首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
We have investigated the effects of intracellular K+ and Rb+ on single-channel currents recorded from the large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K+ (BK) channel of the embryonic rat telencephalon using the inside-out patch-clamp technique. Our novel observation concerns the effects of these ions on rapid flickering of channel openings. Specifically, flicker gating was voltage dependent, i.e., it was reduced by depolarization in the -60 to -10 mV range with equimolar concentrations of K+ ions (150 Ko+/150 Ki+). Removal of Ki+ resulted in significant flickering at all potentials in this voltage range. In other words, the voltage dependence of flicker gating was effectively eliminated by the removal of Ki+. This suggests that a K+ ion entering the channel from the intracellular medium binds, in a voltage-dependent manner, at a site that locks the flicker gate in its open position. No effects of changes in Ki+ were observed on the primary, voltage-dependent gate of the channel. The change in flickering did not cause a change in the mean burst duration, which indicates that the primary gate is stochastically independent of the flicker gate. Intracellular Rb+ can substitute for--and is even more effective than--Ki+ with regard to suppression of flickering. Substitution of Rbi+ for Ki+ also increased the mean burst duration for V > or = -30 mV. Both effects of Rbi+ were removed by membrane hyperpolarization.  相似文献   

2.
Transient outward currents in rat saphenous arterial myocytes were studied using the perforated configuration of the patch-clamp method. When myocytes were bathed in a Na-gluconate solution containing TEA to block large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) currents, depolarizing pulses positive to +20 mV from a holding potential of -100 mV induced fast transient outward currents. The activation and inactivation time constants of the current were voltage dependent, and at +40 mV were 3.6 +/- 0.8 ms and 23.9 +/- 6.4 ms (n = 4), respectively. The steady-state inactivation of the transient outward current was steeply voltage dependent (z = 1.7), with 50% of the current inactivated at -55 mV. The current was insensitive to the A-type K+ channel blocker 4-AP (1-5 mM), and was modulated by external Ca, decreasing to approximately 0.85 of control values upon raising Ca2+ from 1 to 10 mM, and increasing approximately 3-fold upon lowering it to 0.1 mM. Transient outward currents were also recorded following replacement of internal K+ with either Na+ or Cs+, raising the possibility that the current was carried by monovalent ions passing through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. This hypothesis was supported by the finding that the transient outward current had the same inactivation rate as the inward Ba2+ current, and that both currents were effectively blocked by the L-type Ca2+ channel blocker, nifedipine and enhanced by the agonist BAYK8644.  相似文献   

3.
The inside-out mode of the patch-clamp method was used to study the effects of internal Mg2+ on single large-conductance (193+/-7 pS) Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels in cultured kidney cells. In the absence of Ca2+, Mg2+ (1 to 10 mM) did not activate the channels but modified the activating effect of Ca2+ ions: it decreased the Hill coefficient (n), reduced the apparent dissociation constant (K0.5), and modified the channel open and closed times. K0.5 was found to be a voltage-dependent parameter. In the absence of Mg2+, it averaged 600 microM at -20 mV and 27 microM at +30 mV (22 degrees C, pH 6.8). Mg2+ at saturating concentrations (5 to 10 mM) decreased K0.5 to 50 microM at -20 mV and to 15 microM at +30 mV. Irrespective of the membrane potential, K0.5 tended to its limit value of about 12.6 microM. Thus, the effects of membrane depolarization and Mg2+ exhibited a non-additive, competitive relationship. Mg2+ perturbed the exponential shape of the voltage dependences of K0.5. The Hill coefficient characterizing the interaction of Ca2+ ions with the channels was found to be voltage-dependent. In the absence of Mg2+, it increased rather sharply from approx. 2 to 3.5 when the membrane potential was raised from -10 to 0 mV. Mg2+ increased n in a dose-dependent manner; however, about a twofold increase of n occurred within a narrow concentration range (2 to 3 mM). The action of Mg2+ on n was, apparently, voltage-independent, and the effects of Mg2+ and voltage on n were seemingly additive.  相似文献   

