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1.
When depolarized from typical resting membrane potentials (V(rest) approximately -90 mV), cardiac sodium (Na) currents are more sensitive to local anesthetics than brain or skeletal muscle Na currents. When expressed in Xenopus oocytes, lidocaine block of hH1 (human cardiac) Na current greatly exceeded that of mu1 (rat skeletal muscle) at membrane potentials near V(rest), whereas hyperpolarization to -140 mV equalized block of the two isoforms. Because the isoform-specific tonic block roughly parallels the drug-free voltage dependence of channel availability, isoform differences in the voltage dependence of fast inactivation could underlie the differences in block. However, after a brief (50 ms) depolarizing pulse, recovery from lidocaine block is similar for the two isoforms despite marked kinetic differences in drug-free recovery, suggesting that differences in fast inactivation cannot entirely explain the isoform difference in lidocaine action. Given the strong coupling between fast inactivation and other gating processes linked to depolarization (activation, slow inactivation), we considered the possibility that isoform differences in lidocaine block are explained by differences in these other gating processes. In whole-cell recordings from HEK-293 cells, the voltage dependence of hH1 current activation was approximately 20 mV more negative than that of mu1. Because activation and closed-state inactivation are positively coupled, these differences in activation were sufficient to shift hH1 availability to more negative membrane potentials. A mutant channel with enhanced closed-state inactivation gating (mu1-R1441C) exhibited increased lidocaine sensitivity, emphasizing the importance of closed-state inactivation in lidocaine action. Moreover, when the depolarization was prolonged to 1 s, recovery from a "slow" inactivated state with intermediate kinetics (I(M)) was fourfold longer in hH1 than in mu1, and recovery from lidocaine block in hH1 was similarly delayed relative to mu1. We propose that gating processes coupled to fast inactivation (activation and slow inactivation) are the key determinants of isoform-specific local anesthetic action.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of low pH on the kinetics of Na channel ionic and gating currents was studied in frog skeletal muscle fibers. Lowering external pH from 7.4 to 5.0 slows the time course of Na current consistent with about a +25-mV shift in the voltage dependence of activation and inactivation time constants. Similar shifts in voltage dependence adequately describe the effects of low pH on the tail current time constant (+23.3 mV) and the gating charge vs. voltage relationship (+22.1 mV). A significantly smaller shift of +13.3 mV described the effect of pH 5.0 solution on the voltage dependence of steady state inactivation. Changes in the time course of gating current at low pH were complex and could not be described as a shift in voltage dependence. tau g, the time constant that describes the time course of the major component of gating charge movement, was slowed in pH 5.0 solution by a factor of approximately 3.5 for potentials from -60 to +45 mV. We conclude that the effects of low pH on Na channel gating cannot be attributed simply to a change in surface potential. Therefore, although it may be appropriate to describe the effect of low pH on some Na channel kinetic properties as a "shift" in voltage dependence, it is not appropriate to interpret such shifts as a measure of changes in surface potential. The maximum gating charge elicited from a holding potential of -150 mV was little affected by low pH.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
