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1.
Single cardiac ATP-sensitive K+ channels and, comparatively, two other members of the inwardly rectifying K+ channel family, cardiac K+ (ir) and K+ (ACh) channels, were studied in the inside-out recording mode in order to analyze influence and significance of the electrochemical K+ gradient for open-state kinetics of these K+ channels. The conductive state of K+ (ATP) channels was defined as a function of the electrochemical K+ gradient in that increased driving force correlates with shortened open-channel lifetime. Flux coupling of gating can be largely excluded as the underlying mechanism for two reasons: (i) τopen proved identical in 23 pS, 56 pS and 80 pS channels; (ii) K+ (ATP) channel protonation by an external pH shift from 9.5 to 5.5 reduced conductance without a concomitant detectable change of τopen. Since gating continued to operate at E K , i.e., in the absence of K+ permeation through the pore, K+ driving force cannot be causally involved in gating. Rather the driving force acts to modulate the gating process similar to Rb+ whose interference with an externally located binding site stabilizes the open state. In K+ (ir) and K+ (ACh) channels, the open state is essentially independent on driving force meaning that their gating apparatus does not sense the electrochemical K+ gradient. Thus, K+ (ATP) channels differ in an important functional aspect which may be tentatively explained by a structural peculiarity of their gating apparatus. Received: 24 March 1997/Revised: 24 April 1998  相似文献   

2.
3.
The most frequently observed K+ channel in the tonoplast of Characean giant internodal cells with a large conductance (ca. 170 pS; Lühring, 1986; Laver & Walker, 1987) behaves, although inwardly rectifying, like animal maxi-K channels. This channel is accessible for patch–clamp techniques by preparation of cytoplasmic droplets, where the tonoplast forms the membrane delineating the droplet. Lowering the pH of the bathing solution, that virtually mimicks the vacuolar environment, from an almost neutral level to values below pH 7, induced a significant but reversible decrease in channel activity, whereas channel conductance remained largely unaffected. Acidification (pH 5) on both sides of the membrane decreased open probability from a maximum of 80% to less than 20%. Decreasing pH at the cytosolic side inhibited channel activity cooperatively with a slope of 2.05 and a pK a 6.56. In addition, low pH at the vacuolar face shifted the activating voltage into a positive direction by almost 100 mV. This is the first report about an effect of extraplasmatic pH on gating of a maxi-K channel. It is suggested that the Chara maxi-K channel possesses an S4-like voltage sensor and negatively charged residues in neighboring transmembrane domains whose S4-stabilizing function may be altered by protonation. It was previously shown that gating kinetics of this channel respond to cytosolic Ca2+ (Laver & Walker, 1991). With regard to natural conditions, pH effects are discussed as contributing mainly to channel regulation at the vacuolar membrane face, whereas at the cytosolic side Ca2+ affects the channel. An attempt was made to ascribe structural mechanisms to different states of a presumptive gating reaction scheme. Received: 8 May 1998/Revised: 18 September 1998  相似文献   

