GH3 cell membrane was examined by patch electrode techniques. Under current clamp with patch elecrtrode, spontaneous action potentials were partially to totally eliminated by application of GRF. In the case of partial elimination, the duration of remaining spontaneous action potentials was prolonged and the amplitude of afterhyperpolarization was decreased. The evoked actiion potential in the cells which did not show spontaneous action potentials was also eliminated by GRF. In order to examine what channels were affected by GRF, voltage-clamp analysis was performed. It was revealed that voltage-gated Ca2+ channel current and Ca2+-induced K+ channels current were decreased by GRF, while voltage-gated Na+ channel and delayed K+ channel current was considered to be a consequence of he decrease of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels current. Therefore it is likely that the effect of GRF on GH3 cells was due to the block of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. The elimination of action potential under current clamp corresponded to the block of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels and the prolongation of action potential could be explained by the decrease of Ca2+-induced K+ channel current. The amplitude decrease of afterhyperpolarization could also be explained by the reduction of Ca2+-induced K+ channel current. Thus the results under current clamp well coincide with the results under voltage clamp. Hormone secretion from GH3 cells was not stimulated by GRF. However, the finding that GRF solely blocked voltage-gated Ca2+ channel suggested the specific action of GRF on GH3 cell membranes.  相似文献   

5.
T-type Ca2+ channel family includes three subunits CaV3.1, CaV3.2 and CaV3.3 and have been shown to control burst firing and intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in neurons. Here, we investigated whether CaV3.1 channels could generate a pacemaker current and contribute to cell excitability. CaV3.1 clones were over-expressed in the neuronal cell line NG108-15. CaV3.1 channel expression induced repetitive action potentials, generating spontaneous membrane potential oscillations (MPOs) and concomitant [Ca2+]i oscillations. These oscillations were inhibited by T-type channels antagonists and were present only if the membrane potential was around −61 mV. [Ca2+]i oscillations were critically dependent on Ca2+ influx through CaV3.1 channels and did not involve Ca2+ release from the endoplasmic reticulum. The waveform and frequency of the MPOs are constrained by electrophysiological properties of the CaV3.1 channels. The trigger of the oscillations was the CaV3.1 window current. This current induced continuous [Ca2+]i increase at −60 mV that depolarized the cells and triggered MPOs. Shifting the CaV3.1 window current potential range by increasing the external Ca2+ concentration resulted in a corresponding shift of the MPOs threshold. The hyperpolarization-activated cation current (Ih) was not required to induce MPOs, but when expressed together with CaV3.1 channels, it broadened the membrane potential range over which MPOs were observed. Overall, the data demonstrate that the CaV3.1 window current is critical in triggering intrinsic electrical and [Ca2+]i oscillations.  相似文献   