In the voltage-gated potassium channel Kv1.5, extracellular acidification decreases the peak macroscopic conductance and accelerates slow inactivation. To better understand the mechanistic basis for these two effects, we recorded unitary currents of Kv1.5 expressed in a mouse cell line (ltk-) using the voltage clamp technique both in cell-attached and excised outside-out patches. Single channel current amplitude at 100 mV (1.7 +/- 0.2 pA at pH 7.4, 1.7 +/- 0.2 pA at pH 6.4) and the single channel conductance between 0 and 100 mV (11.8 +/- 0.6 pS at pH 7.4 and 11.3 +/- 0.8 pS at pH 6.4) did not change significantly with pH. External acidification significantly decreased the number of active sweeps, and this reduction in channel availability accounted for most of the reduction of the peak macroscopic current. The results of runs analyses suggested the null sweeps occur in clusters, and the rate constants for the transition between clusters of null and active sweeps at pH 6.4 were slow (0.12 and 0.18 s(-1), to and from the active clusters, respectively). We propose that low pH facilitates a shift from an available mode (mode A) into an unavailable mode of gating (mode U). In addition to promoting mode U gating, external acidification accelerates depolarization-induced inactivation, which is manifest at the single channel level as a reduction of the mean burst length and an apparent increase of the interburst interval. These effects of external acidification, which are thought to reflect the protonation of a histidine residue in the turret (H-463), point to an important role for the turret in the regulation of channel availability and inactivation.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of external protons on single sodium channel currents recorded from cell-attached patches on guinea pig ventricular myocytes were investigated. Extracellular protons reduce single channel current amplitude in a dose-dependent manner, consistent with a simple rapid channel block model where protons bind to a site within the channel with an apparent pKH of 5.10. The reduction in single channel current amplitude by protons is voltage independent between -70 and -20 mV. Increasing external proton concentration also shifts channel gating parameters to more positive voltages, consistent with previous macroscopic results. Similar voltage shifts are seen in the steady-state inactivation (h infinity) curve, the time constant for macroscopic current inactivation (tau h), and the first latency function describing channel activation. As pHo decreases from 7.4 to 5.5 the midpoint of the h infinity curve shifts from -107.6 +/- 2.6 mV (mean +/- SD, n = 16) to -94.3 +/- 1.9 mV (n = 3, P less than 0.001). These effects on channel gating are consistent with a reduction in negative surface potential due to titration of negative external surface charge. The Gouy-Chapman-Stern surface charge model incorporating specific proton binding provides an excellent fit to the dose-response curve for the shift in the midpoint of the h infinity curve with protons, yielding an estimate for total negative surface charge density of -1e/490 A2 and a pKH for proton binding of 5.16. By reducing external surface Na+ concentration, titration of negative surface charge can also quantitatively account for the reduction in single Na+ channel current amplitude, although we cannot rule out a potential role for channel block. Thus, titration by protons of a single class of negatively charged sites may account for effects on both single channel current amplitude and gating.  相似文献   

