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1.
Unidirectional, ouabain-insensitive K+ influx rose steeply with warming at temperatures above 37°C in guinea pig erythrocytes incubated in isotonic medium. The only component of ouabain-insensitive K+ influx to show the same steep rise was K-Cl cotransport (Q10 of 10 between 37 and 41°C); Na-K-Cl cotransport remained constant or declined and residual K+ influx in hypertonic medium with ouabain and bumetanide rose only gradually. Similar results were obtained for unidirectional K+ efflux. Thermal activation of K-Cl cotransport-mediated K+ influx was fully dependent on the presence of chloride in the medium; none occurred with nitrate replacing chloride. The increase of K+ influx through K-Cl cotransport from 37 to 41°C was blocked by calyculin A, a phosphatase inhibitor. The Q10 of K-Cl cotransport fully activated by hydroxylamine and hypotonicity was about 2. The time course of K+ entry showed an immediate transition to a higher rate when cells were instantly warmed from 37 to 41°C, but there was a 7-min time lag in returning to a lower rate when cells were cooled from 41 to 37°C. These results indicate that the steepness of the response of K-Cl cotransport to mild warming is due to altered regulation of the transporter. Total unidirectional K+ influx was equal to total unidirectional K+ efflux at 37–45°C, but K+ influx exceeded K+ efflux at 41°C when K-Cl cotransport was inhibited by calyculin or prevented by hypertonic incubation. The net loss of K+ that results from the thermal activation of isosomotic K-Cl cotransport reported here would offset a tendency for cell swelling that could arise with warming through an imbalance of pump and leak for Na+ or for K+. Received: 1 November 1997/Revised: 5 March 1998  相似文献   

2.
The brains of the hibernating hamsters and 13-lined ground squirrels maintain Na+ and K+ at the same concentrations as in the awake state. The ability of slices of the cerebral cortex when incubated in vitro to accumulate or retain K+ is similar in the awake hamster and rat at both 38 and 5 ° C. On the other hand, slices of cerebral cortex from the hibernating hamster retained slightly more K+ at 5 °C than did those of awake hamster or rat. It was concluded that the cerebral cortex of the awake hamster is probably not cold resistant with respect to the maintenance of cation balance. Further, the cold resistance that exists in the cerebral cortex of the hibernating hamster is largely destroyed when the brain is disrupted by slicing.  相似文献   

3.
The kinetic properties of glucokinase (GLK) from the liver of active and hibernating ground squirrels Spermophilus undulatus have been studied. Entrance of ground squirrels into hibernation from their active state is accompanied by a sharp decrease in blood glucose (Glc) level (from 14 to 2.9 mM) and with a significant (7-fold) decrease of GLK activity in the liver cytoplasm. Preparations of native GLK practically devoid of other molecular forms of hexokinase were obtained from the liver of active and hibernating ground squirrels. The dependence of GLK activity upon Glc concentration for the enzyme from active ground squirrel liver showed a pronounced sigmoid character (Hill coefficient, h = 1.70 and S 0.5 = 6.23 mM; the experiments were conducted at 25°C in the presence of enzyme stabilizers, K+ and DTT). The same dependence of enzyme activity on Glc concentration was found for GLK from rat liver. However, on decreasing the temperature to 2°C (simulation of hibernation conditions), this dependency became almost hyperbolic (h = 1.16) and GLK affinity for substrate was reduced (S 0.5 = 23 mM). These parameters for hibernating ground squirrels (body temperature 5°C) at 25°C were found to be practically equal to the corresponding values obtained for GLK from the liver of active animals (h = 1.60, S 0.5 = 9.0 mM, respectively); at 2°C sigmoid character was less expressed and affinity for Glc was drastically decreased (h = 1.20, S 0.5 = 45 mM). The calculations of GLK activity in the liver of hibernating ground squirrels based on enzyme kinetic characteristics and seasonal changes in blood Glc concentrations have shown that GLK activity in the liver of hibernating ground squirrels is decreased about 5500-fold.  相似文献   

