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1.
The kinetics of voltage-clamped sodium currents were studied in frog skeletal muscle. Sodium currents in frog skeletal muscle activate and inactivate following an initial delay in response to a depolarizing voltage pulse. Inactivation occurs via a double exponential decay exhibiting fast and slow components for virtually all depolarizing pulses used.The deactivation of Na currents exhibits two exponential components, one decaying rapidly, while the other decays slowly in time; the relative amplitude of the two components changes with the duration of the activating pulse. The two deactivation phases remain after pharmacological elimination of inactivation.In individual fibers, the percent amplitude of the slow inactivation component correlates with the percent amplitude of the slow deactivation component.Tetrodotoxin differentially blocks the slow deactivation component.These observations are interpreted as the activation, inactivation and deactivation of two subtypes (fast and slow) of Na channels.Studies of the slow deactivation phase magnitude vs the duration of the eliciting pulse provide a way to determine the kinetics of the slow Na channel in muscle.Ammonium substitution for Na in the Ringer produces a voltage dependent activation and inactivation of current which exhibits only one decay phase, and eliminates the slow decay phase of current, suggesting that adjustments of the ionic environment of the channels can mask the presence of one of the channel subtypes.  相似文献   

2.
The peptide omega-agatoxin-IIIA (omega-Aga-IIIA) blocks ionic current through L-type Ca channels in guinea pig atrial cells without affecting the associated gating currents. omega-Aga-IIIA permits the study of L- type Ca channel ionic and gating currents under nearly identical ionic conditions. Under conditions that isolate L-type Ca channel currents, omega-Aga-IIIA blocks all ionic current during a test pulse and after repolarization. This block reveals intramembrane charge movements of equal magnitude and opposite sign at the beginning of the pulse (Q(on)) and after repolarization (Q(off)). Q(on) and Q(off) are suppressed by 1 microM felodipine, saturate with increasing test potential, and are insensitive to Cd. The decay of the transient current associated with Q(on) is composed of fast and slow exponential components. The slow component has a time constant similar to that for activation of L-type Ca channel ionic current, over a broad voltage range. The current associated with Q(off) decays monoexponentially and more slowly than ionic current. Similar charge movements are found in guinea pig tracheal myocytes, which lack Na channels and T-type Ca channels. The kinetic and pharmacological properties of Q(on) and Q(off) indicate that they reflect gating currents associated with L-type Ca channels. omega-Aga-IIIA has no effect on gating currents when ionic current is eliminated by stepping to the reversal potential for Ca or by Cd block. Gating currents constitute a significant component of total current when physiological concentrations of Ca are present and they obscure the activation and deactivation of L-type Ca channels. By using omega- Aga-IIIA, we resolve the entire time course of L-type Ca channel ionic and gating currents. We also show that L- and T-type Ca channel ionic currents can be accurately quantified by tail current analysis once gating currents are taken into account.  相似文献   

3.
Ionic currents of enzymatically dispersed type I and type II cells of the carotid body have been studied using the whole cell variant of the patch-clamp technique. Type II cells only have a tiny, slowly activating outward potassium current. By contrast, in every type I chemoreceptor cell studied we found (a) sodium, (b) calcium, and (c) potassium currents. (a) The sodium current has a fast activation time course and an activation threshold at approximately -40 mV. At all voltages inactivation follows a single exponential time course. The time constant of inactivation is 0.67 ms at 0 mV. Half steady state inactivation occurs at a membrane potential of approximately -50 mV. (b) The calcium current is almost totally abolished when most of the external calcium is replaced by magnesium. The activation threshold of this current is at approximately -40 mV and at 0 mV it reaches a peak amplitude in 6-8 ms. The calcium current inactivates very slowly and only decreases to 27% of the maximal value at the end of 300-ms pulses to 40 mV. The calcium current was about two times larger when barium ions were used as charge carriers instead of calcium ions. Barium ions also shifted 15-20 mV toward negative voltages the conductance vs. voltage curve. Deactivation kinetics of the calcium current follows a biphasic time course well fitted by the sum of two exponentials. At -80 mV the slow component has a time constant of 1.3 +/- 0.4 ms whereas the fast component, with an amplitude about 20 times larger than the slow component, has a time constant of 0.16 +/- 0.03 ms. These results suggest that type I cells have predominantly fast deactivating calcium channels. The slow component of the tails may represent the activity of a small population of slowly deactivating calcium channels, although other possibilities are considered. (c) Potassium current seems to be mainly due to the activity of voltage-dependent potassium channels, but a small percentage of calcium-activated channels may also exist. This current activates slowly, reaches a peak amplitude in 5-10 ms, and thereafter slowly inactivates. Inactivation is almost complete in 250-300 ms. The potassium current is reversibly blocked by tetraethylammonium. Under current-clamp conditions type I cells can spontaneously fire large action potentials. These results indicate that type I cells are excitable and have a variety of ionic conductances. We suggest a possible participation of these conductances in chemoreception.  相似文献   