5.
Human ether-à-go-go-related gene (HERG) encoded K+ channels were expressed in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO-K1) cells and studied by whole-cell voltage clamp in the presence of varied extracellular Ca2+ concentrations and physiological external K+. Elevation of external Ca2+ from 1.8 to 10 mM resulted in a reduction of whole-cell K+ current amplitude, slowed activation kinetics, and an increased rate of deactivation. The midpoint of the voltage dependence of activation was also shifted +22.3 +/- 2.5 mV to more depolarized potentials. In contrast, the kinetics and voltage dependence of channel inactivation were hardly affected by increased extracellular Ca2+. Neither Ca2+ screening of diffuse membrane surface charges nor open channel block could explain these changes. However, selective changes in the voltage-dependent activation, but not inactivation gating, account for the effects of Ca2+ on Human ether-à-go-go-related gene current amplitude and kinetics. The differential effects of extracellular Ca2+ on the activation and inactivation gating indicate that these processes have distinct voltage-sensing mechanisms. Thus, Ca2+ appears to directly interact with externally accessible channel residues to alter the membrane potential detected by the activation voltage sensor, yet Ca2+ binding to this site is ineffective in modifying the inactivation gating machinery.  相似文献   

6.
Using various voltage clamp protocols, we have examined the activation and deactivation kinetics of IK1 recorded in dissociated myocytes obtained from canine purkinje fibers. Exponential current relaxations following step changes of the membrane potential were characterized at several different K levels (5, 12, 42, and 82 mM) and several voltages (K reversal potential +/- 40 mV). We have interpreted our data according to a K-activated, K-channel model of IK1 gating. Our data suggests that at least two binding sites for extracellular K must be occupied before the channel opens and occupancy of about three more higher affinity sites for K on the open channel will slow the closing of that channel. In our model, the voltage dependency of gating arises from a combination of three voltage dependent steps: (a) isomerization between open and closed states, (b) binding of K, and (c) occupancy of the channel by internal Mg. Lowering internal K to 40 mM causes major changes in the voltage and K dependence of IK1 gating. However, these changes could be accounted for in our model by relatively small (approximately 20 to 30 mV) shifts in the voltage dependence of several of the steps that govern gating. Our data further suggest that there is an interaction between both extracellular and intracellular K levels and the ability of intracellular Mg to block the IK1 channel.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of extracellular saxitoxin (STX) and tetrodotoxin (TTX) on gating current (IgON) were studied in voltage clamped crayfish giant axons. At a holding potential (VH) of -90 mV, integrated gating charge (QON) was found to be 56% suppressed when 200 nM STX was added to the external solution, and 75% suppressed following the addition of 200 nM TTX. These concentrations of toxin are sufficiently high to block greater than 99% of sodium channels. A smaller suppression of IgON was observed when 1 nM STX was used (KD = 1-2 nM STX). The suppression of IgON by external toxin was found to be hold potential dependent, with only minimal suppression observed at the most hyperpolarized hold potentials, -140 to -120 mV. The maximal effect of these toxins on IgON was observed at hold potentials where the QON vs. VH plot was found to be steepest, -100 to -80 mV. The suppression of IgON induced by TTX is partially relieved following the removal of fast inactivation by intracellular treatment with N-bromoacetamide (NBA). The effect of STX and TTX on IgON is equivalent to a hyperpolarizing shift in the steady state inactivation curve, with 200 nM STX and 200 nM TTX inducing shifts of 4.9 +/- 1.7 mV and 10.0 +/- 2.1 mV, respectively. Our results are consistent with a model where the binding of toxin displaces a divalent cation from a negatively charged site near the external opening of the sodium channel, thereby producing a voltage offset sensed by the channel gating apparatus.  相似文献   

8.
External pH (pH(o)) modifies T-type calcium channel gating and permeation properties. The mechanisms of T-type channel modulation by pH remain unclear because native currents are small and are contaminated with L-type calcium currents. Heterologous expression of the human cloned T-type channel, alpha1H, enables us to determine the effect of changing pH on isolated T-type calcium currents. External acidification from pH(o) 8.2 to pH(o) 5.5 shifts the midpoint potential (V(1/2)) for steady-state inactivation by 11 mV, shifts the V(1/2) for maximal activation by 40 mV, and reduces the voltage dependence of channel activation. The alpha1H reversal potential (E(rev)) shifts from +49 mV at pH(o) 8.2 to +36 mV at pH(o) 5.5. The maximal macroscopic conductance (G(max)) of alpha1H increases at pH(o) 5.5 compared to pH(o) 8.2. The E(rev) and G(max) data taken together suggest that external protons decrease calcium/monovalent ion relative permeability. In response to a sustained depolarization alpha1H currents inactivate with a single exponential function. The macroscopic inactivation time constant is a steep function of voltage for potentials < -30 mV at pH(o) 8.2. At pH(o) 5.5 the voltage dependence of tau(inact) shifts more depolarized, and is also a more gradual function of voltage. The macroscopic deactivation time constant (tau(deact)) is a function of voltage at the potentials tested. At pH(o) 5.5 the voltage dependence of tau(deact) is simply transposed by approximately 40 mV, without a concomitant change in the voltage dependence. Similarly, the delay in recovery from inactivation at V(rec) of -80 mV in pH(o) 5.5 is similar to that with a V(rec) of -120 mV at pH(o) 8.2. We conclude that alpha1H is uniquely modified by pH(o) compared to other calcium channels. Protons do not block alpha1H current. Rather, a proton-induced change in activation gating accounts for most of the change in current magnitude with acidification.  相似文献   