4.
Red cells of hibernating species have a higher relative rate of Na+–K+ pump activity at low temperature than the red cells of a mammal with a typical sensitivity to cold. The kinetics of ATP stimulation of the Na+–K+ pump were determined in guinea pig and ground squirrel red cells at different temperatures between 5 and 37°C by measuring ouabain-sensitive K+ influx at different levels of ATP. In guinea pig cells, elevation of intracellular free Mg2+ to 2 mmol·l-1 by use of the divalent cation ionophore A23187 caused the apparent affinity of the pump for ATP to increase with cooling to 20°C, rather than to decrease, as occurs in cells not loaded with Mg2+. In ground squirrel cells raising intracellular free Mg2+ had little effect on apparent affinity of the pump for ATP at 20°C. ATP affinity rose slightly with cooling both in Mg2+-enriched and in control ground squirrel cells. Increased intracellular free Mg2+ in guinea pig cells stimulated Na+–K+ pump activity so that at 20°C the pump rate was the same in the Mg2+-enriched guinea pig and control ground squirrel cells. Pump activity in Mg2+-enriched guinea pig cells at 5°C was significantly improved but still lower than pump activity in control cells from ground squirrel. Thus, loss of affinity of the Na+–K+ pump for ATP that occurs with cooling in cold-sensitive guinea pig red cells can be, at least partially, prevented by elevating cytoplasmic free Mg2+. Conversely, in ground squirrel red cells natural rise of free Mg2+ may in part account for the preservation of the ATP affinity of their Na+–K+ pump with cooling.Abbreviations K m Michaelis-Menten constant for apparent affinity - MOPS 3-(N-morpholino)-propanesulphonic acid - [Mg2+]i intracellular concentration of free Mg2+ - OD optical density - RBC red blood cell(s) - T b body temperature  相似文献   

5.
The citric acid cycle (CAC) is a central metabolic pathway that links carbohydrate, lipid, and amino acid metabolism in the mitochondria and, hence, is a crucial target for metabolic regulation. The α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex (KGDC) is the rate-limiting step of the CAC, the three enzymes of the complex catalyzing the transformation of α-ketoglutarate to succinyl-CoA with the release of CO2 and reduction of NAD to NADH. During hibernation, the metabolic rate of small mammals is suppressed, in part due to reduced body temperature but also active controls that suppress aerobic metabolism. The present study examined KGDC regulation during hibernation in skeletal muscle of the Richardson's ground squirrel (Urocitellus richardsonii). The KGDC was partially purified from skeletal muscle of euthermic and hibernating ground squirrels and kinetic properties were evaluated at 5°, 22°, and 37 °C. KGDC from hibernator muscle at all temperatures compared with euthermic controls exhibited a decreased affinity for CoA as well as reduced activation by Ca2+ ions at 5 °C from both euthermic and hibernating conditions. Co-immunoprecipitation was employed to isolate the E1, E2 and E3 enzymes of the complex (OGDH, DLST, DLD) to allow immunoblot analysis of post-translational modifications (PTMs) of each enzyme. The results showed elevated phospho-tyrosine content on all three enzymes during hibernation as well as increased ADP-ribosylation and succinylation of hibernator OGDH. Taken together these results show that the KGDC is regulated by posttranslational modifications and temperature effects to reorganize enzyme activity and mitochondrial function to aid suppression of mitochondrial activity during hibernation.  相似文献   

6.
Unidirectional active and passive fluxes of 42K and 24Na were measured in red blood cells of ground squirrels (hibernators) and guinea pigs (nonhibernators). As temperature is lowered, "active" (ouabain-sensitive) K influx and Na efflux were more greatly diminished in guinea pig cells than in those of ground squirrels. The fraction of total K influx which is ouabain sensitive in red blood cells of ground squirrels was virtually constant at all temperatures, whereas it decreased abruptly in guinea pig cells as temperature was lowered. All the passive fluxes (i.e., Na influx, K efflux, and ouabain-insensitive K influx and Na efflux) decreased logarithmically with decrease in temperature in both species, but in ground squirrels the temperature dependence (Q10 2.5–3.0) was greater than in guinea pig (Q10 1.6–1.9). Thus, red blood cells of ground squirrel are able to resist loss of K and gain of Na at low temperature both because of relatively greater Na-K transport (than in cells of nonhibernators) and because of reduced passive leakage of ions.  相似文献   

