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1.
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   

2.
Large Conductance Ca2+-Activated K+ Channels in Human Meningioma Cells   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Cells from ten human meningiomas were electrophysiologically characterized in both living tissue slices and primary cultures. In whole cells, depolarization to voltages higher than +80 mV evoked a large K+ outward current, which could be blocked by iberiotoxin (100 nm) and TEA (half blocking concentration IC50= 5.3 mm). Raising the internal Ca2+ from 10 nm to 2 mm shifted the voltage of half-maximum activation (V 1/2) of the K+ current from +106 to +4 mV. Respective inside-out patch recordings showed a voltage- and Ca2+-activated (BK Ca ) K+ channel with a conductance of 296 pS (130 mm K+ at both sides of the patch). V 1/2 of single-channel currents was +6, −12, −46, and −68 mV in the presence of 1, 10, 100, and 1000 μm Ca2+, respectively, at the internal face of the patch. In cell-attached patches the open probability (P o ) of BK Ca channels was nearly zero at potentials below +80 mV, matching the activation threshold for whole-cell K+ currents with 10 nm Ca2+ in the pipette. Application of 20 μm cytochalasin D increased P o of BK Ca channels in cell-attached patches within minutes. These data suggest that the activation of BK Ca channels in meningioma cells does not only depend on voltage and internal Ca2+ but is also controlled by the cytoskeleton. Received 18 June 1999/Revised: 18 January 2000  相似文献   

3.
Outer sulcus epithelial cells were recently found to actively reabsorb cations from the cochlear luminal fluid, endolymph, via nonselective cation channels in the apical membrane. Here we determined the transport properties of the basolateral membrane with the whole-cell patch clamp technique; the apical membrane contributed insignificantly to the recordings. Outer sulcus epithelial cells exhibited both outward and inward currents and had a resting membrane potential of −90.4 ± 0.7 mV (n= 78), close to the Nernst potential for K+ (−95 mV). The reversal potential depolarized by 54 mV for a tenfold increase in extracellular K+ concentration with a K+/Na+ permeability ratio of 36. The most frequently observed K+ current was voltage independent over a broad range of membrane potentials. The current was reduced by extracellular barium (10−5 to 10−3 m), amiloride (0.5 mm), quinine (1 mm), lidocaine (5 mm) and ouabain (1 mm). On the other hand, TEA (20 mm), charybdotoxin (100 nm), apamin (100 nm), glibenclamide (10 μm), 4-aminopyridine (1 mm) and gadolinium (1 mm) had no significant effect. These data suggest that the large K+ conductance, in concert with the Na+,K+-ATPase, of the basolateral membrane of outer sulcus cells provides the driving force for cation entry across the apical membrane, thereby energizing vectorial cation absorption by this epithelium and contributing to the homeostasis of endolymph.  相似文献   

4.
These experiments were conducted to determine the membrane K+ currents and channels in human urinary bladder (HTB-9) carcinoma cells in vitro. K+ currents and channel activity were assessed by the whole-cell voltage clamp and by either inside-out or outside-out patch clamp recordings. Cell depolarization resulted in activation of a Ca2+-dependent outward K+ current, 0.57 ± 0.13 nS/pF at −70 mV holding potential and 3.10 ± 0.15 nS/pF at 30 mV holding potential. Corresponding patch clamp measurements demonstrated a Ca2+-activated, voltage-dependent K+ channel (KCa) of 214 ± 3.0 pS. Scorpion venom peptides, charybdotoxin (ChTx) and iberiotoxin (IbTx), inhibited both the activated current and the KCa activity. In addition, on-cell patch recordings demonstrated an inwardly rectifying K+ channel, 21 ± 1 pS at positive transmembrane potential (V m ) and 145 ± 13 pS at negative V m . Glibenclamide (50 μm), Ba2+ (1 mm) and quinine (100 μm) each inhibited the corresponding nonactivated, basal whole-cell current. Moreover, glibenclamide inhibited K+ channels in inside/out patches in a dose-dependent manner, and the IC50= 46 μm. The identity of this K+ channel with an ATP-sensitive K+ channel (KATP) was confirmed by its inhibition with ATP (2 mm) and by its activation with diazoxide (100 μm). We conclude that plasma membranes of HTB-9 cells contain the KCa and a lower conductance K+ channel with properties consistent with a sulfonylurea receptor-linked KATP. Received: 12 June 1997/Revised: 21 October 1997  相似文献   