4.
We have used current/voltage (I/V) analysis to investigate the role played by extracellular mucilage in the cellular response to osmotic shock in Lamprothamnium papulosum. Cells lacking extracellular mucilage originated in a brackish environment (1/3 seawater). These were compared, first with cells coated with thick (∼50 μm) extracellular mucilage, collected from a marine lake, and second, with equivalent mucilaginous marine cells, treated with heparinase enzyme to disrupt the mucilage layer. Histochemical stains Toluidine Blue and Alcian Blue at low pH identified the major component of the extracellular mucilage as sulfated polysaccharides. Treating mucilage with heparinase removed the capacity for staining with cationic dyes at low pH, although the mucilage was not removed, and remained as a substantial unstirred layer. Cells lacking mucilage responded to hypotonic shock with depolarization (by ∼95 mV), cessation of cyclosis, due to transient opening of Ca2+ channels, and opening of Ca2+-activated Cl channels and K+ channels. Cell conductance transiently increased tenfold, but after 60 min was restored to the conductance prior to hypotonic shock. Mucilaginous cells depolarized by a small amount (∼18 mV), but Ca2+ channels failed to open in large enough numbers for cyclosis to cease. Likewise most Ca2+-activated Cl channels failed to open and conductance increased only ∼1.2-fold above the prehypotonic level. After 60 min conductance was less than the conductance prior to hypotonic shock. Heparinased mucilaginous cells recovered several aspects of the hypotonic response in cells lacking mucilage. These cells depolarized (by ∼103 mV); cyclosis ceased, indicating that Ca2+ channels had opened, and conductance increased to ∼4 times the value prior to hypotonic shock, indicating that Ca2+-activated Cl channels opened. However, after 60 min, these cells had neither restored membrane potential (and remained at positive values), nor decreased their conductance. It was not possible to determine whether K+ channels had opened. The heparinased cells recovered the normal hypotonic response of mucilaginous cells when heparinase was washed out. Apical seawater cells, which lacked mucilage, were unaffected by heparinase treatment. The results demonstrate that the presence of extracellular sulfated polysaccharide mucilage impacts upon the electrophysiology of the response to osmotic shock in Lamprothamnium cells. The role of such sulfated mucilages in marine algae and animal cells is compared and discussed. Received: 24 March 1998/Revised: 28 April 1999  相似文献   

5.
One of the main effects of abscisic acid (ABA) is to induce net loss of potassium salts from guard cells enabling the stomata to close. K+ is released from the vacuole into the cytosol and then to the extracellular space. The effects of increasing cytosolic K+ on the voltage- and time-dependence of the outwardly rectifying K+-current (I K,out) in guard cell protoplasts (GCP) was examined in the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. The same quantitative analysis was performed in the presence of ABA at different internal K+ concentrations ([K+] i ). Varying [K+] i in the patch pipette from 100 to 270 mm increased the magnitude of I K,out in a nonlinear manner and caused a negative shift in the midpoint (V 0.5) of its steady-state activation curve. External addition of ABA (10–20 μm) also increased the magnitude of I K,out at all [K+] i , but caused a shift in V 0.5 of the steady-state activation curve only in those GCP loaded with 150 mm internal K+ or less. Indeed, V 0.5 did not shift upon addition of ABA when the [K+] i was above 150 mm and up to 270 mm, i.e., the shift in V 0.5 caused by ABA depended on the [K+] i . Both increase in [K+] i and external addition of ABA, decreased (by ≈ 20%) the activation time constant (τ n ) of I K,out. The small decrease in τ n , in both cases, was found to be independent of the membrane voltage. The results indicate that ABA mimics the effect of increasing cytoplasmic K+, and suggest that ABA may increase I K,out and alter V 0.5 of its steady-state activation curve via an enhancement in cytosolic K+. This report describes for the first time the effects of [K+] i on the voltage- and time-dependence of I K,out in guard cells. It also provides an explanation for the quantitative (total membrane current) and qualitative (current kinetics) differences found between intact guard cells and their protoplasts. Received: 1 December 1995/Revised: 8 May 1996  相似文献   

