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1.
Local anesthetics (LAs) block voltage-gated Na+ channels in excitable cells, whereas batrachotoxin (BTX) keeps these channels open persistently. Previous work delimited the LA receptor within the D4-S6 segment of the Na+ channel alpha-subunit, whereas the putative BTX receptor was found within the D1-S6. We mutated residues at D4-S6 critical for LA binding to determine whether such mutations modulate the BTX phenotype in rat skeletal muscle Na+ channels (mu1/rSkm1). We show that mu1-F1579K and mu1-N1584K channels become completely resistant to 5 microM BTX. In contrast, mu1-Y1586K channels remain BTX-sensitive; their fast and slow inactivation is eliminated by BTX after repetitive depolarization. Furthermore, we demonstrate that cocaine elicits a profound time-dependent block after channel activation, consistent with preferential LA binding to BTX-modified open channels. We propose that channel opening promotes better exposure of receptor sites for binding with BTX and LAs, possibly by widening the bordering area around D1-S6, D4-S6, and the pore region. The BTX receptor is probably located at the interface of D1-S6 and D4-S6 segments adjacent to the LA receptor. These two S6 segments may appose too closely to bind BTX and LAs simultaneously when the channel is in its resting closed state.  相似文献   

2.
Wang SY  Nau C  Wang GK 《Biophysical journal》2000,79(3):1379-1387
Batrachotoxin (BTX) alters the gating of voltage-gated Na(+) channels and causes these channels to open persistently, whereas local anesthetics (LAs) block Na(+) conductance. The BTX and LA receptors have been mapped to several common residues in D1-S6 and D4-S6 segments of the Na(+) channel alpha-subunit. We substituted individual residues with lysine in homologous segment D3-S6 of the rat muscle mu1 Na(+) channel from F1274 to N1281 to determine whether additional residues are involved in BTX and LA binding. Two mutant channels, mu1-S1276K and mu1-L1280K, when expressed in mammalian cells, become completely resistant to 5 microM BTX during repetitive pulses. The activation and/or fast inactivation gating of these mutants is substantially different from that of wild type. These mutants also display approximately 10-20-fold reduction in bupivacaine affinity toward their inactivated state but show only approximately twofold affinity changes toward their resting state. These results demonstrate that residues mu1-S1276 and mu1-L1280 in D3-S6 are critical for both BTX and LA binding interactions. We propose that LAs interact readily with these residues from D3-S6 along with those from D1-S6 and D4-S6 in close proximity when the Na(+) channel is in its inactivated state. Implications of this state-dependent binding model for the S6 alignment are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Articaine is widely used as a local anesthetic (LA) in dentistry, but little is known regarding its blocking actions on Na+ channels. We therefore examined the state-dependent block of articaine first in rat skeletal muscle rNav1.4 Na+ channels expressed in Hek293t cells. Articaine exhibited a weak block of resting rNav1.4 Na+ channels at −140 mV with a 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) of 378 ± 26 μM (n = 5). The affinity was higher for inactivated Na+ channels measured at −70 mV with an IC50 value of 40.6 ± 2.7 μM (n = 5). The open-channel block by articaine was measured using inactivation-deficient rNav1.4 Na+ channels with an IC50 value of 15.8 ± 1.5 μM (n = 5). Receptor mapping demonstrated that articaine interacted strongly with a D4S6 phenylalanine residue, which is known to form a part of the LA receptor. Thus the block of rNav1.4 Na+ channels by articaine is via the conserved LA receptor in a highly state-dependent manner, with a ranking order of open (23.9×) > inactivated (9.3×) > resting (1×) state. Finally, the open-channel block by articaine was likewise measured in inactivation-deficient hNav1.7 and rNav1.8 Na+ channels, with IC50 values of 8.8 ± 0.1 and 22.0 ± 0.5 μM, respectively (n = 5), indicating that the high-affinity open-channel block by articaine is indeed preserved in neuronal Na+ channel isoforms.  相似文献   