5.
A large conductance, Ca2+-activated K+ channel of the BK type was examined in cultured pituitary melanotrophs obtained from adult male rats. In cell-attached recordings the slope conductance for the BK channel was ≈190 pS and the probability (P o ) of finding the channel in the open state at the resting membrane potential was low (<<0.1). Channels in inside-out patches and in symmetrical 150 mm K+ had a conductance of ≈260 pS. The lower conductance in the cell-attached recordings is provisionally attributed to an intracellular K+ concentration of ≈113 mm. The permeability sequence, relative to K+, was K+ > Rb+ (0.87) > NH+ 4 (0.17) > Cs+≥ Na+ (≤0.02). The slope conductance for Rb+ was much less than for K+. Neither Na+ nor Cs+ carried measurable currents and 150 mm internal Cs+ caused a flickery block of the channel. Internal tetraethylammonium ions (TEA+) produced a fast block for which the dissociation constant at 0 mV (K D (0 mV)) was 50 mm. The K D (0 mV) for external TEA+ was much lower, 0.25 mm, and the blocking reaction was slower as evidenced by flickery open channel currents. With both internal and external TEA+ the blocking reaction was bimolecular and weakly voltage dependent. External charybdotoxin (40 nm) caused a large and reversible decrease of P o . The P o was increased by depolarization and/or by increasing the concentration of internal Ca2+. In 0.1 μm Ca2+ the half-maximal P o occurred at ≈100 mV; increasing Ca2+ to 1 μm shifted the voltage for the half-maximal P o to −75 mV. The Ca2+ dependence of the gating was approximated by a fourth power relationship suggesting the presence of four Ca2+ binding sites on the BK channel. Received: 23 October/Revised: 15 December 1995  相似文献   

6.
The Ca2+-activated maxi K+ channel was found in the apical membrane of everted rabbit connecting tubule (CNT) with a patch-clamp technique. The mean number of open channels (NP o ) was markedly increased from 0.007 ± 0.004 to 0.189 ± 0.039 (n= 7) by stretching the patch membrane in a cell-attached configuration. This activation was suggested to be coupled with the stretch-activation of Ca2+-permeable cation channels, because the maxi K+ channel was not stretch-activated in both the cell-attached configuration using Ca2+-free pipette and in the inside-out one in the presence of 10 mm EGTA in the cytoplasmic side. The maxi K+ channel was completely blocked by extracellular 1 μm charybdotoxin (CTX), but was not by cytoplasmic 33 μm arachidonic acid (AA). On the other hand, the low-conductance K+ channel, which was also found in the same membrane, was completely inhibited by 11 μm AA, but not by 1 μm CTX. The apical K+ conductance in the CNT was estimated by the deflection of transepithelial voltage (ΔV t ) when luminal K+ concentration was increased from 5 to 15 mEq. When the tubule was perfused with hydraulic pressure of 0.5 KPa, the ΔV t was only −0.7 ± 0.4 mV. However, an increase in luminal fluid flow by increasing perfusion pressure to 1.5 KPa markedly enhanced ΔV t to −9.4 ± 0.9 mV. Luminal application of 1 μm CTX reduced the ΔV t to −1.3 ± 0.6 mV significantly in 6 tubules, whereas no significant change of ΔV t was recorded by applying 33 μm AA into the lumen of 5 tubules (ΔV t =−7.2 ± 0.5 mV in control vs.ΔV t =−6.7 ± 0.6 mV in AA). These results suggest that the Ca2+-activated maxi K+ channel is responsible for flow-dependent K+ secretion by coupling with the stretch-activated Ca2+-permeable cation channel in the rabbit CNT. Received: 21 August 1997/Revised: 20 March 1998  相似文献   