6.
Previous squid-axon studies identified a novel K/HCO3 cotransporter that is insensitive to disulfonic stilbene derivatives. This cotransporter presumably responds to intracellular alkali loads by moving K+ and HCO 3 out of the cell, tending to lower intracellular pH (pHi). With an inwardly directed K/HCO3 gradient, the cotransporter mediates a net uptake of alkali (i.e., K+ and HCO 3 influx). Here we test the hypothesis that intracellular quaternary ammonium ions (QA+) inhibit the inwardly directed cotransporter by interacting at the intracellular K+ site. We computed the equivalent HCO 3 influx (J HCO3) mediated by the cotransporter from the rate of pHi increase, as measured with pH-sensitive microelectrodes. We dialyzed axons to pHi 8.0, using a dialysis fluid (DF) free of K+, Na+ and Cl. Our standard artificial seawater (ASW) also lacked Na+, K+ and Cl. After halting dialysis, we introduced an ASW containing 437 mm K+ and 0.5% CO2/12 mm HCO 3, which (i) caused membrane potential to become transiently very positive, and (ii) caused a rapid pHi decrease, due to CO2 influx, followed by a slower plateau-phase pHi increase, due to inward cotransport of K+ and HCO 3. With no QA+ in the DF, J HCO3 was ∼58 pmole cm−2 sec−1. With 400 mm tetraethylammonium (TEA+) in the DF, J HCO3 was virtually zero. The apparent K i for intracellular TEA+ was ∼78 mm, more than two orders of magnitude greater than that obtained by others for inhibition of K+ channels. Introducing 100 mm inhibitor into the DF reduced J HCO3 to ∼20 pmole cm−2 sec−1 for tetramethylammonium (TMA+), ∼24 for TEA+, ∼10 for tetrapropylammonium (TPA+), and virtually zero for tetrabutylammonium (TBA+). The apparent K i value for TBA+ is ∼0.86 mm. The most potent inhibitor was phenyl-propyltetraethylammonium (PPTEA+), with an apparent K i of ∼91 μm. Thus, trans-side quaternary ammonium ions inhibit K/HCO3 influx in the potency sequence PPTEA+ > TBA+ > TPA+ > TEA+≅ TMA+. The identification of inhibitors of the K/HCO3 cotransporter, for which no inhibitors previously existed, will facilitate the study of this transporter. Received: 21 November 2000/Revised: 14 May 2001  相似文献   

7.
Diphtheria toxin (DT) forms cation selective channels at low pH in cell membranes and planar bilayers. The channels formed by wild-type full length toxin (DT-AB), wild-type fragment B (DT-B) and mutants of DT-B were studied in the plasma membrane of Vero cells using the patch-clamp technique. The mutations concerned certain negatively charged amino acids within the channel-forming transmembrane domain (T-domain). These residues might interact electrostatically with cations flowing through the channel, and were therefore exchanged for uncharged amino acids or lysine. The increase in whole-cell conductance induced by toxin, Δg m , was initially determined. DT-AB induced a ∼10-fold lower Δg m than DT-B. The mutations DT-B E327Q, DT-B D352N and DT-B E362K did not affect Δg m , whereas DT-B D295K, DT-B D352K and DT-B D318K drastically reduced Δg m . Single channel analysis of DT-B, DT-AB, DT-B D295K, DT-B D318K and DT-B E362K was then performed in outside-out patches. No differences were found for the single-channel conductances, but the mutants varied in their gating characteristics. DT-B D295K exhibited only a very transient channel activity. DT-AB as well as DT-B D318K displayed significantly lower open probability and mean dwell times than DT-B. Hence, the lower channel forming efficiency of DT-AB and DT-B D318K as compared to DT-B is reflected on the molecular level by their tendency to spend more time in the closed position and the fast flickering mode. Altogether, the present work shows that replacements of single amino acids distributed throughout a large part of the transmembrane domain (T-domain) strongly affect the overall channel activity expressed as Δg m and the gating kinetics of single channels. This indicates clearly that the channel activity observed in DT-exposed Vero cells at low pH is inherent to DT itself and not due to DT-activation of an endogenous channel. Received: 20 June 1996/Revised: 8 November 1996  相似文献   

8.
Melanoma cells are transformed melanocytes of neural crest origin. K+ channel blockers have been reported to inhibit melanoma cell proliferation. We used whole-cell recording to characterize ion channels in four different human melanoma cell lines (C8161, C832C, C8146, and SK28). Protocols were used to identify voltage-gated (KV), Ca2+-activated (KCa), and inwardly rectifying (KIR) K+ channels; swelling-sensitive Cl channels (Clswell); voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (CaV) and Ca2+ channels activated by depletion of intracellular Ca2+ stores (CRAC); and voltage-gated Na+ channels (NaV). The presence of Ca2+ channels activated by intracellular store depletion was further tested using thapsigargin to elicit a rise in [Ca2+] i . The expression of K+ channels varied widely between different cell lines and was also influenced by culture conditions. KIR channels were found in all cell lines, but with varying abundance. Whole-cell conductance levels for KIR differed between C8161 (100 pS/pF) and SK28 (360 pS/pF). KCa channels in C8161 cells were blocked by 10 nm apamin, but were unaffected by charybdotoxin (CTX). KCa channels in C8146 and SK28 cells were sensitive to CTX (K d = 4 nm), but were unaffected by apamin. KV channels, found only in C8146 cells, activated at ∼−20 mV and showed use dependence. All melanoma lines tested expressed CRAC channels and a novel Clswell channel. Clswell current developed at 30 pS/sec when the cells were bathed in 80% Ringer solution, and was strongly outwardly rectifying (4:1 in symmetrical Cl). We conclude that different melanoma cell lines express a diversity of ion channel types. Received: 2 April 1996/Revised: 22 August 1996  相似文献   