4.
Multimodal action of single Na+ channels in myocardial mouse cells.   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Unitary Na+ currents of myocardial mouse cells were studied at room temperature in 10 cell-attached patches, each containing one and only one channel. Small-pore patch pipettes (resistance 10-97 M omega when filled with 200% Tyrode's solution) with exceptionally thick walls were used. Observed were both rapidly inactivating (6 patches) and slowly inactivating (3 patches) Na+ currents. In one patch, a slow transition from rather fast to slow inactivation was detected over a time of 0.5 h. A short and a long component of the open-channel life time were recorded at the beginning, but only a short one at the end of the experiment. Concomitantly, the first latency was slowed. Amplitude histograms showed that the electrochemical driving force across the pore of the channel did not change during this time. In three patches, a fast and repetitive switching between different modes of Na+ channel action could be clearly identified by plotting the long-time course of the averaged current per trace. The ensemble-averaged current formed in each mode was different in kinetics and amplitude. Each mode had a characteristic mean open-channel life time and distribution of first latency, but the predominant single-channel current amplitude was unaffected by mode switches. It is concluded that two types of changes in kinetics may happen in a single Na+ channel: fast and reversible switches between different modes, and a slow loss of inactivation.  相似文献   

5.
Na tail currents in the myelinated axon of Xenopus laevis were measured at -70 mV after steps to -10 mV. The tail currents were biexponential, comprising a fast and a slow component. The time constant of the slow tail component, analyzed in the time window 0.35-0.50 ms, was independent of step duration, and had a value of 0.23 ms. The amplitude, extrapolated back to time 0, varied, however, with step duration. It reached a peak after 0.7 ms and inactivated relatively slowly (at 2.1 ms the absolute value was reduced by approximately 30%). The amplitude of the fast component, estimated by subtracting the amplitude of the slow component from the calculated total tail current amplitude, reached a peak (three times larger than that of the slow component) after 0.5 ms and inactivated relatively fast (at 2.1 ms it was reduced by approximately 65%). The results were explained by a novel Na channel model, comprising two open states bifurcating from a common closed state and with separate inactivating pathways. A voltage-regulated use of the two pathways explains a number of findings reported in the literature.  相似文献   

6.
This study investigates the inactivation properties of Na channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes from two rat IIA Na channel cDNA clones differing by a single amino acid residue. Although the two cDNAs encode Na channels with substantially different activation properties (Auld, V. J., A. L. Goldin, D. S. Krafte, J. Marshall, J. M. Dunn, W. A. Catterall, H. A. Lester, N. Davidson, and R. J. Dunn. 1988. Neuron. 1:449-461), their inactivation properties resemble each other strongly but differ markedly from channels induced by poly(A+) rat brain RNA. Rat IIA currents inactivate more slowly, recover from inactivation more slowly, and display a steady-state voltage dependence that is shifted to more positive potentials. The macroscopic inactivation process for poly(A+) Na channels is defined by a single exponential time course; that for rat IIA channels displays two exponential components. At the single-channel level these differences in inactivation occur because rat IIA channels reopen several times during a depolarizing pulse; poly(A+) channels do not. Repetitive stimulation (greater than 1 Hz) produces a marked decrement in the rat IIA peak current and changes the waveform of the currents. When low molecular weight RNA is coinjected with rat IIA RNA, these inactivation properties are restored to those that characterize poly(A+) channels. Slow inactivation is similar for rat IIA and poly(A+) channels, however. The data suggest that activation and inactivation involve at least partially distinct regions of the channel protein.  相似文献   