4.
Activation of Ca2+-dependent K+ conductance has long been postulated to contribute to the cyclical pauses in glucose-induced electrical activity of pancreatic islet B cells. Here we have examined the gating, permeation and blockade by cations of a large-conductance, Ca2+-activated K+ channel in these cells. This channel shares many features with BK (or maxi-K+) Ca2+-activated K+ channels in other cells. (1) Its 'permeability' selectivity sequence is PT1+: PK+: PRb+: PNH4+: PNa+, Li+, Cs+ = 1.3:1.0:0.5:0.17: less than 0.05. Permeant, as well as impermeant, cations reduce channel conductance. (2) Its conductance saturates at 325-350 pS with bath KCl greater than 400 mM (144 mM KCl pipette). (3) It shows asymmetric blockade by tetraethylammonium ion (TEA) and Na+. (4) It is sensitive to Ca2+i over the range 5 nM-100 microM; over the range 50-200 nM, channel activity varies as [Ca2+ free]1-2. (5) It is sensitive to internal pH over the range 6.85-7.35, but the decrease in channel activity seen with reduced pHi may be partially compensated by the increase in free Ca2+ concentration which occurs on acidification of buffered Ca2+/EGTA solutions.  相似文献   

5.
Single channel currents through Ca2+-activated K+ channels of bovine chromaffin cells were measured to determine the effects of small ions on permeation through the channel. The channel selects strongly for K+ over Na+ and Cs+, and Rb+ carries a smaller current through the channel than K+. Tetraethylammonium ion (TEA+) blocks channel currents when applied to either side of the membrane; it is effective at lower concentrations when applied externally. Millimolar concentrations of internal Na+ reduce the average current through the channel and produce large fluctuations (flicker) in the open channel currents. This flickery block is analyzed by a new method, amplitude distribution analysis, which can measure block and unblock rates in the microsecond time range even though individual blocking events are not time-resolved by the recording system. The analysis shows that the rate of block by Na+ is very voltage dependent, but the unblock rate is voltage independent. These results can be explained easily by supposing that current flow through the channel is diffusion limited, a hypothesis consistent with the large magnitude of the single channel current.  相似文献   

6.
Transport of K+ by the photoreceptor Na(+)-Ca2+, K+ exchanger was investigated in isolated rod outer segments (OS) by recording membrane current under whole-cell voltage-clamp conditions. Known amounts of K+ were imported in the OS through the Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels while perfusing with high extracellular concentration of K+, [K+]o. These channels were detected in the recordings from the OS, which probably retained a small portion of the rest of the cell. The activation of forward exchange (Na+ imported per Ca2+ and K+ extruded) by intracellular K+, Ki+, was described by first-order kinetics with a Michaelis constant, Kapp(Ki+), of about 2 mM and a maximal current, Imax, of about -60 pA. [Na+]i larger than 100 mM had little effect on Kapp(Ki+) and Imax, indicating that Nai+ did not compete with Ki+ for exchange sites under physiological conditions, and that Na+ release at the exchanger intracellular side was not a rate-limiting step for the exchange process. Exchanger stoichiometry resulted in one K+ ion extruded per one positive charge imported. Exchange current was detected only if Ca2+ and K+ were present on the same membrane side, and Na+ was simultaneously present on the opposite side. Nonelectrogenic modes of ion exchange were tested taking advantage of the hindered diffusion found for Cai2+ and Ki+. Experiments were carried out so that the occurrence of a putative nonelectrogenic ion exchange, supposedly induced by the preapplication of certain extracellular ion(s), would have resulted in the transient presence of both Cai2+ and Ki+. The lack of electrogenic forward exchange in a subsequent switch to high Nao+, excluded the presence of previous nonelectrogenic transport.  相似文献   

