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1.
K+-selective ion channels from a mammalian brain synaptosomal membrane preparation were inserted into planar phospholipid bilayers on the tips of patch-clamp pipettes, and single-channel currents were measured. Multiple distinct classes of K+ channels were observed. We have characterized and described the properties of several types of voltage-dependent, Ca2+-activated K+ channels of large single-channel conductance (greater than 50 pS in symmetrical KCl solutions). One class of channels (Type I) has a 200-250-pS single-channel conductance. It is activated by internal calcium concentrations greater than 10(-7) M, and its probability of opening is increased by membrane depolarization. This channel is blocked by 1-3 mM internal concentrations of tetraethylammonium (TEA). These channels are similar to the BK channel described in a variety of tissues. A second novel group of voltage-dependent, Ca2+-activated K+ channels was also studied. These channels were more sensitive to internal calcium, but less sensitive to voltage than the large (Type I) channel. These channels were minimally affected by internal TEA concentrations of 10 mM, but were blocked by a 50 mM concentration. In this class of channels we found a wide range of relatively large unitary channel conductances (65-140 pS). Within this group we have characterized two types (75-80 pS and 120-125 pS) that also differ in gating kinetics. The various types of voltage-dependent, Ca2+-activated K+ channels described here were blocked by charybdotoxin added to the external side of the channel. The activity of these channels was increased by exposure to nanomolar concentrations of the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. These results indicate that voltage-dependent, charybdotoxin-sensitive Ca2+-activated K+ channels comprise a class of related, but distinguishable channel types. Although the Ca2+-activated (Type I and II) K+ channels can be distinguished by their single-channel properties, both could contribute to the voltage-dependent Ca2+-activated macroscopic K+ current (IC) that has been observed in several neuronal somata preparations, as well as in other cells. Some of the properties reported here may serve to distinguish which type contributes in each case. A third class of smaller (40-50 pS) channels was also studied. These channels were independent of calcium over the concentration range examined (10(-7)-10(-3) M), and were also independent of voltage over the range of pipette potentials of -60 to +60 mV.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Membrane potential has a major influence on stimulus-secretion coupling in various excitable cells. The role of membrane potential in the regulation of parathyroid hormone secretion is not known. High K+-induced depolarization increases secretion from parathyroid cells. The paradox is that increased extracellular Ca2+, which inhibits secretion, has also been postulated to have a depolarizing effect. In this study, human parathyroid cells from parathyroid adenomas were used in patch clamp studies of K+ channels and membrane potential. Detailed characterization revealed two K+ channels that were strictly dependent of intracellular Ca2+ concentration. At high extracellular Ca2+, a large K+ current was seen, and the cells were hyperpolarized (-50.4 +/- 13.4 mV), whereas lowering of extracellular Ca2+ resulted in a dramatic decrease in K+ current and depolarization of the cells (-0.1 +/- 8.8 mV, p < 0.001). Changes in extracellular Ca2+ did not alter K+ currents when intracellular Ca2+ was clamped, indicating that K+ channels are activated by intracellular Ca2+. The results were concordant in cell-attached, perforated patch, whole-cell and excised membrane patch configurations. These results suggest that [Ca2+]o regulates membrane potential of human parathyroid cells via Ca2+-activated K+ channels and that the membrane potential may be of greater importance for the stimulus-secretion coupling than recognized previously.  相似文献   

3.
High-conductance K+ channels are known to be activated by internal Ca2+ and membrane depolarization. The effects of changes in internal Mg2+ concentration have now been investigated in patch-clamp single-channel current experiments on excised membrane fragments from mouse acinar cells. It is shown that Mg2+ in the concentration range 10(-6)-10(-3) M evokes a dose-dependent K+ channel activation at a constant Ca2+ concentration of 10(-8) M. The demonstration that changes in [Mg2+]i between 2.5 X 10(-4) and 1.13 X 10(-3) M has effects on the channel open-state probability indicates that fluctuations in [Mg2+]i in intact cells may influence the control of channel opening.  相似文献   