9.
The site 3 toxin, Anthopleurin-A (Ap-A), was used to modify inactivation of sodium channels in voltage-clamped single canine cardiac Purkinje cells at approximately 12 degrees C. Although Ap-A toxin markedly prolonged decay of sodium current (INa) in response to step depolarizations, there was only a minor hyperpolarizing shift by 2.5 +/- 1.7 mV (n = 13) of the half-point of the peak conductance- voltage relationship with a slight steepening of the relationship from - 8.2 +/- 0.8 mV to -7.2 +/- 0.8 mV (n = 13). Increases in Gmax were dependent on the choice of cation used as a Na substitute intracellularly and ranged between 26 +/- 15% (Cs, n = 5) to 77 +/- 19% (TMA, n = 8). Associated with Ap-A toxin modification time to peak INa occurred later, but analysis of the time course INa at multiple potentials showed that the largest effects were on inactivation with only a small effect on activation. Consistent with little change in Na channel activation by Ap-A toxin, INa tail current relaxations at very negative potentials, where the dominant process of current relaxation is deactivation, were similar in control and after toxin modification. The time course of the development of inactivation after Ap-A toxin modification was dramatically prolonged at positive potentials where Na channels open. However, it was not prolonged after Ap-A toxin at negative potentials, where channels predominately inactivate directly from closed states. Steady state voltage-dependent availability (h infinity or steady state inactivation), which predominately reflects the voltage dependence of closed-closed transitions equilibrating with closed-inactivated transitions was shifted in the depolarizing direction by only 1.9 +/- 0.8 mV (n = 8) after toxin modification. The slope factor changed from 7.2 +/- 0.8 to 9.9 +/- 0.9 mV (n = 8), consistent with a prolongation of inactivation from the open state of Ap-A toxin modified channels at more depolarized potentials. We conclude that Ap-A selectively modifies Na channel inactivation from the open state with little effect on channel activation or on inactivation from closed state(s).  相似文献   

10.
A novel, small conductance of Cl- channel was characterized by incorporation into planar bilayers from a plasma membrane preparation of lobster walking leg nerves. Under conditions of symmetrical 100 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, single Cl- channels exhibit rectifying current-voltage (I-V) behavior with a conductance of 19.2 +/- 0.8 pS at positive voltages and 15.1 +/- 1.6 pS in the voltage range of -40 to 0 mV. The channel exhibits a negligible permeability for Na+ compared with Cl- and displays the following sequence of anion permeability relative to Cl- as measured under near bi-ionic conditions: I- (2.7) greater than NO3- (1.8) greater than Br- (1.5) greater than Cl- (1.0) greater than CH3CO2- (0.18) greater than HCO3- (0.10) greater than gluconate (0.06) greater than F- (0.05). The unitary conductance saturates with increasing Cl- concentration in a Michaelis-Menten fashion with a Km of 100 mM and gamma max = 33 pS at positive voltage. The I-V curve is similar in 10 mM Tris or 10 mM HEPES buffer, but substitution of 100 mM NaCl with 100 mM tetraethylammonium chloride on the cis side results in increased rectification with a 40% reduction in current at negative voltages. The gating of the channel is weakly voltage dependent with an open-state probability of 0.23 at -75 mV and 0.64 at +75 mV. Channel gating is sensitive to cis pH with an increased opening probability observed for a pH change of 7.4 to 11 and nearly complete inhibition for a pH change of 7.4 to 6.0. The lobster Cl- channel is reversibly blocked by the anion transport inhibitors, SITS (4-acetamido, 4'-isothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid) and NPPB (5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino)benzoic acid). Many of these characteristics are similar to those previously described for small conductance Cl- channels in various vertebrate cells, including epithelia. These functional comparisons suggest that this invertebrate Cl- channel is an evolutionary prototype of a widely distributed class of small conductance anion channels.  相似文献   

11.
We have measured the concentration and voltage dependence of block by acetylcholine (ACh) of fetal- and adult-type mouse muscle nicotinic receptors, expressed in a fibroblast cell line. Data, obtained at a transmembrane potential of -60 mV and with ACh concentrations of 1 mM and above, are broadly consistent with the occlusion of an open channel with a single ACh+ ion (simple open channel block). The rate of recovery from block is approximately 40,000s-1 and has only a weak voltage dependence. This is in contrast to the strong voltage dependence observed for the degree of block. Deviations from the predictions of the simple model are seen in data collected at positive transmembrane potentials and at negative potentials for ACh concentrations < 1 mM. Less concentration dependence is observed than expected. Of a number of models tested, we demonstrate that two models incorporating both a high and a low affinity blocking site can predict our data.  相似文献   