6.
Using a patch-clamp technique in the whole-cell configuration, we studied the effect of a nitric oxide (NO) donor, nitroglycerin (NG), on outward transmembrane ion current in isolated smooth muscle cells (SMC) of the main pulmonary artery of the rabbit. We also studied the characteristics of unitary high-conductance Ca2+-dependent K+ channels (KCa channels) in the SMC membrane in the cell-attached and outside-out configurations. Nitroglycerin in a 10 M concentration increased the amplitude and intensified oscillations of outward transmembrane current induced by step depolarization. In this case, the threshold of activation of the current (–40 mV) did not change. If the potential was +70 mV, the transmembrane current in the presence of NG increased, as compared with the control, by 32.6 ± 19.4% (n = 6), on average. Simultaneous addition of 10 M NG and 1 mM tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA), a blocker of KCa channels, to the external solution at the potential of +70 mV decreased the amplitude of outward transmembrane current with respect to the control by 25.2 ± 11% (n = 6) and suppressed oscillations of this current. In the series of experiments carried out in the outside-out configuration (concentration of K+ ions in the external solution was 5.9 mM), we calculated the conductance of a single KCa channel, which was approximately 150 pS. In the case where the potential was equal to +40 mV, 1 mM TEA suppressed completely the current through unitary KCa channels. In the series of experiments performed in the cell-attached configuration, 100 M NG to a considerable extent intensified the activity of unitary high-conductance KCa channels by increasing the probability of the channel open state (P 0), on average, by 80 ± 1%, as compared with the control. In this case, NG did not influence the conductance of single KCa channels. We concluded that the NO donor NG increases the amplitude of outward transmembrane current in SMC of the rabbit main pulmonary artery by stimulation of the activity of TEA-sensitive high-conductance KCa channels. Our experiments carried out on single KCa channels demonstrated that the activating effect of NG on KCa channels is realized at the expense of an increase in the P 0 of these channels, but not of a change in the conductance of single channels.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The patch-clamp technique is used here to investigate the kinetics of Ca2+ block in single high-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels. These channels are detected in the membrane surounding cytoplasmic drops fromChara australis, a membrane which originates from the tonoplast of the parent cell. The amplitudes and durations of single channel events are measured over a wide range of membrane potential (–300 to 200 mV). Ca2+ on either side of the channel reduces its K+ conductance and alters its ion-gating characteristics in a voltage-dependent manner. This Ca2+-induced attenuation of conductance is analyzed using the theory of diffusion-limited ion flow through pores. Interaction of external Ca2+ with the channel's ion-gating mechanism is examined in terms of a kinetic model for ion-gating that includes two voltage-dependent gating mechanisms. The kinetics of channel block by external Ca2+ indicates that (i) external Ca2+ binds at two sites, a superficial site and a deep site, located at 8 and 40% along the trans-pore potential difference, (ii) the external vestibule cannot be occupied by more than one Ca2+ or K+, and (iii) the kinetics of Ca2+ binding at the deep site is coupled with that of a voltage-dependent gate on the external side of the channel. Kinetics of channel block by internal Ca2+ indicates that more than one Ca2+ is involved.  相似文献   

8.
We used MCF-7 human breast cancer cells that endogenously express Cav3.1 and Cav3.2 T-type Ca2+ channels toward a mechanistic study on the effect of EGCG on [Ca2+]i. Confocal Ca2+ imaging showed that EGCG induces a [Ca2+]i spike which is due to extracellular Ca2+ entry and is sensitive to catalase and to low-specificity (mibefradil) and high-specificity (Z944) T-type Ca2+channel blockers. siRNA knockdown of T-type Ca2+ channels indicated the involvement of Cav3.2 but not Cav3.1. Application of EGCG to HEK cells expressing either Cav3.2 or Cav3.1 induced enhancement of Cav3.2 and inhibition of Cav3.1 channel activity. Measurements of K+ currents in MCF-7 cells showed a reversible, catalase-sensitive inhibitory effect of EGCG, while siRNA for the Kv1.1 K+ channel induced a reduction of the EGCG [Ca2+]i spike. siRNA for Cav3.2 reduced EGCG cytotoxicity to MCF-7 cells, as measured by calcein viability assay. Together, data suggest that EGCG promotes the activation of Cav3.2 channels through K+ current inhibition leading to membrane depolarization, and in addition increases Cav3.2 currents. Cav3.2 channels are in part responsible for EGCG inhibition of MCF-7 viability, suggesting that deregulation of [Ca2+]i by EGCG may be relevant in breast cancer treatment.  相似文献   