4.
Voltage-dependent membrane currents were studied in dissociated hepatocytes from chick, using the patch-clamp technique. All cells had voltage-dependent outward K+ currents; in 10% of the cells, a fast, transient, tetrodotoxin-sensitive Na+ current was identified. None of the cells had voltage-dependent inward Ca2+ currents. The K+ current activated at a membrane potential of about -10 mV, had a sigmoidal time course, and did not inactivate in 500 ms. The maximum outward conductance was 6.6 +/- 2.4 nS in 18 cells. The reversal potential, estimated from tail current measurements, shifted by 50 mV per 10-fold increase in the external K+ concentration. The current traces were fitted by n2 kinetics with voltage-dependent time constants. Omitting Ca2+ from the external bath or buffering the internal Ca2+ with EGTA did not alter the outward current, which shows that Ca2+-activated K+ currents were not present. 1-5 mM 4-aminopyridine, 0.5-2 mM BaCl2, and 0.1-1 mM CdCl2 reversibly inhibited the current. The block caused by Ba was voltage dependent. Single-channel currents were recorded in cell-attached and outside-out patches. The mean unitary conductance was 7 pS, and the channels displayed bursting kinetics. Thus, avian hepatocytes have a single type of K+ channel belonging to the delayed rectifier class of K+ channels.  相似文献   

5.
Patch-clamp whole-cell and single-channel current recordings were made from pig pancreatic acinar cells to test the effects of quinine, quinidine, Ba2+ and Ca2+. Voltage-clamp current recordings from single isolated cells showed that high external concentrations of Ba2+ or Ca2+ (88 mM) abolished the outward K+ currents normally associated with depolarizing voltage steps. Lower concentrations of Ca2+ only had small inhibitory effects whereas 11 mM Ba2+ almost blocked the K+ current. 5.5 mM Ba2+ reduced the outward K+ current to less than 30% of the control value. Both external quinine and quinidine (200-500 microM) markedly reduced whole-cell outward K+ currents. In single-channel current studies it was shown that external Ba2+ (1-5 mM) markedly reduced the probability of opening of high-conductance Ca2+ and voltage-activated K+ channels whereas internal Ba2+ (6 X 10(-6) to 3 X 10(-5) M) caused activation at negative membrane potentials and inhibition at positive potentials. Quinidine (200-400 microM) evoked rapid chopping of single K+ channel openings acting both from the outside and inside of the membrane and in this way markedly reduced the total current passing through the channels.  相似文献   

6.
The inside-out mode of the patch-clamp method was used to study the effects of internal Mg2+ on single large-conductance (193+/-7 pS) Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels in cultured kidney cells. In the absence of Ca2+, Mg2+ (1 to 10 mM) did not activate the channels but modified the activating effect of Ca2+ ions: it decreased the Hill coefficient (n), reduced the apparent dissociation constant (K0.5), and modified the channel open and closed times. K0.5 was found to be a voltage-dependent parameter. In the absence of Mg2+, it averaged 600 microM at -20 mV and 27 microM at +30 mV (22 degrees C, pH 6.8). Mg2+ at saturating concentrations (5 to 10 mM) decreased K0.5 to 50 microM at -20 mV and to 15 microM at +30 mV. Irrespective of the membrane potential, K0.5 tended to its limit value of about 12.6 microM. Thus, the effects of membrane depolarization and Mg2+ exhibited a non-additive, competitive relationship. Mg2+ perturbed the exponential shape of the voltage dependences of K0.5. The Hill coefficient characterizing the interaction of Ca2+ ions with the channels was found to be voltage-dependent. In the absence of Mg2+, it increased rather sharply from approx. 2 to 3.5 when the membrane potential was raised from -10 to 0 mV. Mg2+ increased n in a dose-dependent manner; however, about a twofold increase of n occurred within a narrow concentration range (2 to 3 mM). The action of Mg2+ on n was, apparently, voltage-independent, and the effects of Mg2+ and voltage on n were seemingly additive.  相似文献   