12.
Block of the calcium-independent transient outward K+ current, I(to), by 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) was studied in ferret right ventricular myocytes using the whole cell patch clamp technique. 4-AP reduces I(to) through a closed state blocking mechanism displaying "reverse use- dependent" behavior that was inferred from: (a) development of tonic block at hyperpolarized potentials; (b) inhibition of development of tonic block at depolarized potentials; (c) appearance of "crossover phenomena" in which the peak current is delayed in the presence of 4-AP at depolarized potentials; (d) relief of block at depolarized potentials which is concentration dependent and parallels steady-state inactivation for low 4-AP concentrations (V1/2 approximately -10 mV in 0.1 mM 4-AP) and steady-state activation at higher concentrations (V1/2 = +7 mV in 1 mM 4-AP, +15 mV in 10 mM 4-AP); and (e) reassociation of 4- AP at hyperpolarized potentials. No evidence for interaction of 4-AP with either the open or inactivated state of the I(to) channel was obtained from measurements of kinetics of recovery and deactivation in the presence of 0.5-1.0 mM 4-AP. At hyperpolarized potentials (-30 to - 90 mV) 10 mM 4-AP associates slowly (time constants ranging from approximately 800 to 1,300 ms) with the closed states of the channel (apparent Kd approximately 0.2 mM). From -90 to -20 mV the affinity of the I(to) channel for 4-AP appears to be voltage insensitive; however, at depolarized potentials (+20 to +100 mV) 4-AP dissociates with time constants ranging from approximately 350 to 150 ms. Consequently, the properties of 4-AP binding to the I(to) channel undergo a transition in the range of potentials over which channel activation and inactivation occurs (-30 to +20 mV). We propose a closed state model of I(to) channel gating and 4-AP binding kinetics, in which 4-AP binds to three closed states. In this model 4-AP has a progressively lower affinity as the channel approaches the open state, but has no intrinsic voltage dependence of binding.  相似文献   

13.
Previously, we showed that arachidonic acid (AA) potentiates currents flowing through a cloned human inwardly rectifying K(+) channel, hKir2.3. The mechanism by which this potentiation occurs is not understood. Here, we report that this potentiation is mediated by multiple mechanisms and that one of them, which we studied in more detail, is consistent with AA-induced decrease of inward rectification. AA (10 micro M) potentiation of hKir2.3 whole-cell current increased with depolarization (40% greater at -47 mV than at -127 mV) and decreased with elevated extracellular [K(+)] (158+/-21%, 56+/-8% and 38+/-9% in 5.4, 70 and 135 mM K(+), respectively). Hyperpolarization elicited inward currents consisting of an instantaneous and two time-dependent components with time constants (at -97 mV) of 6.4+/-1.1 ms and 27.8+/-4.1 ms, respectively. AA (10 microM) significantly decreased the slow time constant (14.1+/-0.7 ms). Consistent with the kinetic changes, AA (10 microM) right-shifted the voltage dependence of the chord conductance (mid-point shifted by +9 mV). In inside-out patches where inward rectification was minimal, AA potentiation (38+/-3%) was smaller than in whole-cell recording and was not voltage dependent. These results are consistent with the idea that AA potentiates hKir2.3 in part by decreasing inward rectification of the channel.  相似文献   