4.
Voltage-gated potassium (K+) channels are multi-ion pores. Recent studies suggest that, similar to calcium channels, competition between ionic species for intrapore binding sites may contribute to ionic selectivity in at least some K+ channels. Molecular studies suggest that a putative constricted region of the pore, which is presumably the site of selectivity, may be as short as one ionic diameter in length. Taken together, these results suggest that selectivity may occur at just a single binding site in the pore. We are studying a chimeric K+ channel that is highly selective for K+ over Na+ in physiological solutions, but conducts Na+ in the absence of K+. Na+ and K+ currents both display slow (C-type) inactivation, but had markedly different inactivation and deactivation kinetics; Na+ currents inactivated more rapidly and deactivated more slowly than K+ currents. Currents carried by 160 mM Na+ were inhibited by external K+ with an apparent IC50 <30 μM. K+ also altered both inactivation and deactivation kinetics of Na+ currents at these low concentrations. In the complementary experiment, currents carried by 3 mM K+ were inhibited by external Na+, with an apparent IC50 of ∼100 mM. In contrast to the effects of low [K+] on Na+ current kinetics, Na+ did not affect K+ current kinetics, even at concentrations that inhibited K+ currents by 40–50%. These data suggest that Na+ block of K+ currents did not involve displacement of K+ from the high affinity site involved in gating kinetics. We present a model that describes the permeation pathway as a single high affinity, cation-selective binding site, flanked by low affinity, nonselective sites. This model quantitatively predicts the anomalous mole fraction behavior observed in two different K+ channels, differential K+ and Na+ conductance, and the concentration dependence of K+ block of Na+ currents and Na+ block of K+ currents. Based on our results, we hypothesize that the permeation pathway contains a single high affinity binding site, where selectivity and ionic modulation of gating occur.  相似文献   

5.
According to the classic modulated receptor hypothesis, local anesthetics (LAs) such as benzocaine and lidocaine bind preferentially to fast-inactivated Na(+) channels with higher affinities. However, an alternative view suggests that activation of Na(+) channels plays a crucial role in promoting high-affinity LA binding and that fast inactivation per se is not a prerequisite for LA preferential binding. We investigated the role of activation in LA action in inactivation-deficient rat muscle Na(+) channels (rNav1.4-L435W/L437C/A438W) expressed in stably transfected Hek293 cells. The 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC(50)) for the open-channel block at +30 mV by lidocaine and benzocaine were 20.9 +/- 3.3 microM (n = 5) and 81.7 +/- 10.6 microM (n = 5), respectively; both were comparable to inactivated-channel affinities. In comparison, IC(50) values for resting-channel block at -140 mV were >12-fold higher than those for open-channel block. With 300 microM benzocaine, rapid time-dependent block (tau approximately 0.8 ms) of inactivation-deficient Na(+) currents occurred at +30 mV, but such a rapid time-dependent block was not evident at -30 mV. The peak current at -30 mV, however, was reduced more severely than that at +30 mV. This phenomenon suggested that the LA block of intermediate closed states took place notably when channel activation was slow. Such closed-channel block also readily accounted for the LA-induced hyperpolarizing shift in the conventional steady-state inactivation measurement. Our data together illustrate that the Na(+) channel activation pathway, including most, if not all, transient intermediate closed states and the final open state, promotes high-affinity LA binding.  相似文献   

6.
Antidepressants, such as traditional tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), are the first-line treatment for various pain syndromes. Available evidence indicates that TCAs may target Na+ channels for their analgesic action. In this report, we examined the effects of contemporary antidepressants sertraline and paroxetine on (1) neuronal Na+ channels expressed in GH3 cells and (2) muscle rNav1.4 Na+ channels heterologously expressed in Hek293t cells. Our results showed that both antidepressants blocked Na+ channels in a highly state-dependent manner. The 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC50) for sertraline and paroxetine ranged ∼18–28 μm for resting block and ∼2–8 μm for inactivated block of neuronal and rNav1.4 Na+ channels. Surprisingly, the IC50 values for both drugs were about 0.6–0.7 μm for the open channel block of persistent late Na+ currents generated through inactivation-deficient rNav1.4 mutant Na+ channels. For comparison, the open channel block in neuronal hNav1.7 counterparts yielded IC50 values around 0.3–0.4 μm for both drugs. Receptor mapping using fast inactivation-deficient rNav1.4-F1579A/K mutants with reduced affinities toward local anesthetics (LAs) and TCAs indicated that the F1579 residue is not involved in the binding of sertraline and paroxetine. Thus, sertraline and paroxetine are potent open channel blockers that target persistent late Na+ currents preferentially, but their block is not mediated via the phenylalanine residue at the known LA/TCA receptor site.  相似文献   