7.
We tested the hypothesis that somatostatin (SRIF) inhibits insulin secretion from an SV40 transformed hamster beta cell line (HIT cells) by an effect on the voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels and examined whether G-proteins were involved in the process. Ca2+ currents were recorded by the whole cell patch-clamp method, the free cytosolic calcium, [Ca2+]i, was monitored in HIT cells by fura-2, and cAMP and insulin secretion were measured by radioimmunoassay. SRIF decreased Ca2+ currents, [Ca2+]i, and basal insulin secretion in a dose-dependent manner over the range of 10(-12)-10(-7)M. The increase in [Ca2+]i and insulin secretion induced by either depolarization with K+ (15 mM) or by the Ca2+ channel agonist, Bay K 8644 (1 microM) was attenuated by SRIF in a dose-dependent manner over the same range of 10(-12)-10(-7) M. the half-maximal inhibitory concentrations (IC50) for SRIF inhibition of insulin secretion were 8.6 X 10(-12) M and 8.3 X 10(-11) M for K+ and Bay K 8644-stimulated secretion and 1 X 10(-10) M and 2.9 X 10(-10) M for the SRIF inhibition of the K+ and Bay K 8644-induced rise in [Ca2+]i, respectively. SRIF also attenuated the rise in [Ca2+]i induced by the cAMP-elevating agent, isobutylmethylxanthine (1 mM) in the presence of glucose. Bay K 8644, K+ and SRIF had no significant effects on cAMP levels and SRIF had no effects on adenylyl cyclase activity at concentrations lower than 1 microM. SRIF (100 nM) did not change K+ efflux (measured by 86Rb+) through ATP-sensitive K+ channels in HIT cells. SRIF (up to 1 microM) had no significant effect on membrane potential measured by bisoxonol fluorescence. Pretreatment of the HIT cells with pertussis toxin (0.1 microgram/ml) overnight abolished the effects of SRIF on Ca2+ currents, [Ca2+]i and insulin secretion implying a G-protein dependence in SRIF's actions. Thus, one mechanism by which SRIF decreases insulin secretion is by inhibiting Ca2+ influx through voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels, an action mediated through a pertussis toxin-sensitive G-protein.  相似文献   

8.
This study investigates the presence and properties of Na+-activated K+ (K(Na)) channels in epithelial renal cells. Using real-time PCR on mouse microdissected nephron segments, we show that Slo2.2 mRNA, which encodes for the K(Na) channels of excitable cells, is expressed in the medullary and cortical thick ascending limbs of Henle's loop, but not in the other parts of the nephron. Patch-clamp analysis revealed the presence of a high conductance K+ channel in the basolateral membrane of both the medullary and cortical thick ascending limbs. This channel was highly K+ selective (P(K)/P(Na) approximately 20), its conductance ranged from 140 to 180 pS with subconductance levels, and its current/voltage relationship displayed intermediate, Na+-dependent, inward rectification. Internal Na+ and Cl- activated the channel with 50% effective concentrations (EC50) and Hill coefficients (nH) of 30 +/- 1 mM and 3.9 +/- 0.5 for internal Na+, and 35 +/- 10 mM and 1.3 +/- 0.25 for internal Cl-. Channel activity was unaltered by internal ATP (2 mM) and by internal pH, but clearly decreased when internal free Ca2+ concentration increased. This is the first demonstration of the presence in the epithelial cell membrane of a functional, Na+-activated, large-conductance K+ channel that closely resembles native K(Na) channels of excitable cells. This Slo2.2 type, Na+- and Cl--activated K+ channel is primarily located in the thick ascending limb, a major renal site of transcellular NaCl reabsorption.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of several opioid drugs was tested on the K+ contractures in frog's skeletal muscle. These contractures are produced by the entrance of extracellular Ca2+ ions via the voltage-dependent, slow Ca2+ channels located in the T tubules. Morphine and other opioid agonists in concentrations ranging from 10(-10) to 10(-5) M inhibited K+ contractures. The stereoisomers, dextrorphan and levorphanol, were found to have identical potency in inhibiting high K+ contractures, suggesting that this was a nonstereospecific blockade of voltage-dependent calcium channels by the opioid drugs despite the low effective drug concentrations. In agreement with this conclusion it was found that the inhibition of K+ contractures by the opioids was not antagonized by naloxone. It also was observed using a sucrose gap apparatus that these opioid drugs in concentrations used to block the high K+ contractures did not reduce the K+-induced membrane depolarization. Raising the bathing solution Ca2+ concentration from 1.08 to 5 mM produced a reversal of the opioid-induced block of K+ contractures. Finally it was shown that while opioids completely blocked K+ contractures, they did not produce any effect on caffeine contractures showing that opioids do not deplete intracellular Ca2+ stores or inhibit the release of Ca2+ from intracellular sarcoplasmic reticulum stores. It was concluded that several opioid drugs in very low concentrations block K+ contractures in frog's skeletal muscle by a nonstereospecific block of voltage-dependent slow calcium channels.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of quinine and tetraethylammonium (TEA) on single-channel K+ currents recorded from excised membrane patches of the insulin-secreting cell line RINm5F were investigated. When 100 microM quinine was applied to the external membrane surface K+ current flow through inward rectifier channels was abolished, while a separate voltage-activated high-conductance K+ channel was not significantly affected. On the other hand, 2 mM TEA abolished current flow through voltage-activated high-conductance K+ channels without influencing the inward rectifier K+ channel. Quinine is therefore not a specific inhibitor of Ca2+-activated K+ channels, but instead a good blocker of the Ca2+-independent K+ inward rectifier channel whereas TEA specifically inhibits the high-conductance voltage-activated K+ channel which is also Ca2+-activated.  相似文献   