9.
The functional effect of activating Ca2+-permeable neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) on vesicle secretion was studied in PC12 cells. Single cells were patch-clamped in the whole-cell configuration and stimulated with either brief pulses of nicotine to activate the Ca2+-permeable nAChRs or with voltage steps to activate voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels. Membrane capacitance was used as a measure of vesicle secretion. Activation of nAChRs by nicotine application to cells voltage clamped at −80 mV evoked secretion. This secretion was completely abolished by nicotinic antagonists. When the cells were voltage clamped at +20 mV in the presence of Cd2+ to block voltage-activated Ca2+ channels, nicotine elicited a small amount of secretion. Most interestingly, when the nAChRs were activated coincidentally with voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels, secretion was augmented approximately twofold over the secretion elicited with voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels alone. Our data suggest that Ca2+ influx via nAChRs affects Ca2+-dependent cellular functions, including vesicle secretion. In addition to the secretion evoked by nAChR activation at hyperpolarized potentials, we demonstrate that even at depolarized potentials, nAChRs provide an important Ca2+ entry pathway underlying Ca2+-dependent cellular processes such as exocytosis.  相似文献   

10.
Speract, a sperm-activating peptide (SAP) from sea urchin eggs, increases the intracellular concentration of Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) and modulates sperm motility. We measured the initial sperm response to speract using its caged analog and observed, for the first time, a small but significant decrease in sperm [Ca2+]i before the increase. Both directions of the [Ca2+]i change were completely blocked in high K+ seawater. Using membrane-permeant caged cyclic nucleotides (cNMP), only cGMP induced the decrease in [Ca2+]i although both cGMP and cAMP increased the [Ca2+]i. The decrease in the [Ca2+]i induced by cGMP was more notable following a second photolytic event, once [Ca2+]i had been elevated by an initial flash. This pattern of [Ca2+]i change was confirmed in individual sperm. These results together with pharmacological evidence suggest that the initial [Ca2+]i decrease is due to a Na+/Ca2+ exchanger activity, stimulated by hyperpolarization mediated by K+ efflux through cGMP-regulated K+ channels.  相似文献   

11.
Summary A new mutant ofParamecium tetraurelia, k-shyA, was characterized behaviorally and electrophysiologically. The mutant cell exhibited prolonged backward swimming episodes in response to depolarizing conditions. Electrophysiological comparison of k-shyA with wild type cells under voltage clamp revealed that the properties of three Ca2+-regulated currents were altered in the mutant. (i) The voltage-dependent Ca2+ current recovered from Ca2+-dependent inactivation two- to 10-fold more slowly than wild type. Ca2+ current amplitudes were also reduced in the mutant, but could be restored by EGTA injection. (ii) The decay of the Ca2+-dependent K+ tail current was slower in the mutant. (iii) The decay of the Ca2+-dependent Na+ tail current was also slower in the mutant. All other membrane properties studied, including the resting membrane potential and resistance and the voltage-sensitive K+ currents, were normal in k-shyA. Considered together, these observations are consistent with a defect in the ability of k-shyA to reduce the free intracellular Ca2+ concentration following stimulation. The possible targets of the genetic lesion and alternative explanations are discussed. The k-shy mutants may provide a useful tool for molecular and physiological analyses of the regulation of Ca2+ metabolism inParamecium.  相似文献   