9.
The influenza B virus protein, NB, was expressed in Escherichia coli, either with a C-terminal polyhistidine tag or with NB fused to the C-terminus of glutathione S-transferase (GST), and purified by affinity chromatography. NB produced ion channel activity when added to artificial lipid bilayers separating NaCl solutions with unequal concentrations (150–500 mm cis, 50 mm trans). An antibody to a peptide mimicking the 25 residues at the C-terminal end of NB, and amantadine at high concentration (2–3 mm), both depressed ion channel activity. Ion channels had a variable conductance, the lowest conductance observed being approximately 10 picosiemens. At a pH of 5.5 to 6.5, currents reversed at positive potentials indicating that the channel was more permeable to sodium than to chloride ions (PNa/PCl∼ 9). In asymmetrical NaCl solutions at a pH of 2.5, currents reversed closer to the chloride than to the sodium equilibrium potential indicating that the channel had become more permeable to chloride than to sodium ions (PCl/PNa∼ 4). It was concluded that, at normal pHs, NB forms cation-selective channels. Received: 6 March 1995/Revised: 17 November 1995  相似文献   

10.
The effects of thyroid status on the properties of ATP-sensitive potassium channels were investigated. Single-channel recordings were made using excised inside-out membrane patches from enzymatically dissociated ventricular myocytes from hearts of control and thyroidectomized rats and each group was studied with and without administration of thyroid hormone. In patches excised from hypothyroid myocytes the IC50 for ATP inhibition of KATP channels was 110 μm. This value was 3-fold higher than the IC50 in control myocytes (43 μm). Treatment of hypothyroid rats to restore physiological levels of thyroid hormone (tri-iodothyronine, T3), resulted in a return to normal ATP-sensitivity (IC50= 46 μm). In patches from animals rendered hyperthyroid, the IC50 for ATP was 50 μm and this value was not significantly different from the control. There was no difference in the cooperativity of ATP-binding (Hill coefficient, nH) among control (nH= 2.2), hypothyroid (nH= 2.1), T3-treated (nH= 2.0) and hyperthyroid groups (nH= 2.4). The unitary conductance was unchanged and there was no apparent change in intraburst kinetics between examples of single KATP channels from control and hypothyroid rats. Action potentials recorded in myocytes from hypothyroid rats were significantly shortened by 50 μm levcromakalim, a KATP channel opener (P < 0.001) but unchanged in control myocytes. We conclude that hypothyroidism significantly decreased the ATP-sensitivity of KATP channels, whereas the induction of hyperthyroid conditions did not alter the ATP-sensitivity of these channels. Thus, hypothyroidism is likely to have important physiological consequences under circumstances in which KATP channels are activated, such as during ischemia. Received: 1 July 1997/Revised: 24 December 1997  相似文献   

11.
Depolarization-activated H+-selective currents were studied using whole-cell and excised-patch voltage clamp methods in human monocytic leukemia THP-1 cells, before and after being induced by phorbol ester to differentiate into macrophage-like cells. The H+ conductance, g H, activated slowly during depolarizing pulses, with a sigmoidal time course. Fitted by a single exponential following a delay, the activation time constant, τact was roughly 10 sec at threshold potentials, decreasing at more positive potentials. Tail currents upon repolarization decayed mono-exponentially at all potentials. The tail current time constant, τtail, was voltage dependent, decreasing with hyperpolarization from 2–3 sec at 0 mV to ∼200 msec at −100 mV. Surprisingly, although τact depended strongly on pH o , τtail was completely independent of pH o . H+ currents were inhibited by Zn2+. Increasing pH o or decreasing pH i shifted the voltage-activation relationship to more negative potentials, tending to activate the g H at any given voltage. Studied in excised, inside-out membrane patches, H+ currents were larger and activated much more rapidly at lower bath pH (i.e., pH i ). In THP-1 cells differentiated into macrophages, the H+ current density was reduced by one-half, and τact was slower by about twofold. The properties of H+ channels in THP-1 cells and in other macrophage-related cells are compared. Received: 19 September 1995/Revised: 14 March 1996  相似文献   