7.
The current-voltage (I/V) profiles of Ventricaria (formerly Valonia) membranes were measured at a range of external potassium concentrations, [K+] o , from 0.1 to 100 mm. The conductance-voltage (G/V) characteristics were computed to facilitate better resolution of the profile change with time after exposure to different [K+] o . The resistance-voltage (R/V) characteristics were computed to attempt resolution of plasmalemma and tonoplast. Four basic electrophysiological stages emerged: (1) Uniform low resistance between −60 and +60 mV after the cell impalement. (2) High resistance between +50 and +150 for [K+] o from 0.1 to 1.0 mm and hypotonic media. (3) High resistance between −150 and −20 mV for [K+] o of 10 mm (close to natural seawater) and hypertonic media. (4) High resistance between −150 and +170 mV at [K+] o of 100 mm. The changes between these states were slow, requiring minutes to hours and sometimes exhibiting spontaneous oscillations of the membrane p.d. (potential difference). Our analysis of the I/V data supports a previous hypothesis, that Ventricaria tonoplast is the more resistive membrane containing a pump, which transports K+ into the vacuole to regulate turgor. We associate state (1) with the plasmalemma conductance being dominant and the K+ pump at the tonoplast short-circuited probably by a K+ channel, state (2) with the K+ pump ``off' or short-circuited at p.d.s more negative than +50 mV, state (3) with the K+ pump ``on,' and state (4) with the pump dominant, but affected by high K+. A model for the Ventricaria membrane system is proposed. Received: 5 November 1998/Revised: 11 May 1999  相似文献   

8.
Nystatin perforated-patch clamp and single-channel recording methods were used to characterize macroscopic and single-channel K+ currents and the effects of angiotensin II (AngII) in cultured rat adrenal glomerulosa cells. Two basic patterns of macroscopic current-voltage relationships were observed: type 1 exhibited a rapidly activating, noninactivating, voltage-dependent outward current and type 2 exhibited an inactivating voltage-dependent outward current attributed to charybdotoxin sensitive Ca++-dependent K+ channels. Most cells exhibited the type 1 pattern and experiments focused on this cell type. Cell-attached and inside-out patches were dominated by a single K+ channel class which exhibited an outward conductance of 12 pS (20 mm K+ pipette in cell-attached and inside-out configurations, 145 mm K+ in), a mean open time of 2 msec, and a weakly voltage-dependent low open probability that increased with depolarization. Channel open probability was reversibly inhibited by bath stimulation with AngII. At the macroscopic level, type 1 cell macroscopic K+ currents appeared comprised of two components: a weakly voltage-dependent current controlling the resting membrane potential (−85 mV) which appeared mediated by the 12 pS K+ channel and a rapidly activating, noninactivating voltage-dependent current activated above −50 mV. The presence of the second voltage-dependent K+ channel class was suggested by the effects of AngII, the blocking effects of quinidine and Cs+, and the properties of the weakly voltage-dependent K+ channel described. The K+ selectivity of the macroscopic current was demonstrated by the dependence of current reversal potentials on the K+ equilibrium potential and by the effects of K+ channel blockers, Cs+ and quinidine. AngII (10 pm to 1 nm) reversibly inhibited macroscopic K+ currents and this effect was blocked by the AT1 receptor antagonist losartin. Received: 6 August 1996/Revised: 15 November 1996  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The outer sulcus epithelium was recently shown to absorb cations from the lumen of the gerbil cochlea. Patch clamp recordings of excised apical membrane were made to investigate ion channels that participate in this reabsorptive flux. Three types of channel were observed: (i) a nonselective cation (NSC) channel, (ii) a BK (large conductance, maxi K or K Ca ) channel and (iii) a small K+ channel which could not be fully characterized. The NSC channel found in excised insideout patch recordings displayed a linear current-voltage (I-V) relationship (27 pS) and was equally conductive for Na+ and K+, but not permeable to Cl or N-methyl-d-glucamine. Channel activity required the presence of Ca2+ at the cytosolic face, but was detected at Ca2+ concentrations as low as 10−7 m (open probability (P o ) = 0.11 ± 0.03, n= 8). Gadolinium decreased P o of the NSC channel from both the external and cytosolic side (IC50∼ 0.6 μm). NSC currents were decreased by amiloride (10 μm− 1 mm) and flufenamic acid (0.1 mm). The BK channel was also frequently (38%) observed in excised patches. In symmetrical 150 mm KCl conditions, the I-V relationship was linear with a conductance of 268 pS. The Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation for current carried solely by K+ could be fitted to the I-V relationship in asymmetrical K+ and Na+ solutions. The channel was impermeable to Cl and N-methyl-d-glucamine. P o of the BK channel increased with depolarization of the membrane potential and with increasing cytosolic Ca2+. TEA (20 mm), charybdotoxin (100 nm) and Ba2+ (1 mm) but not amiloride (1 mm) reduced P o from the extracellular side. In contrast, external flufenamic acid (100 μm) increased P o and this effect was inhibited by charybdotoxin (100 nm). Flufenamic acid inhibited the inward short-circuit current measured by the vibrating probe and caused a transient outward current. We conclude that the NSC channel is Ca2+ activated, voltage-insensitive and involved in both constitutive K+ and Na+ reabsorption from endolymph while the BK channel might participate in the K+ pathway under stimulated conditions that produce an elevated intracellular Ca2+ or depolarized membrane potential. Received: 14 October 1999/Revised: 10 December 1999  相似文献   