12.
The relationship between Ca2+ release (“Ca2+ sparks”) through ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ release channels in the sarcoplasmic reticulum and KCa channels was examined in smooth muscle cells from rat cerebral arteries. Whole cell potassium currents at physiological membrane potentials (−40 mV) and intracellular Ca2+ were measured simultaneously, using the perforated patch clamp technique and a laser two-dimensional (x–y) scanning confocal microscope and the fluorescent Ca2+ indicator, fluo-3. Virtually all (96%) detectable Ca2+ sparks were associated with the activation of a spontaneous transient outward current (STOC) through KCa channels. A small number of sparks (5 of 128) were associated with currents smaller than 6 pA (mean amplitude, 4.7 pA, at −40 mV). Approximately 41% of STOCs occurred without a detectable Ca2+ spark. The amplitudes of the Ca2+ sparks correlated with the amplitudes of the STOCs (regression coefficient 0.8; P < 0.05). The half time of decay of Ca2+ sparks (56 ms) was longer than the associated STOCs (9 ms). The mean amplitude of the STOCs, which were associated with Ca2+ sparks, was 33 pA at −40 mV. The mean amplitude of the “sparkless” STOCs was smaller, 16 pA. The very significant increase in KCa channel open probability (>104-fold) during a Ca2+ spark is consistent with local Ca2+ during a spark being in the order of 1–100 μM. Therefore, the increase in fractional fluorescence (F/Fo) measured during a Ca2+ spark (mean 2.04 F/Fo or ∼310 nM Ca2+) appears to significantly underestimate the local Ca2+ that activates KCa channels. These results indicate that the majority of ryanodine receptors that cause Ca2+ sparks are functionally coupled to KCa channels in the surface membrane, providing direct support for the idea that Ca2+ sparks cause STOCs.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The whole-cell patch-clamp method has been used to measure Ca2+ influx through otherwise K+-selective channels in the plasma membrane surrounding protoplasts from guard cells of Vicia faba. These channels are activated by membrane hyperpolarization. The resulting K+ influx contributes to the increase in guard cell turgor which causes stomatal opening during the regulation of leaf-air gas exchange. We find that after opening the K+ channels by hyperpolarization, depolarization of the membrane results in tail current at voltages where there is no electrochemical force to drive K+ inward through the channels. Tail current remains when the reversal potential for permeant ions other than Ca2+ is more negative than or equal to the K+ equilibrium potential (–47 mV), indicating that the current is due to Ca2+ influx through the K+ channels prior to their closure. Decreasing internal [Ca2+] (Ca i ) from 200 to 2 nm or increasing the external [Ca2+] (Ca o ) from 1 to 10 mm increases the amplitude of tail current and shifts the observed reversal potential to more positive values. Such increases in the electrochemical force driving Ca2+ influx also decrease the amplitude of time-activated current, indicating that Ca2+ permeation is slower than K+ permeation, and so causes a partial block. Increasing Ca o also (i) causes a positive shift in the voltage dependence of current, presumably by decreasing the membrane surface potential, and (ii) results in a U-shaped current-voltage relationship with peak inward current ca. –160 mV, indicating that the Ca2– block is voltage dependent and suggesting that the cation binding site is within the electric field of the membrane. K+ channels in Zea mays guard cells also appear to have a Ca i -, and Ca o -dependent ability to mediate Ca2+ influx. We suggest that the inwardly rectiying K+ channels are part of a regulatory mechanism for Ca i . Changes in Ca o and (associated) changes in Ca i regulate a variety of intracellular processes and ion fluxes, including the K+ and anion fluxes associated with stomatal aperture change.This work was supported by grants to S.M.A. from NSF (DCB-8904041) and from the McKnight Foundation. K.F.-G. is a Charles Gilbert Heydon Travelling Fellow. The authors thank Dr. R. MacKinnon (Harvard Medical School) and two anonymous reviewers for helpful comments.  相似文献   