12.
Ion channel expression was studied in THP-1 human monocytic leukemia cells induced to differentiate into macrophage-like cells by exposure to the phorbol ester, phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA). Inactivating delayed rectifier K+ currents, I DR, present in almost all undifferentiated THP-1 monocytes, were absent from PMA-differentiated macrophages. Two K+ channels were observed in THP-1 cells only after differentiation into macrophages, an inwardly rectifying K+ channel (I IR) and a Ca2+-activated maxi-K channel (I BK). I IR was a classical inward rectifier, conducting large inward currents negative to E K and very small outward currents. I IR was blocked in a voltage-dependent manner by Cs+, Na+, and Ba2+, block increasing with hyperpolarization. Block by Na+ and Ba2+ was time-dependent, whereas Cs+ block was too fast to resolve. Rb+ was sparingly permeant. In cell-attached patches with high [K+] in the pipette, the single I IR channel conductance was ∼30 pS and no outward current could be detected. I BK channels were observed in cell-attached or inside-out patches and in whole-cell configuration. In cell-attached patches the conductance was ∼200–250 pS and at potentials positive to ∼100 mV a negative slope conductance of the unitary current was observed, suggesting block by intracellular Na+. I BK was activated at large positive potentials in cell-attached patches; in inside-out patches the voltage-activation relationship was shifted to more negative potentials by increased [Ca2+]. Macroscopic I BK was blocked by external TEA+ with half block at 0.35 mm. THP-1 cells were found to contain mRNA for Kv1.3 and IRK1. Levels of mRNA coding for these K+ channels were studied by competitive PCR (polymerase chain reaction), and were found to change upon differentiation in the same direction as did channel expression: IRK1 mRNA increased at least 5-fold, and Kv1.3 mRNA decreased on average 7-fold. Possible functional correlates of the changes in ion channel expression during differentiation of THP-1 cells are discussed. Received: 19 September 1995/Revised: 14 March 1996  相似文献   

13.
Mucosal crude microsomes, prepared from proximal rat small intestine, exhibited significant Mg-dependent, Zn-ATPase activity; V max = 23 μmoles Pi/mg protein/hr, K m = 160 nm, and Hill Coefficient, n= 1.5. Partial purification (∼10-fold) was achieved by detergent extraction, and centrifugation through 250 mm sucrose: V max = 268 units, K m = 1 nm, and n= 6. In partially purified preparations, the assay was linear with time to 60 min, and with protein concentration to 1 μg/300 μl. Activities at pH 8 and 8.5 were higher than at pH 7.2. The ATP K m was 0.7 mm, with an optimal ATP/Mg ratio of ∼2. Ca elicited ATPase activity but did not augment the Zn-dependent activity. In partially purified preparations, the homologous salts of Co, Cd, Cu, and Mn exhibited no detectable activity. Vanadate inhibition studies yielded two component kinetics with a K i of 12 μm for the first component, and 96 μm for the second component, in partially purified preparations. Tissue distribution analyses revealed gradients of activity. In the proximal half of the small intestine, Mg/Zn activity increased progressively from crypt to villus tip. In long axis studies, this activity decreased progressively from proximal to distal small bowel. Received: 12 September 2000/Revised 6 January 2001  相似文献   