14.
The Kv1.5 K(+) channel is functionally altered by coassembly with the Kvbeta1.3 subunit, which induces fast inactivation and a hyperpolarizing shift in the activation curve. Here we examine kinase regulation of Kv1.5/Kvbeta1.3 interaction after coexpression in human embryonic kidney 293 cells. The protein kinase C inhibitor calphostin C (3 microM) removed the fast inactivation (66 +/- 1.9 versus 11 +/- 0.25%, steady state/peak current) and the beta-induced hyperpolarizing voltage shift in the activation midpoint (V(1/2)) (-21.9 +/- 1.4 versus -4.3 +/- 2.0 mV). Calphostin C had no effect on Kv1.5 alone with respect to inactivation kinetics and V(1/2). Okadaic acid, but not the inactive derivative, blunted both calphostin C effects (V(1/2) = -17.6 +/- 2.2 mV, 38 +/- 1.8% inactivation), consistent with dephosphorylation being required for calphostin C action. Calphostin C also removed the fast inactivation (57 +/- 2.6 versus 16 +/- 0.6%) and the shift in V(1/2) (-22.1 +/- 1.4 versus -2.1 +/- 2.0 mV) conferred onto Kv1.5 by the Kvbeta1.2 subunit, which shares only C terminus sequence identity with Kvbeta1. 3. In contrast, modulation of Kv1.5 by the Kvbeta2.1 subunit was unaffected by calphostin C. These data suggest that Kvbeta1.2 and Kvbeta1.3 subunit modification of Kv1.5 inactivation and voltage sensitivity require phosphorylation by protein kinase C or a related kinase.  相似文献   

15.
The influence of extracellular pH (pH(o)) on low-voltage-activated calcium channels of acutely isolated DRG neurons of rats was examined using the whole cell patch-clamp technique. It has been found that in the neurons of middle size with capacitance C=60+/-4.8 pF (mean+/-S.E., n=8) extracellular acidification from pH(o) 7.35 to pH(o) 6.0 significantly and reversibly decreased LVA calcium current densities by 75+/-3.7%, shifted potential for half-maximal activation to more positive voltages by 18.7+/-0.6 mV with significant reduction of its voltage dependence. The half-maximal potential of steady-state inactivation shifted to more positive voltages by 12.1+/-1.7 mV (n=8) and also became less voltage dependent. Dose-response curves for the dependence of maximum values of LVA currents on external pH in neurons of middle size have midpoint pK(a)=6.6+/-0.02 and hill coefficient h=0.94+/-0.04 (n=5). In small cells with capacitance C=26+/-3.6 pF (n=5), acidosis decreased LVA calcium current densities only by 15.3+/-1.3% and shifted potential for half-maximal activation by 5.5+/-1.0 mV with reduction of its voltage dependence. Half-maximal potential of steady-state inactivation shifted to more positive voltages by 10+/-1.6 mV (n=4) and also became less voltage dependent. Dose-response curves for the dependence of maximum values of LVA currents on external pH in neurons of small size have midpoint pK(a)=7.9+/-0.04 and hill coefficient h=0.25+/-0.1 (n=4). These two identified types of LVA currents besides different pH sensitivity demonstrated different kinetic properties. The deactivation of LVA currents with weak pH sensitivity after switching off depolarization to -30 mV had substantially longer decay time than do currents with strong pH sensitivity (tau(d) approximately 5 ms vs. 2 ms respectively). It was found that the prolongation of depolarization steps slows the subsequent deactivation of T-type currents in small DRG neurons. Deactivation traces in these neurons were better described by the sum of two exponentials. Thus, we suppose that T-type channels in small DRG neurons are presented mostly by alpha1I subunit. We suggest that these two types of LVA calcium channels with different sensitivity to external pH can be differently involved in the origin of neuropathic changes.  相似文献   