7.
Na+ currents were measured during 0.4-s depolarizing pulses using the cell-attached variation of the patch-clamp technique. Patches on Cs-dialyzed segments of sartorius muscle of Rana pipiens contained an estimated 25-500 Na+ channels. Three distinct types of current were observed after the pulse onset: a large initial surge of inward current that decayed within 10 ms (early currents), a steady "drizzle" of isolated, brief, inward unitary currents (background currents), and occasional "cloudbursts" of tens to hundreds of sequential unitary inward currents (bursts). Average late currents (background plus bursts) were 0.12% of peak early current amplitude at -20 mV. 85% of the late currents were carried by bursting channels. The unit current amplitude was the same for all three types of current, with a conductance of 10.5 pS and a reversal potential of +74 mV. The magnitudes of the three current components were correlated from patch to patch, and all were eliminated by slow inactivation. We conclude that all three components were due to Na+ channel activity. The mean open time of the background currents was approximately 0.25 ms, and the channels averaged 1.2 openings for each event. Neither the open time nor the number of openings of background currents was strongly sensitive to membrane potential. We estimated that background openings occurred at a rate of 0.25 Hz for each channel. Bursts occurred once each 2,000 pulses for each channel (assuming identical channels). The open time during bursts increased with depolarization to 1-2 ms at -20 mV, whereas the closed time decreased to less than 20 ms. The fractional open time during bursts was fitted with m infinity 3 using standard Na+ channel models. We conclude that background currents are caused by a return of normal Na+ channels from inactivation, while bursts are instances where the channel's inactivation gate spontaneously loses its function for prolonged periods.  相似文献   

8.
Calcium currents from neonatal rat ventricular heart muscle cells grown in primary culture were examined using the "whole-cell" voltage clamp technique. An inward current characterized by large amplitude and slow inactivation decay was induced when the extracellular Ca2+ concentration was reduced by EGTA. This current was suppressed by extracellular Na+ removal, or by calcium antagonists, and increased by epinephrine and BAY K 8644. These findings suggest that this current is carried by sodium ions through Ca channels. Both Ca and Na currents through calcium channels were irreversibly blocked by omega-conotoxin. Complete blockade developed 10-15 minutes after the toxin introduction in the extracellular solution. Blockade of Na currents through calcium channels was characterized by a transient increase of current amplitude without any changes in its kinetics and voltage-dependent properties. Structural differences between calcium channels in rat and guinea-pig and frog cardiomyocytes were suggested.  相似文献   

9.
Young (3-days-old) embryonic chick hearts have slowly-rising spontaneous action potentials, dependent on tetrodotoxin-insensitive slow Na+ channels. When the hearts were placed into organ culture for 5-11 days, action potential duration was markedly increased by 260-370%, and a notch appeared between the initial spike phase and the plateau phase in some hearts. The spike amplitude was mainly dependent on [Na]0, whereas the plateau amplitude was dependent on [Ca]0. Thus, the young embryonic hearts develop slow Ca2+-Na+ channels (while retaining the slow Na+ channels) during organ culture, and the spike phase and the plateau phase of the slow action potentials are mainly dependent on currents through slow Na+ channels and through slow Ca2+-Na+ channels, respectively. The effects of Mn2+ (a specific blocker of slow Ca2+-Na+ channels) and verapamil (a blocker of slow Na+ channels as well as of slow Ca2+-Na+ channels) on the spike phase and the plateau phase were examined. Mn2+ (0.5 mM) and verapamil (5 microM) depressed the plateau duration and overshoot. Verapamil did not decrease the maximum rate of rise (Vmax), but Mn++ produced a small, but significant, decrease. High concentrations (10/30 microM) of verapamil depressed the action potential amplitude and Vmax, and abolished the spontaneous action potentials. These results indicate that slow Ca2+-Na+ channels appear de novo during organ culture of young embryonic hearts.  相似文献   