14.
The K+-agitated (Kag) mutant of Paramecium caudatum shows prolonged backward swimming in K+-rich solution. To understand the regulation mechanisms of the ciliary motility in P. caudatum, we examined the membrane electrical properties of the Kag mutant. The duration of the backward swimming of the Kag in K+-rich solution was about 10 times longer than that of the wild type. In response to an injection of the outward current, the wild type produced an initial action potential and a subsequent membrane depolarization due to I-R potential drop, while the Kag exhibited repetitive action potentials during the depolarization. Under voltage-clamp conditions, the depolarization-activated transient inward current exhibited by the Kag was slightly smaller than that exhibited by the wild type. In response to an application of K+-rich solution, both the wild type and the Kag exhibited a depolarizing afterpotential representing the activation of the K+-induced Ca2+ conductance. The inactivation time course of the K+-induced Ca2+ conductance of Kag was about 10 times longer than that of the wild type. This difference corresponds well with the difference in behavioral responses between Kag and wild type to K+-rich solution. We conclude that the overreaction of the Kag mutant to the K+-rich solution is caused by slowing down of the inactivation of the K+-induced Ca2+ conductance.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The Ca2+-activated K+ channel in rat pancreatic islet cells has been studied using patch-clamp single-channel current recording in excised inside-out and outside-out membrane patches. In membrane patches exposed to quasi-physiological cation gradients (Na+ outside, K+ inside) large outward current steps were observed when the membrane was depolarized. The single-channel current voltage (I/V) relationship showed outward rectification and the null potential was more negative than –40 mV. In symmetrical K+-rich solutions the single-channelI/V relationship was linear, the null potential was 0 mV and the singlechannel conductance was about 250 pS. Membrane depolarization evoked channel opening also when the inside of the membrane was exposed to a Ca2+-free solution containing 2mm EGTA, but large positive membrane potentials (70 to 80 mV) were required in order to obtain open-state probabilities (P) above 0.1. Raising the free Ca2+ concentration in contact with the membrane inside ([Ca2+]i) to 1.5×10–7 m had little effect on the relationship between membrane potential andP. When [Ca2+]i was increased to 3×10–7 m and 6×10–7 m smaller potential changes were required to open the channels. Increasing [Ca2+]i further to 8×10–7 m again activated the channels, but the relationship between membrane potential andP was complex. Changing the membrane potential from –50 mV to +20 mV increasedP from near 0 to 0.6 but further polarization to +50 mV decreasedP to about 0.2. The pattern of voltage activation and inactivation was even more pronounced at [Ca2+]i=1 and 2 m. In this situation a membrane potential change from –70 to +20 mV increasedP from near 0 to about 0.7 but further polarization to +80 mV reducedP to less than 0.1. The high-conductance K+ channel in rat pancreatic islet cells is remarkably sensitive to changes in [Ca2+]i within the range 0.1 to 1 m which suggests a physiological role for this channel in regulating the membrane potential and Ca2+ influx through voltage-activated Ca2+ channels.  相似文献   

16.
1. (1) VO3 combines with high affinity to the Ca2+-ATPase and fully inhibits Ca2+-ATPase and Ca2+-phosphatase activities. Inhibition is associated with a parallel decrease in the steady-state level of the Ca2+-dependent phosphoenzyme.
2. (2) VO3 blocks hydrolysis of ATP at the catalytic site. The sites for VO3 also exhibit negative interactions in affinity with the regulatory sites for ATP of the Ca2+-ATPase.
3. (3) The sites for VO3 show positive interactions in affinity with sites for Mg2+ and K+. This accounts for the dependence on Mg2+ and K+ of the inhibition by VO3. Although, with less effectiveness, Na+ substitutes for K+ whereas Li+ does not. The apparent affinities for Mg2+ and K+ for inhibition by VO3 seem to be less than those for activation of the Ca2+-ATPase.
4. (4) Inhibition by VO3 is independent of Ca2+ at concentrations up to 50 μM. Higher concentrations of Ca2+ lead to a progressive release of the inhibitory effect of VO3.
Keywords: Ca2+-ATPase; Vanadate inhibition; K+; Li+; (Red cell membrane)  相似文献   