11.
The lipid bilayer technique is used to examine the biophysical properties of anion and cation channels frequently formed by platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) venom (OaV). The OaV-formed anion channel in 250/50 mm KCl cis/trans has a maximum conductance of 857 ± 23 pS (n= 5) in 250/50 mm KCl cis/trans. The current-voltage relationship of this channel shows strong inward rectification. The channel activity undergoes time-dependent inactivation that can be removed by depolarizing voltage steps more positive than the reversal potential for chloride, E Cl , (+40 mV). The reversal potential of the OaV-formed slow current activity in 250/50 mm KCl cis/trans is close to the potassium equilibrium potential (E K ) of −40 mV. The conductance values for the slow channel are 22.5 ± 2.6 pS and 41.38 ± 4.2 pS in 250/50 and 750/50 mm cis/trans, respectively. The gating kinetics of the slow ion channels are voltage-dependent. The channel open probability (P o ) is between 0.1 and 0.8 at potentials between 0 and +140 mV. The channel frequency (F o ) increases with depolarizing voltages between 0 and +140 mV, whereas mean open time (T o ) and mean closed time (T c ) decrease. Ion substitution experiments of the cis solution show that the channel has conductance values of 21.47 ± 2.3 and 0.53 ± 0.1 pS in 250 mm KCl and choline Cl, respectively. The amplitude of the single channel current is dependent on [K+] cis and the current reversal potential (E rev ) responds to increases in [K+] cis by shifting to more negative voltages. The increase in current amplitude as a function of increasing [K+] cis can be best described by a third order polynomial fit. At +140 mV, the values of the maximal single channel conductance (γ max ) and the concentration for half maximal γ (K s ) are 38.6 pS and 380 mm and decline to 15.76 pS and 250 mm at 0 mV, respectively. The ion selectivity of the channel to K+, Na+, Cs+ and choline+ was determined in ion substitution experiments. The permeability values for P K+ :P Na+ :P Cs+ :P choline+ were 1:1:0.63:0.089, respectively. On the other hand, the activity of the slow channel was eliminated (Fig. 7B). The slow channel was reversibly inhibited by [TEA+] trans and the half-maximal inhibitory concentration (K i ) was ∼48 mm. Received: 26 April 1999/Revised: 19 July 1999  相似文献   