7.
Activity of sensorimotor cortical neurons in the ground squirrel was studied on slices under cooling the incubation medium from 32–34 to 21–26°С. Hypothermia evoked spontaneous firing activity in “silent” neurons and a slight decrease in firing in high-frequency neurons. Changes in the firing rate arose below 27°С and were accompanied by a fall in the spike amplitude. The intensity of hypothermic and post-hypothermic changes in ground squirrels was lower than in guinea pig sensorimotor cortical neurons recorded under the same conditions. In ground squirrels, most hypothermia-resistant were high-frequency (more than 8 spikes/s) neurons, which accounted for 45% of the recorded, while in guinea pigs high-frequency neurons occurred only in 15% of records. By the diameter of cell bodies, the population of sensorimotor cortical neurons was more homogeneous in ground squirrels than in guinea pigs. It is suggested that specific hypothermic changes in sensorimotor cortical neurons of ground squirrels relate to a lower density of K+ channels in their plasma membranes, because in the mammalian nervous system the latter open below 27°С due to thermal limitations of the M-cholinergic reaction which blocks these channels.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Anti-L serum prepared by immunization of a high-potassium-type (HK) (blood type MM) sheep with blood from a low-potassium-type (LK) (blood type ML) sheep contained an antibody which stimulated four- to sixfold K+-pump influx in LK (LL) sheep red cells. In long-termin vitro incubation experiments, LK sheep red cells sensitized with anti-L showed a net increase in K+ after two days of incubation at 37°C, whereas HK-nonimmune (NI)-serum-treated control cells lost K+. The antibody could be absorbed by LK (LL) sheep red cells but not by HK sheep red cells. Kinetic experiments showed that the concentration of external K+ ([K+]0) required to produce halfmaximum stimulation of the pump ([Na+]0=0, replaced by Mg++) was the same (0.25 mM) in L-antiserum-treated or untreated LK cells. LK cells with different [K+]i (Na+ replacement) were prepared by the p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate (PCMBS) method. At [K+]0=5 mM, pump influx decreased as [K+]i increased from 1 to 70 mM in L-antiserum-treated LK cells, whereas LK cells treated with HK-NI-serum ceased to pump at [K+]i=35 mM. Exposure to anti-L serum produced an almost twofold increase in the number of pump sites of LK cells as measured by the binding of tritiated ouabain by LK sheep red cells. These findings indicate that the formation of a complex between the L-antigen and its antibody stimulates active transport in LK sheep red cells both by changing the kinetics of the pump and by increasing the number of pump sites.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract Effects of temperature on the ionic relations and energy metabolism of Chara corallina were investigated. Measurements were made of the ionic content, tracer ion fluxes, and photosynthetic and dark CO2 fixation in isolated cells, and of O2 exchange in photosynthesis and respiration in isolated shoot apices. The total intracellular concentration of K+, Na+ and Cl? was the same in cells held for 5 days in non-growing medium at 15°C (the growth temperature) as in those held at 25°C or 5°C. The tracer influx in the light of all ions tested (Rb+, Na+, CH3NH3+, Cl? and H2PO4?) was lower at 5°C than at 15°C in experiments in which cells were subjected to 5°C for less than 24 h in toto. The influx at 25°C was greater than that at 15°C for H2PO?4, there was no difference between the two temperatures for Na+, while the influx at 25°C was less than that at 15°C for Cl?, Rb+ and CH3NH3+ For Cl? and H2PO?4 similar results were found in later experiments with cells grown at 20—23°C. Photosynthetic CO2 fixation and O2 evolution, and respiratory O2 uptake, are greater at 25°C, and lower at 5°C, than they are at the growth temperature of 15°C. In longer-term pretreatments at the different temperatures, tracer Cl? influx at 15°C and particularly at 25°C were lower than in short-term experiments, while the influx at 5°C was higher. It was concluded from these experiments, and from previous data on H+ free energy differences across the plasmalemma, that (1) the maintenance of internal ion concentrations involves a close balancing of influx and efflux of K+, Na+ and Cl? at all experimental temperatures; (2) the regulation of the tracer fluxes of the ions is kinetic rather than thermodynamic and (3) that the tracer fluxes at low temperatures are not restricted by the rate at which respiration or photosynthesis can supply energy to them.  相似文献   