10.
Voltage-dependent membrane currents of cells dissociated from tongues of larval tiger salamanders (Ambystoma tigrinum) were studied using whole-cell and single-channel patch-clamp techniques. Nongustatory epithelial cells displayed only passive membrane properties. Cells dissociated from taste buds, presumed to be gustatory receptor cells, generated both inward and outward currents in response to depolarizing voltage steps from a holding potential of -60 or -80 mV. Almost all taste cells displayed a transient inward current that activated at -30 mV, reached a peak between 0 and +10 mV and rapidly inactivated. This inward current was blocked by tetrodotoxin (TTX) or by substitution of choline for Na+ in the bath solution, indicating that it was a Na+ current. Approximately 60% of the taste cells also displayed a sustained inward current which activated slowly at about -30 mV and reached a peak at 0 to +10 mV. The amplitude of the slow inward current was larger when Ca2+ was replaced by Ba2+ and it was blocked by bath applied CO2+, indicating it was a Ca2+ current. Delayed outward K+ currents were observed in all taste cells although in about 10% of the cells, they were small and activated only at voltages more depolarized than +10 mV. Normally, K+ currents activated at -40 mV and usually showed some inactivation during a 25-ms voltage step. The inactivating component of outward current was not observed at holding potentials more depolarized -40 mV. The outward currents were blocked by tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA) and BaCl2 in the bath or by substitution of Cs+ for K+ in the pipette solution. Both transient and noninactivating components of outward current were partially suppressed by CO2+, suggesting the presence of a Ca2(+)-activated K+ current component. Single-channel currents were recorded in cell-attached and outside-out patches of taste cell membranes. Two types of K+ channels were partially characterized, one having a mean unitary conductance of 21 pS, and the other, a conductance of 148 pS. These experiments demonstrate that tiger salamander taste cells have a variety of voltage- and ion-dependent currents including Na+ currents, Ca2+ currents and three types of K+ currents. One or more of these conductances may be modulated either directly by taste stimuli or indirectly by stimulus-regulated second messenger systems to give rise to stimulus-activated receptor potentials. Others may play a role in modulation of neurotransmitter release at synapses with taste nerve fibers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Patch-clamp techniques were used to investigate slowly activating, Ca(2+)-insensitive K+ channels of isolated rat olfactory receptor neurons. These channels had a unitary conductance of 135 pS and were only found in a small proportion (less than 5%) of membrane patches. Upon depolarization to voltages more positive than -50 mV, the channels activated gradually over a period of at least 10 s. When hyperpolarized to negative voltages, channel activity deactivated in a slow but voltage-dependent manner. These channels may underlie a slowly activating K+ current that is observed in approximately 30% of whole-cell recordings. Similar single channels have been reported in smooth muscle cells, but this is the first demonstration of these channels in any type of neuron. The channels may contribute to the spike frequency adaptation and post-stimulus hyperpolarization that are observed during the excitatory response to odorants. They may also contribute to cell repolarization following large odorant-stimulated receptor currents.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of benzocaine (0.5-1 mM) on normal Na currents, and on Na current and gating charge movement (Q) of batrachotoxin (BTX)-modified Na channels were analyzed in voltage-clamped frog node of Ranvier. Without BTX treatment the decay of Na current during pulses to between -40 and 0 mV could be decomposed into two exponential components both in the absence and in the presence of benzocaine. Benzocaine did not significantly alter the inactivation time constant of either component, but reduced both their amplitudes. The amplitude of the slow inactivating component was more decreased by benzocaine than the amplitude of the fast one, leading to an apparently faster decline of the overall Na current. After removal of Na inactivation and charge movement immobilization by BTX, benzocaine decreased the amplitude of INa with no change in time course. INa, QON, and QOFF were all reduced by the same factor. The results suggest that the rate of reaction of benzocaine with its receptor is slow compared to the rates of channel activation and inactivation. The differential effects of benzocaine on the two components of Na current inactivation in normal channels can be explained assuming two types of channel with different rates of inactivation and different affinities for the drug.  相似文献   