7.
Acid sensing ion channels (ASICs) are cation-selective membrane channels activated by H+ binding upon decrease in extracellular pH. It is known that Ca2+ plays an important modulatory role in ASIC gating, competing with the ligand (H+) for its binding site(s). However, the H+ or Ca2+ binding sites involved in gating and the gating mechanism are not fully known. We carried out a computational study to investigate potential cation and H+ binding sites for ASIC1 via all-atom molecular dynamics simulations on five systems. The systems were designed to test the candidacy of some acid sensing residues proposed from experiment and to determine yet unknown ligand binding sites. The ion binding patterns reveal sites of cation (Na+ and Ca2+) localization where they may compete with protons and influence channel gating. The highest incidence of Ca2+ and Na+ binding is observed at a highly acidic pocket on the protein surface. Also, Na+ ions fill in an inner chamber that contains a ring of acidic residues and that is near the channel entrance; this site could possibly be a temporary reservoir involved in ion permeation. Some acidic residues were observed to orient and move significantly close together to bind Ca2+, indicating the structural consequences of Ca2+ release from these sites. Local structural changes in the protein due to cation binding or ligand binding (protonation) are examined at the binding sites and discussed. This study provides structural and dynamic details to test hypotheses for the role of Ca2+ and Na+ ions in the channel gating mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
C-type inactivation in Shaker potassium channels inhibits K+ permeation. The associated structural changes appear to involve the outer region of the pore. Recently, we have shown that C-type inactivation involves a change in the selectivity of the Shaker channel, such that C-type inactivated channels show maintained voltage-sensitive activation and deactivation of Na+ and Li+ currents in K+-free solutions, although they show no measurable ionic currents in physiological solutions. In addition, it appears that the effective block of ion conduction produced by the mutation W434F in the pore region may be associated with permanent C-type inactivation of W434F channels. These conclusions predict that permanently C-type inactivated W434F channels would also show Na+ and Li+ currents (in K+-free solutions) with kinetics similar to those seen in C-type-inactivated Shaker channels. This paper confirms that prediction and demonstrates that activation and deactivation parameters for this mutant can be obtained from macroscopic ionic current measurements. We also show that the prolonged Na+ tail currents typical of C-type inactivated channels involve an equivalent prolongation of the return of gating charge, thus demonstrating that the kinetics of gating charge return in W434F channels can be markedly altered by changes in ionic conditions.  相似文献   

9.
G K Wang  W M Mok    S Y Wang 《Biophysical journal》1994,67(5):1851-1860
Two distinct types of local anesthetics (LAs) have previously been found to block batrachotoxin (BTX)-modified Na+ channels: type 1 LAs such as cocaine and bupivacaine interact preferentially with open channels, whereas type 2 LAs, such as benzocaine and tricaine, with inactivated channels. Herein, we describe our studies of a third type of LA, represented by tetracaine as a dual blocker that binds strongly with closed channels but also binds to a lesser extent with open channels when the membrane is depolarized. Enhanced inactivation of BTX-modified Na+ channels by tetracaine was determined by steady-state inactivation measurement and by the dose-response curve. The 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) was estimated to be 5.2 microM at -70 mV, where steady-state inactivation was maximal, with a Hill coefficient of 0.98 suggesting that one tetracaine molecule binds with one inactivated channel. Tetracaine also interacted efficiently with Na+ channels when the membrane was depolarized; the IC50 was estimated to be 39.5 microM at +50 mV with a Hill coefficient of 0.94. Unexpectedly, charged tetracaine was found to be the primary active form in the blocking of inactivated channels. In addition, external Na+ ions appeared to antagonize the tetracaine block of inactivated channels. Consistent with these results, N-butyl tetracaine quaternary ammonium, a permanently charged tetracaine derivative, remained a strong inactivation enhancer. Another derivative of tetracaine, 2-(di-methylamino) ethyl benzoate, which lacked a 4-butylamino functional group on the phenyl ring, elicited block that was approximately 100-fold weaker than that of tetracaine. We surmise that 1) the binding site for inactivation enhancers is within the Na+ permeation pathway, 2) external Na+ ions antagonize the block of inactivation enhancers by electrostatic repulsion, 3) the 4-butylamino functional group on the phenyl ring is critical for block and for the enhancement of inactivation, and 4) there are probably overlapping binding sites for both inactivation enhancers and open-channel blockers within the Na+ pore.  相似文献   