12.
The effects of angiotensin II (100 nm) on the electrical membrane properties of zona fasciculata cells isolated from calf adrenal gland were studied using the whole cell patch recording method. In current-clamp condition, angiotension II induced a biphasic membrane response which began by a transient hyperpolarization followed by a depolarization more positive than the control resting potential. These effects were abolished by Losartan (10−5 m), an antagonist of angiotensin receptors of type 1. The angiotensin II-induced transient hyperpolarization was characterized in voltage-clamp condition from a holding potential of −10 mV. Using either the perforated or the standard recording method, a transient outward current accompanied by an increase of the membrane conductance was observed in response to the hormonal stimulation. This outward current consisted of an initial fast peak followed by an oscillating or a slowly decaying plateau current. In Cl-free solution, the outward current reversed at −78.5 mV, a value close to E K. It was blocked by external TEA (20 mm) and by apamin (50 nm). In K+-free solution, the transient outward current, sensitive to Cl channel blocker DPC (400 μm), reversed at −52 mV, a more positive potential than E Cl. Its magnitude changed in the same direction as the driving force for Cl. The hormone-induced transient outward current was never observed when EGTA (5 mm) was added to the pipette solution. The plateau current was suppressed in nominally Ca2+-free solution (47% of cells) and was reversibly blocked by Cd2+ (300 μm) but not by nisoldipine (0.5–1 μm) which inhibited voltage-gated Ca2+ currents identified in this cell type. The present experiments show that the transient hyperpolarization induced by angiotensin II is due to Ca2+-dependent K+ and Cl currents. These two membrane currents are co-activated in response to an internal increase of [Ca2+] i originating from intra- and extracellular stores. Received: 29 May 1997/Revised: 4 November 1997  相似文献   

13.
The gating and conduction properties of a channel activated by intracellular Na+ were studied by recording unitary currents in inside-out patches excised from lobster olfactory receptor neurons. Channel openings to a single conductance level of 104 pS occurred in bursts. The open probability of the channel increased with increasing concentrations of Na+. At 210 mm Na+, membrane depolarization increased the open probability e-fold per 36.6 mV. The distribution of channel open times could be fit by a single exponential with a time constant of 4.09 msec at −60 mV and 90 mm Na+. The open time constant was not affected by the concentration of Na+, but was increased by membrane depolarization. At 180 mm Na+ and −60 mV, the distribution of channel closed times could be fit by the sum of four exponentials with time constants of 0.20, 1.46, 8.92 and 69.9 msec, respectively. The three longer time constants decreased, while the shortest time constant did not vary with the concentration of Na+. Membrane depolarization decreased all four closed time constants. Burst duration was unaffected by the concentration of Na+, but was increased by membrane depolarization. Permeability for monovalent cations relative to that of Na+ (P X /P Na ), calculated from the reversal potential, was: Li+ (1.11) > Na+ (1.0) > K+ (0.54) > Rb+ (0.36) > Cs+ (0.20). Extracellular divalent cations (10 mm) blocked the inward Na+ current at −60 mV according to the following sequence: Mn2+ > Ca2+ > Sr2+ > Mg2+ > Ba2+. Relative permeabilities for divalent cations (P Y /P Na ) were Ca2+ (39.0) > Mg2+ (34.1) > Mn2+ (15.5) > Ba2+ (13.8) > Na+ (1.0). Both the reversal potential and the conductance determined in divalent cation-free mixtures of Na+ and Cs+ or Li+ were monotonic functions of the mole fraction, suggesting that the channel is a single-ion pore that behaves as a multi-ion pore when the current is carried exclusively by divalent cations. The properties of the channel are consistent with the channel playing a role in odor activation of these primary receptor neurons. Received: 17 September 1996/Revised: 15 November 1996  相似文献   