14.
The modulation of I A K+ current by ten trivalent lanthanide (Ln3+) cations spanning the series with ionic radii ranging from 0.99 ? to 1.14 ? was characterized by the whole-cell patch clamp technique in bovine adrenal zona fasciculata (AZF) cells. Each of the ten Ln3+s reduced I A amplitude measured at +20 mV in a concentration-dependent manner. Smaller Ln3+s were the most potent and half-maximally effective concentrations (EC50s) varied inversely with ionic radius for the larger elements. Estimation of EC50s yielded the following potency sequence: Lu3+ (EC50= 3.0 μm) ≈ Yb3+ (EC50= 2.7 μm) > Er3+ (EC50= 3.7 μm) ≥ Dy3+ (EC50= 4.7 μm) > Gd3+ (EC50= 6.7 μm) ≈ Sm3+ (EC50= 6.9 μm) > Nd3+ (EC50= 11.2 μm) > Pr3+ (EC50= 22.3 μm) > Ce3+ (EC50= 28.0 μm) > La3+ (EC50= 33.7 μm). Ln3+s altered selected voltage-dependent gating and kinetic parameters of I A with a potency and order of effectiveness that paralleled the reduction of I A amplitude. Ln3+s markedly slowed activation kinetics and shifted the voltage-dependence of I A gating such that activation and steady-state inactivation occurred at more depolarized potentials. In contrast, Ln3+s did not measurably alter inactivation or deactivation kinetics and only slightly slowed kinetics of inactivated channels returning to the closed state. Replacement of external Ca2+ with Mg2+ had no effect on the concentration-dependent inhibition of I A by Ln3+s. In contrast to their action on I A K+ current, Ln3+s inhibited T-type Ca2+ currents in AZF cells without slowing activation kinetics. These results indicate that Ln3+ modulate I A K+ channels through binding to a site on I A channels located within the electric field but which is not specific for Ca2+. They are consistent with a model where Ln3+ binding to negative charges on the gating apparatus alters the voltage-dependence and kinetics of channel opening. Ln3+s modulate transient K+ and Ca2+ currents by two fundamentally different mechanisms. Received: 21 January 1997/Revised: 3 April 1998  相似文献   

15.
SqKv1A is a cDNA that encodes a Kv1 (Shaker-type) α-subunit expressed only in the giant axon and the parental giant fiber lobe (GFL) neurons of the squid stellate ganglion. We incorporated SqKv1A into a recombinant baculovirus for expression in the insect Sf9 cell line. Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings reveal that very few cells display functional potassium current (I K) if cultured at the standard postinfection temperature of 27°C. At 18°C, less SqKv1A protein is produced than at 27°C, but cells with I K currents are much more numerous and can survive for at least 20 days postinfection (vs. ∼5 days at 27°C). Activation and deactivation kinetics of SqKv1A in Sf9 cells are slower (∼3- and 10-fold, respectively) than those of native channels in GFL neurons, but have similar voltage dependencies. The two cell types show only subtle differences in steady-state voltage-dependence of conductance and inactivation. Rates of I K inactivation in 20 mm external K are identical in the two cell types, but the sensitivity of inactivation to external tetraethylammonium (TEA) and K ions differ: inactivation of SqKv1A in Sf9 cells is slowed by external TEA and K ions, whereas inactivation of GFL I K is largely insensitive. Functional differences are discussed in terms of factors that may be specific to cell-type, including the presence of presently unidentified Kv1 subunits in GFL neurons that might form heteromultimers with SqKv1A.  相似文献   

16.
A member of the family of Ca++-independent large conductance K+ channels (termed BK channels) was identified in patch clamp experiments with cultured neonatal rat hippocampal neurons. Permeation was characterized (at 5 mmol/l external, 140 mmol/l internal K+; 135 mmol/l external Na+) by a conductance of 107 pS, a ratio PNa/PK∼ 0.01, and outward rectification near the reversal potential. Channel activity was not voltage-dependent, could not be reduced by internal TEA or by a shift of internal pH from 7.4 to 6.8, i.e., discriminating features within the Ca++-independent BK channel family. Cytosolic proteolysis abolished the functional state of hippocampal Ca++-independent BK channels, in contrast to the pronase resistance of hippocampal Ca++-activated BK channels which suggests structural dissimilarities between these related channels. Cytoskeletal alterations had an activating influence on Ca++-independent BK channels and caused a 3–4-fold rise in P o , but patch excision and channel isolation from the natural environment provoked the strongest increase in P o , from 0.07 ± 0.03 to 0.73 ± 0.04. This activation process operated slowly, on a minute time scale and can be most easily explained with the loss of a membrane-associated inhibitory particle. Once activated, Ca++-independent BK channels reacted sensitively to a Mg-ATP supplemented brain tissue extract with a P o decline, from 0.60 ± 0.06 to 0.10 ± 0.05. Heated extracts failed to induce significant channel inhibition, providing evidence for a heat-unstable molecule with reassociates with the internal channel surface to reestablish channel inhibition. A dualistic channel control, by this membrane-associated molecule and by the cytoskeleton seems possible. Received: 16 July 1997/Revised: 3 November 1997  相似文献   