11.
B S Wong  H Lecar    M Adler 《Biophysical journal》1982,39(3):313-317
Single Ca2+-dependent K+-channel currents were recorded in intact and excised inside-out membrane patches of the anterior pituitary clone AtT-20/D16-16. The frequency of channel openings and lifetimes depends both on membrane potential and on the Ca2+ concentrations at the inner membrane surface. The curve of the open-state probability of the channel as a function of membrane potential appears to translate along the voltage axis with changes in internal Ca2+ concentration. For Ca2+ concentrations between 10(-7) and 10(-6) M, the shift is consistent with the hypothesis that three Ca2+ ions are required to open a Ca2+-dependent K+ channel. Single channel conductances are estimated to be 124 pS in patches with normal external K+ (5.4 mM) and 208 pS in excised patches with symmetrical K+ (145 mM) across the membrane. Tetraethylammonium (20 mM) added to the cytoplasmic surface reversibly blocks the Ca2+-dependent K+ channel.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of sarcoplasmic reticulum lumenal (trans) Ca2+ on cytosolic (cis) ATP-activated rabbit skeletal muscle Ca2+ release channels (ryanodine receptors) were examined using the planar lipid bilayer method. Single channels were recorded in symmetric 0.25 M KCl media with K+ as the major current carrier. With nanomolar [Ca2+] in both bilayer chambers, the addition of 2 mM cytosolic ATP greatly increased the number of short channel openings. As lumenal [Ca2+] was increased from < 0.1 microM to approximately 250 microM, increasing channel activities and events with long open time constants were seen at negative holding potentials. Channel activity remained low at positive holding potentials. Further increase in lumenal [Ca2+] to 1, 5, and 10 mM resulted in a decrease in channel activities at negative holding potentials and increased activities at positive holding potentials. A voltage-dependent activation by 50 microM lumenal Ca2+ was also observed when the channel was minimally activated by < 1 microM cytosolic Ca2+ in the absence of ATP. With microM cytosolic Ca2+ in the presence or absence of 2 mM ATP, single-channel activities showed no or only a weak voltage dependence. Other divalent cations (Mg2+, Ba2+) could not replace lumenal Ca2+. On the contrary, cytosolic ATP-activated channel activities were decreased as lumenal Ca2+ fluxes were reduced by the addition of 1-5 mM BaCl2 or MgCl2 to the lumenal side, which contained 50 microM Ca2+. An increase in [KCl] from 0.25 M to 1 M also reduced single-channel activities. Addition of the "fast" Ca2+ buffer 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethanetetraacetic acid (BAPTA) to the cls chamber increased cytosolic ATP-, lumenal Ca(2+)-activated channel activities to a nearly maximum level. These results suggested that lumenal Ca2+ flowing through the skeletal muscle Ca2+ release channel may regulate channel activity by having access to cytosolic Ca2+ activation and Ca2+ inactivation sites that are located in "BAPTA-inaccessible" and "BAPTA-accessible" spaces, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
The voltage-dependent K+ channel was examined in enzymatically isolated guinea pig hepatocytes using whole-cell, excised outside-out and inside- out configurations of the patch-clamp technique. The resting membrane potential in isolated hepatocytes was -25.3 +/- 4.9 mV (n = 40). Under the whole-cell voltage-clamp, the time-dependent delayed rectifier outward current was observed at membrane potentials positive to -20 mV at physiological temperature (37 degrees C). The reversal potential of the current, as determined from tail current measurements, shifted by approximately 57 mV per 10-fold change in the external K+ concentration. In addition, the current did not appear when K+ was replaced with Cs+ in the internal and external solutions, indicating that the current was carried by K+ ions. The envelope test of the tails demonstrated that the growth of the tail current followed that of the current activation. The ratio between the activated current and the tail amplitude was constant during the depolarizing step. The time course of growth and deactivation of the tail current were best described by a double exponential function. The current was suppressed in Ca(2+)-free, 5 mM EGTA internal or external solution (pCa > 9). The activation curve (P infinity curve) was not shifted by changing the internal Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i). The current was inhibited by bath application of 4-aminopyridine or apamin. alpha 1-Adrenergic stimulation with noradrenaline enhanced the current but beta-adrenergic stimulation with isoproterenol had no effect on the current. In single- channel recordings from outside-out patches, unitary current activity was observed by depolarizing voltage-clamp steps whose slope conductance was 9.5 +/- 2.2 pS (n = 10). The open time distribution was best described by a single exponential function with the mean open lifetime of 18.5 +/- 2.6 ms (n = 14), while at least two exponentials were required to fit the closed time distributions with a time constant for the fast component of 2.0 +/- 0.3 ms (n = 14) and that for the slow component of 47.7 +/- 5.9 ms (n = 14). Ensemble averaged current exhibited delayed rectifier nature which was consistent with whole-cell measurements. In excised inside-out patch recordings, channel open probability was sensitive to [Ca2+]i. The concentration of Ca2+ at the half-maximal activation was 0.031 microM. These results suggest that guinea pig hepatocytes possess voltage-gated delayed rectifier K+ channels which are modified by intracellular Ca2+.  相似文献   