7.
Relief of Na+ block of Ca2+-activated K+ channels by external cations   总被引:10,自引:6,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
The flickery block of single Ca2+-activated K+ channels that is produced by internally applied Na+ can be relieved by millimolar concentrations of external K+. This effect of K+ on the kinetics of Na+ block was studied by the method of amplitude distribution analysis described in the companion paper (Yellen, G., 1984b, J. Gen. Physiol., 84:157-186). It appears that K+ relieves block by increasing the exit rate of the blocking ion from the channel, not by competitively slowing its entrance rate. This suggests that a K ion that enters the channel from the outside can expel the blocking Na ion, which entered the channel from the inside. Cs+, which cannot carry current through the channel, and Rb+, which carries a reduced current through the channel, are just as effective as K+ in relieving the block by internal Na+. The kinetics of block by internal nonyltriethylammonium (C9) are unaffected by the presence of these ions in the external bathing solution.  相似文献   

8.
Charybdotoxin (CTX), a small, basic protein from scorpion venom, strongly inhibits the conduction of K ions through high-conductance, Ca2+-activated K+ channels. The interaction of CTX with Ca2+-activated K+ channels from rat skeletal muscle plasma membranes was studied by inserting single channels into uncharged planar phospholipid bilayers. CTX blocks K+ conduction by binding to the external side of the channel, with an apparent dissociation constant of approximately 10 nM at physiological ionic strength. The dwell-time distributions of both blocked and unblocked states are single-exponential. The toxin association rate varies linearly with the CTX concentration, and the dissociation rate is independent of it. CTX is competent to block both open and closed channels; the association rate is sevenfold faster for the open channel, while the dissociation rate is the same for both channel conformations. Membrane depolarization enhances the CTX dissociation rate e-fold/28 mV; if the channel's open probability is maintained constant as voltage varies, then the toxin association rate is voltage independent. Increasing the external solution ionic strength from 20 to 300 mM (with K+, Na+, or arginine+) reduces the association rate by two orders of magnitude, with little effect on the dissociation rate. We conclude that CTX binding to the Ca2+-activated K+ channel is a bimolecular process, and that the CTX interaction senses both voltage and the channel's conformational state. We further propose that a region of fixed negative charge exists near the channel's CTX-binding site.  相似文献   

9.
Several divalent cations were studied as agonists of a Ca2+-activated K+ channel obtained from rat muscle membranes and incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. The effect of these agonists on single-channel currents was tested in the absence and in the presence of Ca2+. Among the divalent cations that activate the channel, Ca2+ is the most effective, followed by Cd2+, Sr2+, Mn2+, Fe2+, and Co2+. Mg2+, Ni2+, Ba2+, Cu2+, Zn2+, Hg2+, and Sn2+ are ineffective. The voltage dependence of channel activation is the same for all the divalent cations. The time-averaged probability of the open state is a sigmoidal function of the divalent cation concentration. The sigmoidal curves are described by a dissociation constant K and a Hill coefficient N. The values of these parameters, measured at 80 mV are: N = 2.1, K = 4 X 10(-7) mMN for Ca2+; N = 3.0, K = 0.02 mMN for Cd2+; N = 1.45, K = 0.63 mMN for Sr2+; N = 1.7, K = 0.94 mMN for Mn2+; N = 1.1, K = 3.0 mMN for Fe2+; and N = 1.1 K = 4.35 mMN for Co2+. In the presence of Ca2+, the divalent cations Cd2+, Co2+, Mn2+, Ni2+, and Mg2+ are able to increase the apparent affinity of the channel for Ca2+ and they increase the Hill coefficient in a concentration-dependent fashion. These divalent cations are only effective when added to the cytoplasmic side of the channel. We suggest that these divalent cations can bind to the channel, unmasking new Ca2+ sites.  相似文献   