17.
The giant marine alga Valonia utricularis is a classical model system for studying the electrophysiology and water relations of plant cells by using microelectrode and pressure probe techniques. The recent finding that protoplasts can be prepared from the giant ``mother cells' (Wang, J., Sukhorukov, V.L., Djuzenova, C.S., Zimmermann, U., Müller, T., Fuhr, G., 1997, Protoplasma 196:123–134) allowed the use of the patch-clamp technique to examine ion channel activity in the plasmalemma of this species. Outside-out and cell-attached experiments displayed three different types of voltage-gated Cl channels (VAC1, VAC2, VAC3, Valonia Anion Channel 1,2,3), one voltage-gated K+ channel (VKC1, Valonia K + Channel 1) as well as stretch-activated channels. In symmetrical 150 mm Cl media, VAC1 was most frequently observed and had a single channel conductance of 36 ± 7 pS (n= 4) in the outside-out and 33 ± 5 pS (n= 10) in the cell-attached configuration. The reversal potential of the corresponding current-voltage curves was within 0 ± 4 mV (n= 4, outside-out) and 9 ± 7 mV (n= 10, cell-attached) close to the Nernst potential of Cl and shifted towards more negative values when cell-attached experiments were performed in asymmetrical 50:150 mm Cl media (bath/pipette; E Cl− −20 ± 7 mV (n= 4); Nernst potential −28 mV). Consistent with a selectivity for Cl, VAC1 was inhibited by 100 μM DIDS (4,4′-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2′-disulfonic acid). VAC1 was activated by a hyperpolarization of the patch. Boltzmann fits of the channel activity under symmetrical 150 mm Cl conditions yielded a midpoint potential of −12 ± 5 mV (n= 4, outside-out) and −3 ± 6 mV (n= 9, cell-attached) and corresponding apparent minimum gating charges of 15 ± 3 (n= 4) and 18 ± 5 (n= 9). The midpoint potential shifted to more negative values in the presence of a Cl gradient. VAC2 was activated by voltages more negative than E Cl− and was always observed together with VAC1, but less frequently. It showed a ``flickering' gating. The single channel conductance was 99 ± 10 pS (n= 6). VAC3 was activated by membrane depolarization and frequently exhibited several subconductance states. The single channel conductance of the main conductance state was 36 ± 5 pS (n= 5). VKC1 was also activated by positive clamped voltages. Up to three conductance states occurred whereby the main conductance state had a single channel conductance of 124 ± 27 pS (n= 6). In the light of the above results it seems to be likely that VAC1 contributes mainly to the Cl conductance of the plasmalemma of the turgescent ``mother cells' and that this channel (as well as VAC2) can operate in the physiological membrane potential range. The physiological significance of VAC3 and VKC1 is unknown, but may be related (as the stretch-activated channels) to processes involved in turgor regulation. Received: 24 June 1999/Revised: 2 September 1999  相似文献   