14.
Patch-clamp studies were carried out in villus enterocytes isolated from the guinea pig proximal small intestine. In the whole-cell mode, outward K+ currents were found to be activated by depolarizing command pulses to -45 mV. The activation followed fourth order kinetics. The time constant of K+ current activation was voltage-dependent, decreasing from approximately 3 ms at -10 mV to 1 ms at +50 mV. The K+ current inactivated during maintained depolarizations by a voltage- independent, monoexponential process with a time constant of approximately 470 ms. If the interpulse interval was shorter than 30 s, cumulative inactivation was observed upon repeated stimulations. The steady state inactivation was voltage-dependent over the voltage range from -70 to -30 mV with a half inactivation voltage of -46 mV. The steady state activation was also voltage-dependent with a half- activation voltage of -22 mV. The K+ current profiles were not affected by chelation of cytosolic Ca2+. The K+ current induced by a depolarizing pulse was suppressed by extracellular application of TEA+, Ba2+, 4-aminopyridine or quinine with half-maximal inhibitory concentrations of 8.9 mM, 4.6 mM, 86 microM and 26 microM, respectively. The inactivation time course was accelerated by quinine but decelerated by TEA+, when applied to the extracellular (but not the intracellular) solution. Extracellular (but not intracellular) applications of verapamil and nifedipine also quickened the inactivation time course with 50% effective concentrations of 3 and 17 microM, respectively. Quinine, verapamil and nifedipine shifted the steady state inactivation curve towards more negative potentials. Outward single K+ channel events with a unitary conductance of approximately 8.4 pS were observed in excised inside-out patches of the basolateral membrane, when the patch was depolarized to -40 mV. The ensemble current rapidly activated and thereafter slowly inactivated with similar time constants to those of whole-cell K+ currents. It is concluded that the basolateral membrane of guinea pig villus enterocytes has a voltage-gated, time-dependent, Ca(2+)-insensitive, small-conductance K+ channel. Quinine, verapamil, and nifedipine accelerate the inactivation time course by affecting the inactivation gate from the external side of the cell membrane.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of Ba2+ ions on twitches, K+-induced contractures, and on intracellularly recorded membrane potentials (Em) and depolarizations of frog skeletal muscle fibres were investigated. Exposure of toe muscles to choline--Ringer's solution with 10(-3) M Ba2+ with Ca2+ (1.08 mM) eliminated or very greatly reduced contractures produced by 60 mM K+. In contrast, not only did the same concentration of Ba2+ ions fail to depress the twitch tension of isolated semitendinosus fibres when added to Ringer's with Ca2+, but it even restored twitches that had been eliminated in a zero Ca2+ Ringer's solution. The resting Em of sartorius muscle fibres in choline--Ringer's solution was reduced about 20 mV by 10(-3) M Ba2+. This Ba2+ ion concentration also antagonized the K+-induced depolarization. Thus in the presence of 1 mM Ba2+, 20 mM K+ hyperpolarized rather than depolarized the fibres and 60 or 123 mM K+ produced only very slowly developing, small depolarizations. These results suggest that the loss of the K+-induced contracture in choline-Ringer's caused by Ba2+ ions is due to an inhibition of the K+-induced depolarization. The latter result is consistent with previous findings of other workers that Ba2+ ions block membrane K+ channels.  相似文献   