17.
Large-conductance Ca2+-dependent K+ (BKCa) channels are activated by intracellular Ca2+ and membrane depolarization in an allosteric manner. We investigated the pharmacological and biophysical characteristics of a BKCa-type K+ channel in androgen-dependent LNCaP (lymph node carcinoma of the prostate) cells with novel functional properties, here termed BKL. K+ selectivity, high conductance, activation by Mg2+ or NS1619, and inhibition by paxilline and penitrem A largely resembled the properties of recombinant BKCa channels. However, unlike conventional BKCa channels, BKL channels activated in the absence of free cytosolic Ca2+ at physiological membrane potentials; the half-maximal activation voltage was shifted by about −100 mV compared with BKCa channels. Half-maximal Ca2+-dependent activation was observed at 0.4 μM for BKL (at −20 mV) and at 4.1 μM for BKCa channels (at +50 mV). Heterologous expression of hSlo1 in LNCaP cells increased the BKL conductance. Expression of hSlo-β1 in LNCaP cells shifted voltage-dependent activation to values between that of BKL and BKCa channels and reduced the slope of the Popen (open probability)-voltage curve. We propose that LNCaP cells harbor a so far unknown type of BKCa subunit, which is responsible for the BKL phenotype in a dominant manner. BKL-like channels are also expressed in the human breast cancer cell line T47D. In addition, functional expression of BKL in LNCaP cells is regulated by serum-derived factors, however not by androgens.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Calcium-activated potassium channels were the channels most frequently observed in primary cultured normal mammary cell and in the established mammary tumor cell, MMT060562. In both cells, single-channel and whole-cell clamp recordings sometimes showed slow oscillations of the Ca2+-gated K+ current. The characteristics of the Ca2+-activated K+ channels in normal and cancerous mammary cells were quite similar. The slope conductances changed from 8 to 70 pS depending on the mode of recording and the ionic composition in the patch electrode. The open probability of this channel increased between 0.1 to 1 m of the intracellular Ca2+, but it was independent of the membrane potential.Charybdotoxin reduced the activity of the Ca2+-activated K+ channel and the oscillation of the membrane current, but apamin had no apparent effect. The application of tetraethylammonium (TEA) from outside and BaCl2 from inside of the cell diminished the activity of the channel. The properties of this channel were different from those of both the large conductance (BK or MAXI K) and small conductance (SK) type Ca2+-activated K+ channels.  相似文献   

19.
Purinergic signalling in rat GFSHR-17 granulosa cells was characterised by Ca2+-imaging and perforated patch-clamp. We observed a resting intracellular Ca2+-concentration ([Ca2+]i) of 100 nM and a membrane potential of −40 mV. This was consistent with high K+− and Cl permeability and a high intracellular Cl concentration of 40 mM. Application of ATP for 5–15 s every 3 min induced repeated [Ca2+]i increases and a 30 mV hyperpolarization. The phospholipase C inhibitor U73122 or the IP3-receptor antagonist 2-aminoethoethyl diphenyl borate suppressed ATP responses. Further biochemical and pharmacological experiments revealed that ATP responses were related to stimulation of P2Y2 and P2Y4 receptors and that the [Ca2+]i increase was a prerequisite for hyperpolarization. Inhibitors of Ca2+-activated channels or K+ channels did not affect the ATP-evoked responses. Conversely, inhibitors of Cl channels hyperpolarized cells to −70 mV and suppressed further ATP-evoked hyperpolarization. We propose that P2Y2 and P2Y4 receptors in granulosa cells modulate Cl permeability by regulating Ca2+-release.  相似文献   

20.
With the help of a standard voltage-clamp technique, we investigated transmembrane ion currents in isolated smooth muscle cells of the guinea pigtaenia coli. In Ca2+-dependent K+ current, we identified and studied the properties of an apamin-sensitive voltage-independent component carried through the channels of low conductance (in many publications called small conductance,I SK(Ca)). This component did not show the temporal inactivation;I SK(Ca) was insensitive to the action of 4 mM tetraethylammonium, but was completely blocked by 500 nM of apamin. It was shown thatI SK(Ca) is very sensitive to changes in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+] i ): a decrease in [Ca2+] i up to 50 nM resulted in the almost complete blockade of the current. The entry of Ca ions into a cell from the external solution through the voltage-operated Ca2+ channels of L-type was not an obligatory condition for activation ofI SK(Ca). The current-voltage relationship forI SK(Ca) had a maximum within the voltage range of +20 to +50 mV. Neirofiziologiya/Neurophysiology, Vol. 32, No. 2, pp. 87–94, March–April, 2000.  相似文献   

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