10.
Proton block of unitary currents through BK channels was investigated with single-channel recording. Increasing intracellular proton concentration decreased unitary current amplitudes with an apparent pKa of 5.1 without discrete blocking events, indicating fast proton block. Unitary currents recorded at pH(i) 8.0 and 9.0 had the same amplitudes, indicating that 10(-8) M H(+) had little blocking effect. Increasing H(+) by recording at pH(i) 7.0, 6.0, and 5.0 then reduced the unitary currents by 13%, 25%, and 53%, respectively, at +200 mV. Increasing K(+)(i) relieved the proton block in a manner consistent with competitive inhibition of K(+)(i) action by H(+)(i). Proton block was voltage dependent, increasing with depolarization, indicating that block was coupled to the electric field of the membrane. Proton block was not described by the Woodhull equation for noncompetitive voltage-dependent block, but was described by an equation for cooperative competitive inhibition that included voltage-dependent block from the Woodhull equation. Proton block was still present after replacing the eight negative charges in the ring of charge at the entrance to the intracellular vestibule by uncharged amino acids. Thus, the ring of charge is not the site of proton block or of competitive inhibition of K(+)(i) action by H(+)(i). With 150 mM symmetrical KCl, unitary current amplitudes increased with depolarization, reaching 66 pA at +350 mV (pH(i) 7.0). The increase in amplitude with voltage became sublinear for voltages >100 mV. The sublinearity was unaffected by removing from the intracellular solutions Ca(2+) and Ba(2+) ions, the Ca(2+) buffers EGTA and HEDTA, the pH buffer TES, or by replacing Cl(-) with MeSO(3)(-). Proton block accounted for approximately 40% of the sublinearity at +200 mV and pH 7.0, indicating that factors in addition to proton block contribute to the sublinearity of the unitary currents through BK channels.  相似文献   

11.
IKx is a voltage-dependent K+ current in the inner segment of rod photoreceptors that shows many similarities to M-current. The depression of IKx by external Ba2+ was studied with whole-cell voltage clamp. Ba2+ reduced the conductance and voltage sensitivity of IKx tail currents and shifted the voltage range over which they appeared to more positive potentials. These effects showed different sensitivities to Ba2+: conductance was the least sensitive (K0.5 = 7.6 mM), voltage dependence intermediate (K0.5 = 2.4 mM) and voltage sensitivity the most sensitive (K0.5 = 0.2 mM). Ca2+, Co2+, Mn2+, Sr2+, and Zn2+ did not have actions comparable to Ba2+ on the voltage dependence or the voltage sensitivity of IKx tail currents. In high K+ (100 mM), the voltage range of activation of IKx was shifted 20 mV negative, as was the tau-voltage relation. High K+ did not prevent the effect of Ba2+ on conductance, but abolished its ability to affect voltage dependence and voltage sensitivity. Ba2+ also altered the apparent time-course of activation and deactivation of IKx. Low Ba2+ (0.2 mM) slowed both deactivation and activation, with most effect on deactivation; at higher concentrations (1-25 mM), deactivation and activation time courses were equally affected, and at the highest concentrations, 5 and 25 mM Ba2+, the time course became faster than control. Rapid application of 5 mM Ba2+ suggested that the time dependent currents in Ba2+ reflect in part the slow voltage-dependent block and unblock of IKx channels by Ba2+. This blocking action of Ba2+ was steeply voltage- dependent with an apparent electrical distance of 1.07. Ba2+ appears to interact with IKx channels at multiple sites. A model which assumes that Ba2+ has a voltage-independent and a voltage-dependent blocking action on open or closed IKx channels reproduced many aspects of the data; the voltage-dependent component could account for both the Ba(2+)- induced shift in voltage dependence and reduction in voltage sensitivity of IKx tail currents.  相似文献   