16.
K+ channels were recorded in excised, inside-out patches from the apical membrane of the freshly isolated tubule of the caudal portion of the rat epididymis. With asymmetric K+ concentrations in bath and pipette (140 mM K+in/6 mM K+out), the channels had a slope conductance of 54.2 pS at 0 mV. The relative permeability of K+ over Na+ was about 171 to 1. The channels were activated by intracellular Ca2+ and by membrane depolarization. These channels belong to a class defined as "intermediate-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channel. " External tetraethylammonium ions (TEA+) caused a flickery block of the channel with reduction in single-channel current amplitude measured at a range of holding membrane potentials (-40 to 60 mV). Activity of the K+ channels was inhibited by intracellular ATP (KD =1.188 mM). The channel activity was detected only occasionally in patches from the apical membrane (about 1 in 17 patches containing active channels). The presence of the intermediate-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels indicates that they could provide a route for K+ secretion in a Ca2+-dependent process responsible for a high luminal K+ concentration found in the epididymal duct of the rat.  相似文献   

17.
Macroscopic and unitary currents through Ca(2+)-activated Cl- channels were examined in enzymatically isolated guinea-pig hepatocytes using whole-cell, excised outside-out and inside-out configurations of the patch-clamp technique. When K+ conductances were blocked and the intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) was set at 1 microM (pCa = 6), membrane currents were observed under whole-cell voltage-clamp conditions. The reversal potential of the current shifted by approximately 60 mV per 10-fold change in the external Cl- concentration. In addition, the current did not appear when Cl- was omitted from the internal and external solutions, indicating that the current was Cl- selective. The current was activated by increasing [Ca2+]i and was inactivated in Ca(2+)-free, 5 mM EGTA internal solution (pCa > 9). The current was inhibited by bath application of 9- anthracenecarboxylic acid (9-AC) and 4,4'-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2'- disulfonic acid (DIDS) in a voltage-dependent manner. In single channel recordings from outside-out patches, unitary current activity was observed, whose averaged slope conductance was 7.4 +/- 0.5 pS (n = 18). The single channel activity responded to extracellular Cl- changes as expected for a Cl- channel current. The open time distribution was best described by a single exponential function with mean open lifetime of 97.6 +/- 10.4 ms (n = 11), while at least two exponentials were required to fit the closed time distributions with a time constant for the fast component of 21.5 +/- 2.8 ms (n = 11) and that for the slow component of 411.9 +/- 52.0 ms (n = 11). In excised inside-out patch recordings, channel open probability was sensitive to [Ca2+]i. The relationship between [Ca2+]i and channel activity was fitted by the Hill equation with a Hill coefficient of 3.4 and the half-maximal activation was 0.48 microM. These results suggest that guinea-pig hepatocytes possess Ca(2+)-activated Cl- channels.  相似文献   