16.
The characteristics of nickel (Ni) block of L-type Ca current (I(Ca, L)) were studied in whole cell patch-clamped guinea pig cardiac myocytes at 37 degrees C in the absence and presence of 100 microM cAMP in the pipette solution. Ni block of peak I(Ca,L) had a dissociation constant (K(d)) of 0.33 +/- 0.03 mM in the absence of cAMP, whereas in the presence of cAMP, the K(d) was 0.53 +/- 0.05 mM (P = 0.006). Ni blocked Ca entry via Ca channels (measured as I(Ca, L) integral over 50 ms) with similar kinetics (K(d) of 0.35 +/- 0.03 mM in cAMP-free solution and 0.30 +/- 0.02 mM in solution with cAMP, P = not significant). Under both conditions, 5 mM Ni produced a maximal block that was complete for the first pulse after application. Ni block of I(Ca,L) was largely use independent. Ni (0. 5 mM) induced a positive shift (4 to 6 mV) in the activation curve of I(Ca,L). The block of I(Ca,L) by 0.5 mM Ni was independent of prepulse membrane potential (over the range of -120 to -40 mV). Ni (0.5 mM) also induced a significant shift in I(Ca,L) inactivation: by 6 mV negative in cAMP-free solution and by 4 mV positive in cells dialyzed with 100 microM cAMP. These data suggest that, in addition to blocking channel conductance by binding to a site in the channel pore, Ni may bind to a second site that influences the voltage-dependent gating of the L-type Ca channel. They also suggest that Ca channel phosphorylation causes a conformational change that alters some effects of Ni. The results may be relevant to excitation-contraction coupling studies, which have employed internal cAMP dialysis, and where Ni has been used to block I(Ca,L) and Ca entry into cardiac cells.  相似文献   

17.
The present study was conducted to explore the possible contribution of a recently described leak K+ channel, TASK (TWIK-related acid-sensitive K+ channel), to the high resting K+ conductance of adrenal glomerulosa cells. Northern blot analysis showed the strongest TASK message in adrenal glomerulosa (capsular) tissue among the examined tissues including heart and brain. Single-cell PCR demonstrated TASK expression in glomerulosa cells. In patch-clamp experiments performed on isolated glomerulosa cells the inward current at -100 mV in 30 mM [K+] (reflecting mainly potassium conductance) was pH sensitive (17+/-2% reduction when the pH changed from 7.4 to 6.7). In Xenopus oocytes injected with mRNA prepared from adrenal glomerulosa tissue the expressed K+ current at -100 mV was virtually insensitive to tetraethylammonium (3 mM) and 4-aminopyridine (3 mM). Ba2+ (300 microM) and Cs+ (3 mM) induced voltage-dependent block. Lidocaine (1 mM) and extracellular acidification from pH 7.5 to 6.7 inhibited the current (by 28% and 16%, respectively). This inhibitory profile is similar (although it is not identical) to that of TASK expressed by injecting its cRNA. In oocytes injected with adrenal glomerulosa mRNA, TASK antisense oligonucleotide reduced significantly the expression of K+ current at -100 mV, while the sense oligonucleotide failed to have inhibitory effect. Application of angiotensin II (10 nM) both in isolated glomerulosa cells and in oocytes injected with adrenal glomerulosa mRNA inhibited the K+ current at -100 mV. Similarly, in oocytes coexpressing TASK and ATla angiotensin II receptor, angiotensin II inhibited the TASK current. These data together indicate that TASK contributes to the generation of high resting potassium permeability of glomerulosa cells, and this background K+ channel may be a target of hormonal regulation.  相似文献   

18.
In order to test the requirement of Na channel inactivation for the action of local anesthetics, we investigated the inhibitory effects of quaternary and tertiary amine anesthetics on normally inactivating and noninactivating Na currents in squid axons under voltage clamp. Either the enzymatic mixture pronase, or chloramine-T (CT), a noncleaving, oxidizing reagent, was used to abolish Na channel inactivation. We found that both the local anesthetics QX-314 and etidocaine, when perfused internally at 1 mM, elicited a "tonic" (resting) block of Na currents, a "time-dependent" block that increased during single depolarizations, and a "use-dependent" (phasic) block that accumulated as a result of repetitive depolarizations. All three effects occurred in both control and CT-treated axons. As in previous reports, little time-dependent or phasic block by QX-314 appeared in pronase-treated axons, although tonic block remained. Time-dependent block was greatest and fastest at large depolarizations (Em greater than +60 mV) for both the control and CT-treated axons. The recovery kinetics from phasic block were the same in control and CT-modified axons. The voltage dependence of the steady state phasic block in CT-treated axons differed from that in the controls; an 8-10% reduction of the maximum phasic block and a steepening and shift of the voltage dependence in the hyperpolarizing direction resulted from CT treatment. The results show that these anesthetics can bind rapidly to open Na channels in a voltage-dependent manner, with no requirement for fast inactivation. We propose that the rapid phasic blocking reactions in nerve are consequences primarily of channel activation, mediated by binding of anesthetics to open channels, and that the voltage dependence of phasic block arises directly from that of channel activation.  相似文献   