13.
Tetrodotoxin (TTX)-sensitive Na currents were examined in single dissociated ventricular myocytes from neonatal rats. Single channel and whole cell currents were measured using the patch-clamp method. The channel density was calculated as 2/micron 2, which agreed with our usual finding of four channels per membrane patch. At 20 degrees C, the single channel conductance was 20 pS. The open time distributions were fit by a single-exponential function with a mean open time of approximately 1.0 ms at membrane potentials from -60 to -40 mV. Averaged single channel and whole cell currents were similar when scaled and showed both fast and slow rates of inactivation. The inactivation and activation gating shifted quickly to hyperpolarized potentials for channels in cell-attached as well as excised patches, whereas a much slower shift occurred in whole cells. Slowly inactivating currents were present in both whole cell and single channel current measurements at potentials as positive as -40 mV. In whole cell measurements, the potential range could be extended, and slow inactivation was present at potentials as positive as -10 mV. The curves relating steady state activation and inactivation to membrane potential had very little overlap, and slow inactivation occurred at potentials that were positive to the overlap. Slow inactivation is in this way distinguishable from the overlap or window current, and the slowly inactivating current may contribute to the plateau of the rat cardiac action potential. On rare occasions, a second set of Na channels having a smaller unit conductance and briefer duration was observed. However, a separate set of threshold channels, as described by Gilly and Armstrong (1984. Nature [Lond.]. 309:448), was not found. For the commonly observed Na channels, the number of openings in some samples far exceeded the number of channels per patch and the latencies to first opening or waiting times were not sufficiently dispersed to account for the slowly inactivating currents: the slow inactivation was produced by channel reopening. A general model was developed to predict the number of openings in each sample. Models in which the number of openings per sample was due to a dispersion of waiting times combined with a rapid transition from an open to an absorbing inactivated state were unsatisfactory and a model that was more consistent with the results was identified.  相似文献   

14.
The rate of sodium current decay at –140 mV was studied as a function of the duration and amplitude of the activating voltage pulse. These sodium current decays or tails of current showed a biexponential decline in amplitude which depended upon the duration of the activating pulse. At 12°C, the two exponential components of the Na tail currents exhibited time constants of 72 and 534 s. As the duration of an activating pulse was lengthened, the relative amplitude of the slow component of the decay increased compared to the fast component, without any changes in the fast and slow time constants. This slowing of the decay of current as a function of the duration of the activating pulse is found only in fibers with inactivation intact.A number of Markov models were tested for their ability to predict the biexponential decays found in muscle fibers with inactivation intact and removed. A homogeneous population of channels having only a single open state fails to predict the behavior. A homogeneous population of channels having two open states predicts the behavior. The behavior can also be predicted by two different types of single open-state sodium channels, with one ensemble of channels carrying a minority of the current and exhibiting a much slower closing rate. If a homogeneous population of channels is present, the simulations show that the observed changes in decay rates are driven by inactivation.  相似文献   