14.
Primary cultures containing a high percentage of lactotrophs were obtained by dissociating the pituitary of rats following 14–18 days of lactation. Lactotrophs with a distinctive appearance were recorded after 1–35 days in vitro and identified by immunocytochemical staining for prolactin. Whole-cell voltage clamp measurements in isotonic KCl solution from a holding potential of −40 mV revealed the presence of inward-rectifying K currents with a time-dependent, Na+-independent inactivation at potentials negative to −60 mV. The time for complete inactivation was strikingly different between lactotrophs, varying between 1 sec and more than 5 sec at −120 mV, and was not related to time in culture. The reversal potential shifted 59 mV (25°C) for a tenfold change in external K+ concentration, demonstrating the selectivity of the channel for K+ over Na+. The inward-rectifying K current was blocked by 5 mm Ba2+ and partially blocked by 10 mm TEA. Chloramine-T (1 and 2 mm) produced a total block of the inward-rectifying K current in lactotrophs. Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (500 nm) significantly reduced the inward-rectifying K current in about half of the lactotrophs. This current is similar to the inward-rectifying K current previously characterized in clonal somatomammotrophic pituitary cells (GH3B6). The variability of the rate of inactivation of this current in lactotrophs and its responsiveness to TRH is discussed. Received: 28 September 1995/Revised: 11 December 1995  相似文献   

15.
Muscarinic receptor-linked G protein, G i , can directely activate the specific K+ channel (I K(ACh)) in the atrium and in pacemaker tissues in the heart. Coupling of G i to the K+ channel in the ventricle has not been well defined. G protein regulation of K+ channels in isolated human ventricular myocytes was examined using the patch-clamp technique. Bath application of 1 μm acetylcholine (ACh) reversibly shortened the action potential duration to 74.4 ± 12.1% of control (at 90% repolarization, mean ±sd, n= 8) and increased the whole-cell membrane current conductance without prior β-adrenergic stimulation in human ventricular myocytes. The ACh effect was reversed by atropine (1 μm). In excised inside-out patch configurations, application of GTPγS (100 μm) to the bath solution (internal surface) caused activation of I K(ACh) and/or the background inwardly-rectifying K+ channel (I K1) in ventricular cell membranes. I K(ACh) exhibited rapid gating behavior with a slope conductance of 44 ± 2 pS (n= 25) and a mean open lifetime of 1.8 ± 0.3 msec (n= 21). Single channel activity of GTPγS-activated I K1 demonstrated long-lasting bursts with a slope conductance of 30 ± 2 pS (n= 16) and a mean open lifetime of 36.4 ± 4.1 msec (n= 12). Unlike I K(ACh), G protein-activated I K1 did not require GTP to maintain channel activity, suggesting that these two channels may be controlled by G proteins with different underlying mechanisms. The concentration of GTP at half-maximal channel activation was 0.22 μm in I K(ACh) and 1.2 μm in I K1. Myocytes pretreated with pertussis toxin (PTX) prevented GTP from activating these channels, indicating that muscarinic receptor-linked PTX-sensitive G protein, G i , is essential for activation of both channels. G protein-activated channel characteristics from patients with terminal heart failure did not differ from those without heart failure or guinea pig. These results suggest that ACh can shorten the action potential by activating I K(ACh) and I K1 via muscarinic receptor-linked G i proteins in human ventricular myocytes. Received: 23 September 1996/Revised: 18 December 1996  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
In frog red blood cells, K-Cl cotransport (i.e., the difference between ouabain-resistant K fluxes in Cl and NO3) has been shown to mediate a large fraction of the total K+ transport. In the present study, Cl-dependent and Cl-independent K+ fluxes via frog erythrocyte membranes were investigated as a function of external and internal K+ ([K+] e and [K+] i ) concentration. The dependence of ouabain-resistant Cl-dependent K+ (86Rb) influx on [K+] e over the range 0–20 mm fitted the Michaelis-Menten equation, with an apparent affinity (K m ) of 8.2 ± 1.3 mm and maximal velocity (V max ) of 10.4 ± 1.6 mmol/l cells/hr under isotonic conditions. Hypotonic stimulation of the Cl-dependent K+ influx increased both K m (12.8 ± 1.7 mm, P < 0.05) and V max (20.2 ± 2.9 mmol/l/hr, P < 0.001). Raising [K+] e above 20 mm in isotonic media significantly reduced the Cl-dependent K+ influx due to a reciprocal decrease of the external Na+ ([Na+] e ) concentration below 50 mm. Replacing [Na+] e by NMDG+ markedly decreased V max (3.2 ± 0.7 mmol/l/hr, P < 0.001) and increased K m (15.7 ± 2.1 mm, P < 0.03) of Cl-dependent K+ influx. Moreover, NMDG+ Cl substitution for NaCl in isotonic and hypotonic media containing 10 mm RbCl significantly reduced both Rb+ uptake and K+ loss from red cells. Cell swelling did not affect the Na+-dependent changes in Rb+ uptake and K+ loss. In a nominally K+(Rb+)-free medium, net K+ loss was reduced after lowering [Na+] e below 50 mm. These results indicate that over 50 mm [Na+] e is required for complete activation of the K-Cl cotransporter. In nystatin-pretreated cells with various intracellular K+, Cl-dependent K+ loss in K+-free media was a linear function of [K+] i , with a rate constant of 0.11 ± 0.01 and 0.18 ± 0.008 hr−1 (P < 0.001) in isotonic and hypotonic media, respectively. Thus K-Cl cotransport in frog erythrocytes exhibits a strong asymmetry with respect to transported K+ ions. The residual, ouabain-resistant K+ fluxes in NO3 were only 5–10% of the total and were well fitted to linear regressions. The rate constants for the residual influxes were not different from those for K+ effluxes in isotonic (∼0.014 hr−1) and hypotonic (∼0.022 hr−1) media, but cell swelling resulted in a significant increase in the rate constants. Received: 19 November 1998/Revised: 23 August 1999  相似文献   

