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Ca2+ activation and pH dependence of a maxi K+ channel from rabbit distal colon epithelium
Authors:Dan A Klaerke  Hubert Wiener  Thomas Zeuthen  Peter L Jørgensen
Institution:(1) Biomembrane Research Center, The August Krogh Institute, Copenhagen University, 2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark;(2) Department of Pharmacology, University of Vienna, 1090 Vienna, Austria;(3) The Panum Institute, Department of Medical Physiology, Copenhagen University, 2200 Copenhagen N, Denmark
Abstract:To determine if their properties are consistent with a role in regulation of transepithelial transport, Ca2+-activated K+ channels from the basolateral plasma membrane of the surface cells in the distal colon have been characterized by single channel analysis after fusion of vesicles with planar lipid bilayers. A Ca2+-activated K+ channel with a single channel conductance of 275 pS was predominant. The sensitivity to Ca2+ was strongly dependent on the membrane potential and on the pH. At a neutral pH, the K 0.5 for Ca2+ was raised from 20nm at a potential of 0 mV to 300nm at –40 mV. A decrease in pH at the cytoplasmic face of the K+ channel reduced the Ca2+ sensitivity dramatically. A loss of the high sensitivity to Ca2+ was also observed after incubation with MgCl2, possibly a result of dephosphorylation of the channels by endogenous phosphatases. Modification of the channel protein may thus explain the variation in Ca2+ sensitivity between studies on K+ channels from the same tissue. High affinity inhibition (K 0.5=10nm) by charybdotoxin of the Ca2+-activated K+ channel from the extracellular face could be lifted by an outward flux of K+ through the channel. However, at the ion gradients and potentials found in the intact epithelium, charybdotoxin should be a useful tool for examination of the role of maxi K+ channels. The high sensitivity for Ca2+ and the properties of the activator site are in agreement with an important regulatory role for the high conductance K+ channel in the epithelial cells.Dr. E. Moczydlowsky, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, and Dr. Per Stampe, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA, are thanked for introduction to the bilayer technique. Tove Soland is thanked for excellent technical assistance. This work was supported by the Novo Nordisk Foundation, the Carlsberg Foundation, the Danish Medical Research Council, and the Austrian Research Council.
Keywords:Maxi K+ channel  Calcium  pH  Charybdotoxin  Rabbit distal colon
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