18.
Opening of ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channels by the uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation, 2,4 dinitrophenol (DNP), has been assumed to be secondary to metabolic inhibition and reduced intracellular ATP levels. Herein, we present data which show that DNP (200 μm) can induce opening of cardiac KATP channels, under whole-cell and inside-out conditions, despite millimolar concentrations of ATP (1–2.5 mm). DNP-induced currents had a single channel conductance (71 pS), inward rectification, reversal potential, and intraburst kinetic properties (open time constant, τopen: 4.8 msec; fast closed time constant, τclosed(f): 0.33 msec) characteristic of KATP channels suggesting that DNP did not affect the pore region of the channel, but may have altered the functional coupling of the ATP-dependent channel gating. A DNP analogue, with the pH-titrable hydroxyl replaced by a methyl group, could not open KATP channels. The pH-dependence of the effect of DNP on channel opening under whole-cell, cell-attached, and inside-out conditions suggested that transfer of protonated DNP across the sarcolemma is essential for activation of KATP channels in the presence of ATP. We conclude that the use of DNP for metabolic stress-induced KATP channel opening should be reevaluated. Received: 10 September 1996/Revised: 27 December 1996  相似文献   

19.
The effect of extracellular cation concentration and membrane voltage on the current carried by outward-rectifying K+ channels was examined in stomatal guard cells of Vicia faba L. Intact guard cells were impaled with double-barrelled microelectrodes and the K+ current was monitored under voltage clamp in 0.1–30 mm K+ and in equivalent concentrations of Rb+, Cs+ and Na+. From a conditioning voltage of −200 mV, clamp steps to voltages between −150 and +50 mV in 0.1 mm K+ activated current through outward-rectifying K+ channels (I K, out) at the plasma membrane in a voltage-dependent fashion. Increasing [K+] o shifted the voltage-sensitivity of I K, out in parallel with the equilibrium potential for K+ across the membrane. A similar effect of [K+] o was evident in the kinetics of I K, out activation and deactivation, as well as the steady-state conductance- (g K ) voltage relations. Linear conductances, determined as a function of the conditioning voltage from instantaneous I-V curves, yielded voltages for half-maximal conductance near −130 mV in 0.1 mm K+, −80 mV in 1.0 mm K+, and −20 mV in 10 mm K+. Similar data were obtained with Rb+ and Cs+, but not with Na+, consistent with the relative efficacy of cation binding under equilibrium conditions (K+≥ Rb+ > Cs+ > > Na+). Changing Ca2+ or Mg2+ concentrations outside between 0.1 and 10 mm was without effect on the voltage-dependence of g K or on I K, out activation kinetics, although 10 mm [Ca2+] o accelerated current deactivation at voltages negative of −75 mV. At any one voltage, increasing [K+] o suppressed g K completely, an action that showed significant cooperativity with a Hill coefficient of 2. The apparent affinity for K+ was sensitive to voltage, varying from 0.5 to 20 mm with clamp voltages near −100 to 0 mV, respectively. These, and additional data indicate that extracellular K+ acts as a ligand and alters the voltage-dependence of I K, out gating; the results implicate K+-binding sites accessible from the external surface of the membrane, deep within the electrical field, but distinct from the channel pore; and they are consistent with a serial 4-state reaction-kinetic model for channel gating in which binding of two K+ ions outside affects the distribution between closed states of the channel. Received: 27 November 1996/Revised: 4 March 1997  相似文献   

20.
Properties of large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels were studied in the soma of motoneurones visually identified in thin slices of neonatal rat spinal cord. The channels had a conductance of 82 ± 5 pS in external Ringer solution (5.6 mm K+ o //155 mm K+ i ) and 231 ± 4 pS in external high-K o solution (155 mm K+ o //155 mm K+ i ). The channels were activated by depolarization and by an increase in internal Ca2+ concentration. Potentials of half-maximum channel activation (E50) were −13, −34, −64 and −85 mV in the presence of 10−6, 10−5, 10−4 and 10−3 m internal Ca2+, respectively. Using an internal solution containing 10−4 m Ca2+, averaged KCa currents showed fast activation within 2–3 msec after a voltage step to +50 mV. Averaged KCa currents did not inactivate during 400 msec voltage pulses. External TEA reduced the apparent single-channel amplitude with a 50% blocking concentration (IC50) of 0.17 ± 0.02 mm. KCa channels were completely suppressed by externally applied 100 mm charybdotoxin. It is concluded that KCa channels activated by Ca2+ entry during the action potential play an important role in the excitability of motoneurones. Received: 7 November 1996/Revised: 29 October 1997  相似文献   

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