18.
2-Methoxyestradiol, an endogenous metabolite of 17β-estradiol, is known to have antitumor and antiangiogenic actions. The effects of 2-methoxyestradiol on ionic currents were investigated in an endothelial cell line (HUV-EC-C) originally derived from human umbilical vein. In the whole-cell patch-clamp configuration, 2-methoxyestradiol (0.3–30 μm) reversibly suppressed the amplitude of K+ outward currents. The IC 50 value of the 2-methoxyestradiol-induced decrease in outward current was 3 μm. Evans blue (30 μm) or niflumic acid (30 μm), but not diazoxide (30 μm), reversed the 2-methoxyestradiol-induced decrease in outward current. In the inside-out configuration, application of 2-methoxyestradiol (3 μm) to the bath did not modify the single-channel conductance of large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BKCa) channels; however, it did suppress the channel activity. 2-Methoxyestradiol (3 μm) produced a shift in the activation curve of BKCa channels to more positive potentials. Kinetic studies showed that the 2-methoxyestradiol-induced inhibition of BKCa channels is primarily mediated by a decrease in the number of long-lived openings. 2-Methoxyestradiol-induced inhibition of the channel activity was potentiated by membrane stretch. In contrast, neither 17β-estradiol (10 μm) nor estriol (10 μm) affected BKCa channel activity, whereas 2-hydroxyestradiol (10 μm) slightly suppressed it. Under current-clamp condition, 2-methoxyestradiol (10 μm) caused membrane depolarization and Evans blue (30 μm) reversed 2-methoxyestradiol-induced depolarization. The present study provides evidence that 2-methoxyestradiol can suppress the activity of BKCa channels in endothelial cells. These effects of 2-methoxyestradiol on ionic currents may contribute to its effects on functional activity of endothelial cells. Received: 27 November 2000/Revised: 13 April 2001  相似文献   