18.
Many plant ion channels have been identified, but little is known about how these transporters are regulated. We have investigated the regulation of a slow vacuolar (SV) ion channel in the tonoplast of barley aleurone storage protein vacuoles (SPV) using the patch-clamp technique. SPV were isolated from barley aleurone protoplasts incubated with CaCl2 in the presence or absence of gibberellic acid (GA) or abscisic acid (ABA). A slowly activating, voltage-dependent ion channel was identified in the SPV membrane. Mean channel conductance was 26 pS when 100 mM KCl was on both sides of the membrane, and reversal potential measurements indicated that most of the current was carried by K+. Treatment of protoplasts with GA3 increased whole-vacuole current density compared to SPV isolated from ABA- or CaCl2-treated cells. The opening of the SV channel was sensitive to cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) between 600 nM and 100 [mu]M, with higher [Ca2+]i resulting in a greater probability of channel opening. SV channel activity was reduced greater than 90% by the calmodulin (CaM) inhibitors W7 and trifluoperazine, suggesting that Ca2+ activates endogenous CaM tightly associated with the membrane. Exogenous CaM partially reversed the inhibitory effects of W7 on SV channel opening. CaM also sensitized the SV channel to Ca2+. In the presence of ~3.5 [mu]M CaM, specific current increased by approximately threefold at 2.5 [mu]M Ca2+ and by more than 13-fold at 10 [mu]M Ca2+. Since [Ca2+]i and the level of CaM increase in barley aleurone cells following exposure to GA, we suggest that Ca2+ and CaM act as signal transduction elements mediating hormone-induced changes in ion channel activity.  相似文献   

19.
Ca2+ influx via voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels is known to be elicited during action potentials but possibly also occurs at the resting potential. The steady-state current through voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels and its role for the electrical activity was, therefore, investigated in pituitary GH3 cells. Applying the recently developed 'nystatin-modification' of the patch-clamp technique, most GH3 cells (18 out of 23 cells) fired spontaneous action potentials from a baseline membrane potential of 43.7 +/- 4.6 mV (mean +/- s.d., n = 23). The frequency of action potentials was stimulated about twofold by Bay K 8644 (100 nM), a Ca(2+)-channel stimulator, and action potentials were completely suppressed by the Ca(2+)-channel blocker PN 200-110 (100 nM). Voltage clamping GH3 cells at fixed potentials for several minutes and with 1 mM Ba2+ as divalent charge carrier, we observed steady-state Ca(2+)-channel currents that were dihydropyridine-sensitive and displayed a U-shaped current-voltage relation. The results strongly suggest that the observed long lasting, dihydropyridine-sensitive Ca(2+)-channel currents provide a steady-state conductivity for Ca2+ at the resting potential and are essential for the generation of action potentials in GH3 pituitary cells.  相似文献   

20.
Bradykinin-induced K+ currents, membrane hyperpolarization, as well as rises in cytoplasmic Ca2+ and cGMP levels were studied in endothelial cells cultured from pig aorta. Exposure of endothelial cells to 1 microM bradykinin induced a whole-cell K+ current and activated a small-conductance (approximately 9 pS) K+ channel in on-cell patches. This K+ channel lacked voltage sensitivity, was activated by increasing the Ca2+ concentration at the cytoplasmic face of inside-out patches and blocked by extracellular tetrabutylammonium (TBA). Bradykinin concomitantly increased membrane potential and cytoplasmic Ca2+ of endothelial cells. In high (140 mM) extracellular K+ solution, as well as in the presence of the K(+)-channel blocker TBA (10 mM), bradykinin-induced membrane hyperpolarization was abolished and increases in cytoplasmic Ca2+ were reduced to a slight transient response. Bradykinin-induced rises in intracellular cGMP levels which reflect Ca(2+)-dependent formation of EDRF(NO) were clearly attenuated in the presence of TBA (10 mM). Our results suggest that bradykinin hyperpolarizes pig aortic endothelial cells by activation of small-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels. Opening of these K+ channels results in membrane hyperpolarization which promotes Ca2+ entry, and consequently, NO synthesis.  相似文献   

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