15.
Membrane properties of isolated mudpuppy taste cells   总被引:13,自引:3,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
The voltage-dependent currents of isolated Necturus lingual cells were studied using the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. Nongustatory surface epithelial cells had only passive membrane properties. Small, spherical cells resembling basal cells responded to depolarizing voltage steps with predominantly outward K+ currents. Taste receptor cells generated both outward and inward currents in response to depolarizing voltage steps. Outward K+ currents activated at approximately 0 mV and increased almost linearly with increasing depolarization. The K+ current did not inactivate and was partially Ca++ dependent. One inward current activated at -40 mV, reached a peak at -20 mV, and rapidly inactivated. This transient inward current was blocked by tetrodotoxin (TTX), which indicates that it is an Na+ current. The other inward current activated at 0 mV, peaked at 30 mV, and slowly inactivated. This more sustained inward current had the kinetic and pharmacological properties of a slow Ca++ current. In addition, most taste cells had inwardly rectifying K+ currents. Sour taste stimuli (weak acids) decreased outward K+ currents and slightly reduced inward currents; bitter taste stimuli (quinine) reduced inward currents to a greater extent than outward currents. It is concluded that sour and bitter taste stimuli produce depolarizing receptor potentials, at least in part, by reducing the voltage-dependent K+ conductance.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of external application of micromolar concentrations of toxin 1 of the scorpion, Androctonus australis Hector, on the sodium conductance of squid giant axons have been studied quantitatively using the voltage clamp technique. Toxin concentrations which induce long plateau action potentials under current clamp conditions were found to simultaneously decrease the peak conductance and increase the delayed sodium conductance. Return to holding potential level after step depolarizations was accompanied by large exponential tails of current. The toxin-induced maintained sodium conductance increased with membrane depolarization independently of the peak conductance. Depolarizing conditioning prepulses to - 30 mV were found to almost totally inactivate the peak sodium current but to leave the delayed conductance unaffected. This property was taken as an indication that the total current is made of the added contributions of two distinct populations on sodium channels : fast activating and inactivating channels and slow activating channels. These two channel populations were separated from each other and analysed. It was found that the fast channels were almost identical to normal channels whereas the slow channels had a much slower (nearly exponential) kinetics and activated for more positive values of membrane potential. These observations strongly support the second hypothesis of Gillespie and Meves (1980) that the peak conductance and maintained conductance reflect the existence of two separate populations of channels. They further indicate that slow channels probably originate from the modification by the toxin of normal voltage-sensitive channels.  相似文献   

17.
Macroscopic Na currents were recorded from N18 neuroblastoma cells by the whole-cell voltage-clamp technique. Inactivation of the Na currents was removed by intracellular application of proteolytic enzymes, trypsin, alpha-chymotrypsin, papain, or ficin, or bath application of N-bromoacetamide. Unlike what has been reported in squid giant axons and frog skeletal muscle fibers, these treatments often increased Na currents at all test pulse potentials. In addition, removal of inactivation gating shifted the midpoint of the peak Na conductance-voltage curve in the negative direction by 26 mV on average and greatly prolonged the rising phase of Na currents for small depolarizations. Polypeptide toxins from Leiurus quinquestriatus scorpion and Goniopora coral, which slow inactivation in adult nerve and muscle cells, also increase the peak Na conductance and shift the peak conductance curve in the negative direction by 7-10 mV in neuroblastoma cells. Control experiments argue against ascribing the shifts to series resistance artifacts or to spontaneous changes of the voltage dependence of Na channel kinetics. The negative shift of the peak conductance curve, the increase of peak Na currents, and the prolongation of the rise at small depolarization after removal of inactivation are consistent with gating kinetic models for neuroblastoma cell Na channels, where inactivation follows nearly irreversible activation with a relatively high, voltage-independent rate constant and Na channels open only once in a depolarization. As the same kind of experiment does not give apparent shifting of activation and prolongation of the rising phase of Na currents in adult axon and muscle membranes, the Na channels of these other membranes probably open more than once in a depolarization.  相似文献   

18.
增效混剂对神经细胞钠通道的抑制作用   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:2  
应用膜片钳技术,以MN-9D神经细胞为材料研究了溴氰菊酯及辛硫磷混剂的增效机理。膜片钳实验表明10-5mol/L辛硫磷对Na+通道电流抑制作用很小,并随作用时间延长而逐步恢复。加药1 min Na+电流抑制率为6.99%,10 min为3.65%。10-6 mol/L溴氰菊酯1 min抑制率为20.28%,10 min为21.43%。对蜚蠊中枢神经系统传导的动作电位抑制中时为53 min;10-6mol/L溴氰菊酯与10-5 mol/L辛硫磷混剂1 min抑制率为34.15%,10 min为36.69%,动作电位抑制中时为40 min,因此混剂可增强对Na+通道电流的抑制作用。通过Na+电流数据、尾电流衰减时间常数统计分析表明溴氰菊酯的修饰作用主要发生在关闭和静止状态的Na+通道,减缓通道的打开,延长通道关闭或失活状态。  相似文献   