12.
In this study, high-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels from rat skeletal muscle were incorporated into planar phospholipid bilayers, and discrete blockade of single channels by Ba2+ was studied. With 150 mM K+ held constant in the internal solution, increasing external K+ over the range 100-1,000 mM raises the rate of Ba2+ dissociation. This "enhancement effect," which operates at K+ concentrations 3-4 orders of magnitude higher than those required for the "lockin" effect described previously, depends on applied voltage, saturates with K+ concentration, and is not observed with Na+. The voltage dependence of the Ba2+ off-rate varies with external K+ in a way suggesting that K+, entering the channel from the external side, forces Ba2+ dissociation to the internal solution. With K+ held fixed in the external solution, the Ba2+ off-rate decreases as internal K+ is raised over the range 0-50 mM. This "lock-in" effect is similar to that seen on the external side (Neyton and Miller, 1988), except that the internal lock-in site is of lower affinity and shows only a fivefold preference for K+ over Na+. All the results taken together argue strongly that this channel's conduction pathway contains four sites of very high affinity for K+, all of which may be simultaneously occupied under normal conducting conditions. According to this view, the mutual destabilization resulting from this high ionic occupancy leads to the unusually high conductance of this K+-specific channel.  相似文献   

13.
The K+ channel of sarcoplasmic reticulum. A new look at Cs+ block.   总被引:10,自引:2,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
K+-selective ion channels from mammalian sarcoplasmic reticulum were inserted into planar phospholipid bilayers, and single-channel currents measured in solutions containing Cs+. Current through this channel can be observed in symmetrical solutions containing only Cs+ salts. At zero voltage, the Cs+ conductance is approximately 15-fold lower than the corresponding K+ conductance. The open channel rectifies strongly in symmetrical Cs+ solutions, and the Cs+ currents are independent of Cs+ concentration in the range 18-600 mM. Biionic (Cs+/K+) reversal potentials are only 10 mV, showing that Cs+ is nearly as permeant as K+, though much less conductive. Addition of Cs+ to symmetrical K+ solutions reduces current through the channel in a voltage-dependent way. The results can be explained by a free energy profile in which the channel's selectivity filter acts in two ways: to provide binding sites for the conducting ions and to serve as a major rate-determining structure. According to this picture, the main difference between high-conductance K+ and low-conductance Cs+ is that Cs+ binds to an asymmetrically positioned site approximately 20-fold more tightly than does K+.  相似文献   

14.
Patch-clamp whole-cell and single-channel current recordings were made from pig pancreatic acinar cells to test the effects of quinine, quinidine, Ba2+ and Ca2+. Voltage-clamp current recordings from single isolated cells showed that high external concentrations of Ba2+ or Ca2+ (88 mM) abolished the outward K+ currents normally associated with depolarizing voltage steps. Lower concentrations of Ca2+ only had small inhibitory effects whereas 11 mM Ba2+ almost blocked the K+ current. 5.5 mM Ba2+ reduced the outward K+ current to less than 30% of the control value. Both external quinine and quinidine (200-500 microM) markedly reduced whole-cell outward K+ currents. In single-channel current studies it was shown that external Ba2+ (1-5 mM) markedly reduced the probability of opening of high-conductance Ca2+ and voltage-activated K+ channels whereas internal Ba2+ (6 X 10(-6) to 3 X 10(-5) M) caused activation at negative membrane potentials and inhibition at positive potentials. Quinidine (200-400 microM) evoked rapid chopping of single K+ channel openings acting both from the outside and inside of the membrane and in this way markedly reduced the total current passing through the channels.  相似文献   