10.
Deltamethrin, a pyrethroid insecticide, and BTG 502, an alkylamide insecticide, target voltage-gated sodium channels. Deltamethrin binds to a unique receptor site and causes prolonged opening of sodium channels by inhibiting deactivation and inactivation. Previous 22Na+ influx and receptor binding assays using mouse brain synaptoneurosomes showed that BTG 502 antagonized the binding and action of batrachotoxin (BTX), a site 2 sodium channel neurotoxin. However, the effect of BTG 502 has not been examined directly on sodium channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes. In this study, we examined the effect of BTG 502 on wild-type and mutant cockroach sodium channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Toxin competition experiments confirmed that BTG 502 antagonizes the action of BTX and possibly shares a common receptor site with BTX. However, unlike BTX which causes persistent activation of sodium channels, BTG 502 reduces the amplitude of peak sodium current. A previous study showed that BTG 502 was more toxic to pyrethroid-resistant house flies possessing a super-kdr (knockdown resistance) mechanism than to pyrethroid-susceptible house flies. However, we found that the cockroach sodium channels carrying the equivalent super-kdr mutations (M918T and L1014F) were not more sensitive to BTG 502 than the wild-type channel. Instead, a kdr mutation, F1519I, which reduces pyrethroid binding, abolished the action of BTG 502. These results provide evidence the actions of alkylamide and pyrethroid insecticides require a common sodium channel residue.  相似文献   

11.
During inactivation of Na+ channels, the intracellular loop connecting domains III and IV is thought to fold into the channel protein and occlude the pore through interaction of the hydrophobic motif isoleucine-phenylalanine-methionine (IFM) with a receptor site. We have searched for amino acid residues flanking the IFM motif which may contribute to formation of molecular hinges that allow this motion of the inactivation gate. Site-directed mutagenesis of proline and glycine residues, which often are components of molecular hinges in proteins, revealed that G1484, G1485, P1512, P1514, and P1516 are required for normal fast inactivation. Mutations of these residues slow the time course of macroscopic inactivation. Single channel analysis of mutations G1484A, G1485A, and P1512A showed that the slowing of macroscopic inactivation is produced by increases in open duration and latency to first opening. These mutant channels also show a higher probability of entering a slow gating mode in which their inactivation is further impaired. The effects on gating transitions in the pathway to open Na+ channels indicate conformational coupling of activation to transitions in the inactivation gate. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that these glycine and proline residues contribute to hinge regions which allow movement of the inactivation gate during the inactivation process of Na+ channels.  相似文献   

12.
We have investigated the suitability of 5′-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine (FSBA) as an ATP site affinity probe for the canine kidney Na+,K+-ATPase. The purified enzyme is slowly inactivated by this compound in suitable buffers, losing about half of its activity over a two-hour period. The rate of inactivation is more rapid in 0.1 M KCl than in 0.1 M NaCl. Low concentrations of ATP protect the enzyme against inactivation, with half-maximal effects at 4 μM ATP in 0.1 M NaCl and 350 μM ATP in 0.1 M KCl. ADP also protects against FSBA inhibition, but AMP is ineffective when present at 100 μM levels. This pattern is consistent with the previously described nucleotide specificity of the Na+,K+-ATPase. Addition of protective amounts of ATP after inactivation has occurred does not restore enzyme activity, indicating that inhibition is irreversible. Measurement of the concentration-dependence of FSBA inactivation suggests an apparent Kd for binding of this compound well above 1 mM, the solubility limit of the analog. This finding is reinforced by the failure of 1 mM FSBA to compete effectively with ATP for the high-affinity ATP site of the enzyme. Nevertheless, attachment of the analog to this site is indicated by its ability to prevent [3H]-ADP binding in proportion to the number of sites it has inactivated. Studies with [3H]-FSBA show that about 1 mole of the analog attaches specifically to the α subunit per mole of enzyme inactivated. A similar amount of nonspecific labeling also occurs with negligible effect on enzyme activity. These findings suggest that FSBA may be useful in probing the topography of the high-affinity ATP binding site of the Na+,K+-ATPase and related enzymes.  相似文献   