19.
The electrical properties of olfactory receptor neurons, enzymatically dissociated from the channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus), were studied using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique. Six voltage-dependent ionic currents were isolated. Transient inward currents (0.1-1.7 nA) were observed in response to depolarizing voltage steps from a holding potential of -80 mV in all neurons examined. They activated between -70 and -50 mV and were blocked by addition of 1 microM tetrodotoxin (TTX) to the bath or by replacing Na+ in the bath with N-methyl-D-glucamine and were classified as Na+ currents. Sustained inward currents, observed in most neurons examined when Na+ inward currents were blocked with TTX and outward currents were blocked by replacing K+ in the pipette solution with Cs+ and by addition of 10 mM Ba2+ to the bath, activated between -40 and -30 mV, reached a peak at 0 mV, and were blocked by 5 microM nimodipine. These currents were classified as L-type Ca2+ currents. Large, slowly activating outward currents that were blocked by simultaneous replacement of K+ in the pipette with Cs+ and addition of Ba2+ to the bath were observed in all olfactory neurons examined. The outward K+ currents activated over approximately the same range as the Na+ currents (-60 to -50 mV), but the Na+ currents were larger at the normal resting potential of the neurons (-45 +/- 11 mV, mean +/- SD, n = 52). Four different types of K+ currents could be differentiated: a Ca(2+)-activated K+ current, a transient K+ current, a delayed rectifier K+ current, and an inward rectifier K+ current. Spontaneous action potentials of varying amplitude were sometimes observed in the cell-attached recording configuration. Action potentials were not observed in whole-cell recordings with normal internal solution (K+ = 100 mM) in the pipette, but frequently appeared when K+ was reduced to 85 mM. These observations suggest that the membrane potential and action potential amplitude of catfish olfactory neurons are significantly affected by the activity of single channels due to the high input resistance (6.6 +/- 5.2 G omega, n = 20) and low membrane capacitance (2.1 +/- 1.1 pF, n = 46) of the cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The flow of Ca ions through single Ca channels has been examined. The gigaseal method was used on identifiable snail neurons that were voltage clamped using a two-microelectrode voltage clamp method. Average Ca patch currents and whole cell currents have similar time courses. They are affected similarly by changes in temperature. The differences in amplitude and inactivation between Ba and Ca whole cell currents were present in the patch records. The stationary noise spectra recorded from ensembles of multichannel patches have two components with fast and slow time constants equivalent to two components in the whole cell tail current relaxations. Elementary current amplitudes measured from the variance-mean relationship and from noise spectra gave values comparable to measurements from single channels. The single channel I-V relationship was curvilinear and the maximum slope conductance in 40 mM Cao was 7 pS. The amplitude of unitary currents was unchanged at long times when inactivation had occurred; hence depletion is not involved in this process. Channel density was approximately 3 microns-2 and was the same for Ba and Ca currents. The whole cell asymmetry currents gave very large values for the gating charge per channel. Changes in temperature from 29 to 9 degrees C had only a slight effect on the two Ca tail current tau's at potentials where turn-on of patch and whole cell currents was markedly slowed and the peak amplitudes were reduced by one-third. Single channel recordings were obtained at these two temperatures, and the mean open time and the fast component of the closed times were scarcely affected. Unit amplitudes were reduced by 30% and the slow closed time component was doubled. Therefore, peak currents and the slow closed time component was doubled. Therefore, peak currents were reduced partly as a result of the reduction in unit amplitude, but mainly as a result of a reduction in opening probability, the latter arising from an increase of the long closed times. It is concluded that the behavior of single Ca channels in membrane patches is the same as it is in whole cells. Cooling from 29 to 9 degrees C acts primarily on transitions among closed states and has little effect on the open to closed transition.  相似文献   

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