15.
The single-channel properties for monovalent and divalent cations of a voltage-independent cation channel from Tetrahymena cilia were studied in planar lipid bilayers. The single-channel conductance reached a maximum value as the K+ concentration was increased in symmetrical solutions of K+. The concentration dependence of the conductance was approximated to a simple saturation curve (a single-ion channel model) with an apparent Michaelis constant of 16.3 mM and a maximum conductance of 354 pS. Divalent cations (Ca2+, Ba2+, Sr2+, and Mg2+) also permeated this channel. The sequence of permeability determined by zero current potentials at high ionic concentrations was Ba2+ greater than or equal to K+ greater than or equal to Sr2+ greater than Mg2+ greater than Ca2+. Single-channel conductances for Ca2+ were nearly constant (13.9 pS-20.5 pS) in the concentrations between 0.5 mM and 50 mM Ca-gluconate. In the experiments with mixed solutions of K+ and Ca2+, a maximum conductance of Ca2+ (gamma Camax) and an apparent Michaelis constant of Ca2+ (K Cam) were obtained by assuming a simple competitive relation between the cations. Gamma Camax and K Cam were 14.0 pS and 0.160 mM, respectively. Single-channel conductances in mixed solutions were well-fitted to this competitive model supporting that this cation channel behaves as a single-ion channel. This channel had relatively high-affinity Ca2+-binding sites.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of sarcoplasmic reticulum lumenal (trans) Ca2+ on cytosolic (cis) ATP-activated rabbit skeletal muscle Ca2+ release channels (ryanodine receptors) were examined using the planar lipid bilayer method. Single channels were recorded in symmetric 0.25 M KCl media with K+ as the major current carrier. With nanomolar [Ca2+] in both bilayer chambers, the addition of 2 mM cytosolic ATP greatly increased the number of short channel openings. As lumenal [Ca2+] was increased from < 0.1 microM to approximately 250 microM, increasing channel activities and events with long open time constants were seen at negative holding potentials. Channel activity remained low at positive holding potentials. Further increase in lumenal [Ca2+] to 1, 5, and 10 mM resulted in a decrease in channel activities at negative holding potentials and increased activities at positive holding potentials. A voltage-dependent activation by 50 microM lumenal Ca2+ was also observed when the channel was minimally activated by < 1 microM cytosolic Ca2+ in the absence of ATP. With microM cytosolic Ca2+ in the presence or absence of 2 mM ATP, single-channel activities showed no or only a weak voltage dependence. Other divalent cations (Mg2+, Ba2+) could not replace lumenal Ca2+. On the contrary, cytosolic ATP-activated channel activities were decreased as lumenal Ca2+ fluxes were reduced by the addition of 1-5 mM BaCl2 or MgCl2 to the lumenal side, which contained 50 microM Ca2+. An increase in [KCl] from 0.25 M to 1 M also reduced single-channel activities. Addition of the "fast" Ca2+ buffer 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethanetetraacetic acid (BAPTA) to the cls chamber increased cytosolic ATP-, lumenal Ca(2+)-activated channel activities to a nearly maximum level. These results suggested that lumenal Ca2+ flowing through the skeletal muscle Ca2+ release channel may regulate channel activity by having access to cytosolic Ca2+ activation and Ca2+ inactivation sites that are located in "BAPTA-inaccessible" and "BAPTA-accessible" spaces, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
A high basal level of phosphorylation (approx. 70% of the optimal Na+-dependent phosphorylation level) is observed in 50 mM imidazole-HCl (pH 7.0), in the absence of added Na+ and K+ and the presence of 10-100 microM Mg2+. In 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.0) the basal level is only 5%, irrespective of the Mg2+ concentration. Nevertheless, imidazole is a less effective activator of phosphorylation than Na+ (Km imidazole-H+ 5.9 mM, Km Na+ 2 mM under comparable conditions). Imidazole-activated phosphorylation is strongly pH dependent, being optimal at pH less than or equal to 7 and minimal at pH greater than or equal to 8, while Na+-activated phosphorylation is optimal at pH 7.4. This suggests that imidazole-H+ is the activating species. Imidazole facilitates Na+-stimulated phosphorylation. The Km for Na+ decreases from 0.63 mM at 5 mM imidazole-HCl to 0.21 mM at 50 mM imidazole-HCl (pH 7; 0.1 mM Mg2+ in all cases). Imidazole-activated phosphorylation is more sensitive to inhibition by K+ (I50 = 12.5 microM) than Na+-activated phosphorylation (I50 = 180 microM). Mg2+ antagonizes activation by imidazole-H+ and also inhibition by K+. The Ki value for Mg2+ (approx. 0.3 mM) is the same for the two antagonistic effects. Tris buffer (pH 7.0) inhibits imidazole-activated phosphorylation with an I50 value of 30 mM in 50 mM imidazole-HCl (pH 7.0) plus 0.1 mM Mg2+. We conclude that imidazole-H+, but not Tris-H+, can replace Na+ as an activator of ATP-dependent phosphorylation, primarily by shifting the E2----E1 transition to the right, leading to a phosphorylating E1 conformation which is different from that in Tris buffer.  相似文献   