13.
The N-terminus of the Na+,K+-ATPase α-subunit shows some homology to that of Shaker-B K+ channels; the latter has been shown to mediate the N-type channel inactivation in a ball-and-chain mechanism. When the Torpedo Na+,K+-ATPase is expressed in Xenopus oocytes and the pump is transformed into an ion channel with palytoxin (PTX), the channel exhibits a time-dependent inactivation gating at positive potentials. The inactivation gating is eliminated when the N-terminus is truncated by deleting the first 35 amino acids after the initial methionine. The inactivation gating is restored when a synthetic N-terminal peptide is applied to the truncated pumps at the intracellular surface. Truncated pumps generate no electrogenic current and exhibit an altered stoichiometry for active transport. Thus, the N-terminus of the α-subunit appears to act like an inactivation gate and performs a critical step in the Na+,K+-ATPase pumping function.  相似文献   

14.
The interaction of 3′-O-(4-Benzoyl)benzoyl-ATP (BzATP) with the rnal (Na+ + K+)-ATPase, the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-transport ATPase, and the gastric (H+ + K+)-ATPase has been investigated in order to determine whether BzATP is a suitable probe for the labeling and identification of a peptide from the ATP binding sites of these ion pumps. After ultraviolet irradiation BzATP inhibited the enzymatic hydrolysis of ATP by each of the ion pumps, and also was covalently incorporated into the 100 000 dalton polypeptides of each protein. The presence of excess ATP in the reaction solution did not prevent either the inactivation of ATPase activity or the labeling of the catalytic polypeptides by BzATP. Prior modification of the ATPases with fluorescein-5′-isothiocyanate (FITC), however, prevented much of the labeling of the 100 000 dalton polypeptides by BzATP. BzATP competitively inhibited the high-affinity binding of ATP to the ion pumps, but ATP did not block the high-affinity binding of BzATP by the enzymes. BzATP binds to the membrane-bound ATPases at a high-affinity site with a Kd of 0.8–1.2 μM and a Bmax of 2–3 nmol/mg, and also binds to at least one low-affinity, high-capacity site on the membranes. HPLC separation of the soluble peptides from a tryptic digest of BzATP-labeled (Na+ + K+)-ATPase revealed the presence of several labeled peptides, none of which was protected by either ATP or FITC. Although BzATP can displace ATP from a high-affinity binding site on the ion pumps, it appears, therefore, that inactivation of enzymatic activity is the result of reactions between BzATP and the proteins at locations outside this site. Thus, it is concluded from these experiments that BzATP is not likely to be a useful probe for the ATP binding sites on the ion transport ATPases.  相似文献   