19.
cDNA encoding the full-length hKv1.3 lymphocyte channel and a C-terminal truncated (Δ459-523) form that lacks the putative PKA Ser468 phosphorylation site were stably transfected in human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 cells. Immunostaining of the transfected cells revealed a distribution at the plasma membrane that was uniform in the case of the full-length channel whereas clustering was observed in the case of the truncated channel. Some staining within the cell cytoplasm was found in both instances, suggesting an active process of biosynthesis. Analyses of the K+ current by the patch-clamp technique in the whole cell configuration showed that depolarizing steps to 40 mV from a holding potential (HP) of −80 mV elicited an outward current of 2 to 10 nA. The current threshold was positive to −40 mV and the current amplitude increased in a voltage-dependent manner. The parameters of activation were −5.7 and −9.9 mV (slope factor) and −35 mV (half activation, V 0.5) in the case of the full-length and truncated channels, respectively. The characteristics of the inactivation were 14.2 and 24.6 mV (slope factor) and −17.3 and −39.0 mV (V 0.5) for the full-length and truncated channels, respectively. The activation time constant of the full-length channel for potentials ranging from −30 to 40 mV decreased from 18 to 12 msec whereas the inactivation time constant decreased from 6600 msec at −30 mV to 1800 msec at 40 mV. The unit current amplitude measured in cells bathing in 140 mm KCl was 1.3 ± 0.1 pA at 40 mV, the unit conductance, 34.5 pS and the zero current voltage, 0 mV. Both forms of the channels were inhibited by TEA, 4-AP, Ni2+ and charybdotoxin. In contrast to the native (Jurkat) lymphocyte Kv1.3 channel that is fully inhibited by PKA and PKC, the addition of TPA resulted in 34.6 ± 7.3% and 38.7 ± 9.4% inhibition of the full-length and the truncated channels, respectively. 8-BrcAMP induced a 39.4 ± 5.4% inhibition of the full-length channel but had no effect (8.6 ± 8.3%) on the truncated channel. Cell dialysis with alkaline phosphatase had no effects, suggesting that the decreased sensitivity of the transfected channels to PKA and PKC was not due to an already phosphorylated channel. Patch extract experiments suggested that the hKv1.3 channel was partially sensitive to PKA and PKC. Cotransfecting the Kvβ1.2 subunit resulted in a decrease in the value of the time constant of inactivation of the full-length channel but did not modify its sensitivity to PKA and PKC. The cotransfected Kvβ2 subunit had no effects. Our results indicate that the hKv1.3 lymphocyte channel retains its electrophysiological characteristics when transfected in the Kvβ-negative HEK 293 cell line but its sensitivity to modulation by PKA and PKC is significantly reduced. Received: 18 June 1997/Revised: 7 October 1997  相似文献   

20.
Single inward rectifier K+ channels were studied in Xenopus laevis embryonic myocytes. We have characterized in detail the channel which is most frequently observed (Kir) although we routinely observe three other smaller current levels with the properties of inward rectifier K+ channels (Kir(0.3), Kir(0.5) and Kir(0.7)). For Kir, slope conductances of inward currents were 10.3, 20.3, and 27.9 pS, in 60, 120 and 200 mM [K+] o respectively. Extracellular Ba2+ blocked the normally high channel activity in a concentration-dependent manner (K A = 7.8 μm, −90 mV). In whole-cell recordings of inward rectifier K+ current, marked voltage dependence of Ba2+ block over the physiological range of potentials was observed. We also examined current rectification. Following step depolarizations to voltages positive to E K , outward currents through Kir channels were not observed even when the cytoplasmic face of excised patches were exposed to Mg2+-free solution at pH 9.1. This was probably also true for Kir(0.3), Kir(0.5) and Kir(0.7) channels. We then examined the possibility of modulation of Kir channel activity and found neither ATP nor GTP-γS had any effect on Kir channel activity when added to the solution perfusing the cytoplasmic face of a patch. Kinetic analysis revealed Kir channels with a single open state (mean dwell time 72 msec) and two closed states (time constants 1.4, 79 msec). These results suggest that the native Kir channels of Xenopus myocytes have similar properties to the cloned strong inward rectifier K+ channels, in terms of conductance, kinetics and barium block but does show some differences in the effects of modulators of channel activity. Furthermore, skeletal muscle may contain either different inward rectifier channels or a single-channel type which can exist in stable subconductance states. Received: 16 September 1996/Revised: 14 March 1997  相似文献   

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