18.
To investigate the possible regulation of large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels (BKCa) by tyrosine phosphatases (Tyr-PPs), single-channel currents of myocytes from rat mesenteric artery were recorded in open cell-attached patches. Two structurally different Tyr-PP inhibitors, sodium orthovanadate (Na3VO4) and dephostatin, were used. The channels (236 pS) evoked at +40 mV and pCa 6, were significantly inhibited by 1 mM Na3VO4 (-81+/-3%, n = 10; P < 0.005). Similarly, 100 microM dephostatin strongly inhibited the BKCa channels (-80+/-7%, n = 7 ; P < 0.05). Therefore, BKCa channels in vascular smooth muscle cells may be regulated by tyrosine phosphatase-dependent signal transduction pathways, whose inhibition could attenuate the channel activity.  相似文献   

19.
ATP inhibits smooth muscle Ca2(+)-activated K+ channels   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
There has been much recent interest in the roles played by smooth-muscle K+ channels in protecting cells against ischemic and anoxic insults and in therapeutic vaso- and bronchodilation (Buckingham 1990; Longmore & Weston 1990). A K+ channel, which is uniquely sensitive to cytoplasmic ATP (KATP), has been identified as a likely candidate for mediating these important functions (Standen et al. 1989). We now show, by using electrophysiological techniques in three different types of smooth muscle, that a large-conductance voltage and Ca2(+)-sensitive channel, otherwise indistinguishable from the the large-conductance Ca2(+)-activated K+ channel (BK channel), is also sensitive to cytoplasmic ATP and cromakalim. ATP, in a dose-dependent manner, decreased the probability of channel opening (Po) of rabbit aortic, rabbit tracheal and pig coronary artery BK channels with a Ki of 0.2-0.6 mM. Cromakalim, 10 microM, partially reversed the ATP induced inhibition and increased Po. Our observations raise the possibility that the ubiquitous BK channel may play a role during pathophysiological events.  相似文献   

20.
Currents through delayed rectifier-type K+ channels in Schwann cells cultured from rabbit sciatic nerve were studied with patch-clamp techniques. When the internal and external solutions contained physiological concentrations of sodium, the amplitude of these outward currents declined as the cell was depolarized to potentials above about +40 mV, despite the increased driving force. This reduction in the amplitude of outward K+ currents was observed in many cells before the subtraction of leakage currents; it was also observed for ensemble currents recorded in outside-out patches. It was therefore not the result of a leak-subtraction artefact nor of inadequate voltage-clamp control. Several lines of evidence also suggested that it was not the result of the extracellular accumulation of K+. By contrast, when the Na+ ion concentration of the internal solution was nominally zero, the reduction in the amplitude of outward K+ currents at positive membrane potentials was not observed. The apparent amplitude of single-channel currents through two types of K+ channel was reduced by 30 mM internal Na+, apparently as the result of a rapid 'flickery' block. The results suggest that channel block by internal Na+ is largely responsible for the negative slope conductance seen in current-voltage plots of whole-cell K+ currents at positive membrane potentials. In addition, our analysis of single-channel currents suggests that the current-voltage curve for a delayed rectifier channel in rabbit Schwann cells (in the absence of internal Na+) is roughly linear with internal and external K+ concentrations of 140 mM and 5.6 mM, respectively.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号