15.
Lidocaine produces voltage- and use-dependent inhibition of voltage-gated Na+ channels through preferential binding to channel conformations that are normally populated at depolarized potentials and by slowing the rate of Na+ channel repriming after depolarizations. It has been proposed that the fast-inactivation mechanism plays a crucial role in these processes. However, the precise role of fast inactivation in lidocaine action has been difficult to probe because gating of drug-bound channels does not involve changes in ionic current. For that reason, we employed a conformational marker for the fast-inactivation gate, the reactivity of a cysteine substituted at phenylalanine 1304 in the rat adult skeletal muscle sodium channel α subunit (rSkM1) with [2-(trimethylammonium)ethyl]methanethiosulfonate (MTS-ET), to determine the position of the fast-inactivation gate during lidocaine block. We found that lidocaine does not compete with fast-inactivation. Rather, it favors closure of the fast-inactivation gate in a voltage-dependent manner, causing a hyperpolarizing shift in the voltage dependence of site 1304 accessibility that parallels a shift in the steady state availability curve measured for ionic currents. More significantly, we found that the lidocaine-induced slowing of sodium channel repriming does not result from a slowing of recovery of the fast-inactivation gate, and thus that use-dependent block does not involve an accumulation of fast-inactivated channels. Based on these data, we propose a model in which transitions along the activation pathway, rather than transitions to inactivated states, play a crucial role in the mechanism of lidocaine action.  相似文献   

16.
In cultured A6 monolayers from distal Xenopus kidney, external Ni2+ stimulated active Na+ uptake via the epithelial Na+ channel, ENaC. Transepithelial capacitance measurements ruled out exocytosis of ENaC-containing vesicles underlying the Ni2+ effect. Na+ current noise analysis was performed using the neutral Na+-channel blocker 6-chloro-3,5-diamino-pyrazine-2-carboxamide (CDPC) and amiloride. The analysis of CDPC-induced noise in terms of a three-state channel model revealed that Ni2+ elicits an increase in the number of open channels as well as in the spontaneous open probability. While Ni2+ had no influence on CDPC-blocker kinetics, the macroscopic and microscopic blocking kinetics of amiloride were affected. Ni2+ turned out to compete with amiloride for a putative binding site but not with CDPC. Moreover, external Na+—known to compete with amiloride and so producing the self-inhibition phenomenon—and Ni2+ exerted mutually exclusive analogous effects on amiloride kinetics. Na+ current kinetics revealed that Ni2+ prevents ENaC to be downregulated by self-inhibition. Co2+ behaved similarly to Ni2+, whereas Zn2+ did not. Attempts to disclose the chemical nature of the site reacting with Ni2+ suggested cysteine but not histidine as reaction partner.  相似文献   

17.
Prevailing models postulate that high Ca2+ selectivity of Ca2+ release-activated Ca2+ (CRAC) channels arises from tight Ca2+ binding to a high affinity site within the pore, thereby blocking monovalent ion flux. Here, we examined the contribution of high affinity Ca2+ binding for Ca2+ selectivity in recombinant Orai3 channels, which function as highly Ca2+-selective channels when gated by the endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ sensor STIM1 or as poorly Ca2+-selective channels when activated by the small molecule 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate (2-APB). Extracellular Ca2+ blocked Na+ currents in both gating modes with a similar inhibition constant (Ki; ∼25 µM). Thus, equilibrium binding as set by the Ki of Ca2+ blockade cannot explain the differing Ca2+ selectivity of the two gating modes. Unlike STIM1-gated channels, Ca2+ blockade in 2-APB–gated channels depended on the extracellular Na+ concentration and exhibited an anomalously steep voltage dependence, consistent with enhanced Na+ pore occupancy. Moreover, the second-order rate constants of Ca2+ blockade were eightfold faster in 2-APB–gated channels than in STIM1-gated channels. A four-barrier, three–binding site Eyring model indicated that lowering the entry and exit energy barriers for Ca2+ and Na+ to simulate the faster rate constants of 2-APB–gated channels qualitatively reproduces their low Ca2+ selectivity, suggesting that ion entry and exit rates strongly affect Ca2+ selectivity. Noise analysis indicated that the unitary Na+ conductance of 2-APB–gated channels is fourfold larger than that of STIM1-gated channels, but both modes of gating show a high open probability (Po; ∼0.7). The increase in current noise during channel activation was consistent with stepwise recruitment of closed channels to a high Po state in both cases, suggesting that the underlying gating mechanisms are operationally similar in the two gating modes. These results suggest that both high affinity Ca2+ binding and kinetic factors contribute to high Ca2+ selectivity in CRAC channels.  相似文献   