19.
In whole-cell patch clamp recordings from chick dorsal root ganglion neurons, removal of intracellular K+ resulted in the appearance of a large, voltage-dependent inward tail current (Icat). Icat was not Ca2+ dependent and was not blocked by Cd2+, but was blocked by Ba2+. The reversal potential for Icat shifted with the Nernst potential for [Na+]. The channel responsible for Icat had a cation permeability sequence of Na+ >> Li+ >> TMA+ > NMG+ (PX/PNa = 1:0.33:0.1:0) and was impermeable to Cl-. Addition of high intracellular concentrations of K+, Cs+, or Rb+ prevented the occurrence of Icat. Inhibition of Icat by intracellular K+ was voltage dependent, with an IC50 that ranged from 3.0-8.9 mM at membrane potentials between -50 and -110 mV. This voltage- dependent shift in IC50 (e-fold per 52 mV) is consistent with a single cation binding site approximately 50% of the distance into the membrane field. Icat displayed anomolous mole fraction behavior with respect to Na+ and K+; Icat was inhibited by 5 mM extracellular K+ in the presence of 160 mM Na+ and potentiated by equimolar substitution of 80 mM K+ for Na+. The percent inhibition produced by both extracellular and intracellular K+ at 5 mM was identical. Reversal potential measurements revealed that K+ was 65-105 times more permeant than Na+ through the Icat channel. Icat exhibited the same voltage and time dependence of inactivation, the same voltage dependence of activation, and the same macroscopic conductance as the delayed rectifier K+ current in these neurons. We conclude that Icat is a Na+ current that passes through a delayed rectifier K+ channel when intracellular K+ is reduced to below 30 mM. At intracellular K+ concentrations between 1 and 30 mM, PK/PNa remained constant while the conductance at -50 mV varied from 80 to 0% of maximum. These data suggest that the high selectivity of these channels for K+ over Na+ is due to the inability of Na+ to compete with K+ for an intracellular binding site, rather than a barrier that excludes Na+ from entry into the channel or a barrier such as a selectivity filter that prevents Na+ ions from passing through the channel.  相似文献   

20.
Nifedipine can block K(+) currents through Kv1.5 channels in an open-channel manner (32). Replacement of internal and external K(+) with equimolar Rb(+) or Cs(+) reduced the potency of nifedipine block of Kv1.5 from an IC(50) of 7.3 microM (K(+)) to 16.0 microM (Rb(+)) and 26.9 microM (Cs(+)). The voltage dependence of block was unaffected, and a single binding site block model was used to describe block for all three ions. By varying ion species at the intra- and extracellular mouth of the channel and by using a nonconducting W472F-Kv1.5 mutant, we demonstrated that block was conditioned by the ion permeating the pore and, to a lesser extent, by the extracellular ion species alone. In Kv1.5, the outer pore mutations R487V and R487Y reduced nifedipine potency close to that of Kv4.2 and other Kv channels with an equivalent valine. Although changing this residue can affect C-type inactivation of Kv channels, the normalized reduction and time course of currents blocked by nifedipine in 5, 135, and 300 mM extracellular K(+) concentration was the same. Similarly, a mean recovery time constant from nifedipine block of 316 ms was unchanged (332 ms) after 5-s prepulses to allow C-type inactivation. This is consistent with the conclusion that nifedipine block and C-type inactivation in the Kv1.5 channel can coexist but are mediated by distinct mechanisms coordinated by outer pore conformation.  相似文献   

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