18.
A ouabain sensitive inward current occurs in Xenopus oocytes in Na+ and K+ -free solutions. Several laboratories have investigated the properties of this current and suggested that acidic extracellular pH (pHo) produces a conducting pathway through the Na+/K+ pump that is permeable to H+ and blocked by [Na+]o. An alternative suggestion is that the current is mediated by an electrogenic H+-ATPase. Here we investigate the effect of pHo and [Na+]o on both transient and steady-state ouabain-sensitive current. At alkaline or neutral pHo the relaxation rate of pre-steady-state current is an exponential function of voltage. Its U-shaped voltage dependence becomes apparent at acidic pHo, as predicted by a model in which protonation of the Na+/K+ pump reduces the energy barrier between the internal solution and the Na+ occluded state. The model also predicts that acidic pHo increases steady-state current leak through the pump. The apparent pK of the titratable group(s) is 6, suggesting that histidine is involved in induction of the conductance pathway. 22Na efflux experiments in squid giant axon and current measurements in oocytes at acidic pHo suggest that both Na+ and H+ are permeant. The acid-induced inward current is reduced by high [Na+]o, consistent with block by Na+. A least squares analysis predicts that H+ is four orders of magnitude more permeant than Na+, and that block occurs when 3 Na+ ions occupy a low affinity binding site (K 0.5=130±30 mM) with a dielectric coefficient of 0.23±0.03. These data support the conclusion that the ouabain-sensitive conducting pathway is a result of passive leak of both Na+ and H+ through the Na+/K+ pump.  相似文献   

19.
The wheat root high-affinity K+ transporter HKT1 functions as a sodium-coupled potassium co-uptake transporter. At toxic millimolar levels of sodium (Na+), HKT1 mediates low-affinity Na+ uptake while potassium (K+) uptake is blocked. In roots, low-affinity Na+ uptake and inhibition of K+ uptake contribute to Na+ toxicity. In the present study, the selectivity among alkali cations of HKT1 expressed in Xenopus oocytes and yeast was investigated under various ionic conditions at steady state. The data show that HKT1 is highly selective for uptake of the two physiologically significant alkali cations, K+ and Na+ over Rb+, Cs+ and Li+. In addition, Rb+ and Cs+, and an excess of extracellular K+ over Na+, are shown to partially reduce or block HKT1-mediated K+-Na+ uptake. Furthermore, K+, Rb+ and Cs+ also effectively reduce outward currents mediated by HKT1, thereby causing depolarizations. In yeast, HKT1 can produce high-affinity Rb+ uptake at approximately 15-fold lower rates than for K+. Rb+ influx in yeast can be mediated by the ability of the yeast plasma membrane proton pump to balance the 35-fold lower HKT1 conductance for Rb+. A model for HKT1 activity is presented involving a high-affinity K+ binding site and a high-affinity Na+ binding site, and competitive interactions of K+, Na+ and other alkali cations for binding to these two sites. Possible implications of the presented results for physiological K+ and Na+ uptake in plants are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The primary target for cocaine is believed to be monoamine transporters because of cocaine’s high-affinity binding that prevents re-uptake of released neurotransmitter. However, direct interaction with ion channels has been shown to be important for certain pharmacological/toxicological effects of cocaine. Here I show that cocaine selectively blocks a calcium-dependent K+ channel in hippocampal neurons grown in culture (IC50 = ∼30 μM). Single-channel recordings show that in the presence of cocaine, the channel openings are interrupted with brief closures (flicker block). As the concentration of cocaine is increased the open-time is reduced, whereas the duration of brief closures is independent of concentration. The association and dissociation rate constants of cocaine for the neuronal Ca2+-activated K+ channels are 261 ± 37 μM−1s−1 and 11451 ± 1467 s−1. The equilibrium dissociation constant (KB) for cocaine, determined from single-channel parameters, is 43 μM. The lack of voltage dependence of block suggests that cocaine probably binds to a site at the mouth of the pore. Block of Ca2+-dependent K+ channels by cocaine may be involved in functions that include broadening of the action potential, which would facilitate transmitter release, enhancement of smooth muscle contraction particularly in blood vessels, and modulation of repetitive neuronal firing by altering the repolarization and afterhyperpolarization phases of the action potential.  相似文献   

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