10.
The glia–neuron interactions were analyzed in the sensory-motor cortex of guinea pigs and ground squirrels (Spermophilus undulatus) during the active summer months. The glial cells were more concentrated in close proximity (15–25 μm) to neurons (38% in guinea pigs and 22.4% in ground squirrels). A more concentrated distribution of glial cells might be very necessary for spontaneous inactive nerve cells (37.2% in guinea pigs and 23% in ground squirrels), since these neurons are associated with the highest energy demand during their functioning and are most susceptible to disturbances of ion homeostasis. The network structure of glia and the close contact between glial cells and brain capillaries provide additional energy for neurons and stabilize the ion balance in the extracellular medium. Glial density in the sensory-motor cortex of ground squirrels is 3 times higher than that in the cortex of guinea pigs. The high content of glial cells in the ground-squirrel cortex is the most important protective factor for survival of animals during long-term hibernation, when the diffusion of K+ ions from nerve cells drastically increases due to the high temperature sensitivity of the M-cholinergic response.  相似文献   

11.
Human lymphocytes were equilibrated for 48 hours at 5-6 mM K+ex over a range of temperatures between 0 and 37°C, and at 5°C over a range of external K+ levels between 0 and 32 mM. Cell K+ and Na+ contents are normal between 37 and 10′. Below 10′ there is a critical thermal transition in ion contents centering around 3°C. This and the steep sigmoidal isotherms of K+ and Na+ at 5°C confirm the cooperative nature of ion exchange. At 0′, cell K+ is maintained at a concentration that is seven to eight times that of the external medium. Isotopic K+ influx shows smaller, rapidly-exchanging, and larger, slowly-exchanging fractions. The latter, which correspond to the saturable, sigmoidal components of cell K+, are slowed by decreasing temperature. Although there is a critical temperature transition of K+-Na+ exchange, there is no corresponding transition for isotopic K+ exchange, which has an activation energy of 11.6 kcal/mole. The combined ion content and flux data are readily understood by reference to two major concepts of the association-induction hypothesis: that of rapid solute exclusion from cell water existing in a state of polarized multilayers, and that of solute accumulation limited by adsorption onto and desorption from fixed anionic sites that interact with one another in a critical, cooperative fashion.  相似文献   

12.
Harmaline inhibits K+ influx into primary cell cultures of ground squirrel kidneys to a greater extent than either ouabain or furosemide. A concentration of 200 μM harmaline was required to inhibit half of the total K+ influx; this effect was also seen at low temperature (5°C), and in another species (hamster). Although kinetic analysis of K+ influx indicates that harmaline does not compete with extracellular K+, harmaline did reduce the binding of [3H]ouabain to the cells. K+ efflux was also reduced. Therefore, harmaline may inhibit the furosemide-sensitive Na+/K+ cotransport system as well as the ouabain-sensitive Na+/K+ pump.  相似文献   

13.
《Cryobiology》2013,66(3):235-241
Metabolic signaling coordinates the transition by hibernating mammals from euthermia into profound torpor. Organ-specific responses by activated p38 mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) are known to contribute to this transition. Therefore, we hypothesized that the MAPK-activated protein kinase-2 (MAPKAPK2), a downstream target of p38 MAPK, would also be active in establishing the torpid state. Kinetic parameters of MAPKAPK2 from skeletal muscle of Richardson’s ground squirrels, Spermophilus richardsonii, were analyzed using a fluorescence assay. MAPKAPK2 activity was 27.4 ± 1.27 pmol/min/mg in muscle from euthermic squirrels and decreased by ∼63% during cold torpor, while total protein levels were unchanged (as assessed by immunoblotting). In vitro treatment of MAPKAPK2 via stimulation of endogenous phosphatases and addition of commercial alkaline phosphatase decreased enzyme activity to only ∼3–5% of its original value in muscle extracts from both euthermic and hibernating squirrels suggesting that posttranslational modification suppresses MAPKAPK2 during the transition from euthermic to torpid states. Enzyme S0.5 and nH values for ATP and peptide substrates changed significantly between euthermia and torpor, and also between assays at 22 versus 10 °C but, kinetic parameters were actually closely conserved when values for the euthermic enzyme at 22 °C were directly compared with the hibernator enzyme at 10 °C. Arrhenius plots showed significantly different activation energies of 40.8 ± 0.7 and 54.3 ± 2.7 kJ/mol for the muscle enzyme from euthermic versus torpid animals, respectively but MAPKAPK2 from the two physiological states showed no difference in sensitivity to urea denaturation. Overall, the results show that total activity of MAPKAPK2 is in fact reduced, despite previous findings of p38 MAPK activation, and kinetic parameters are altered when ground squirrels enter torpor but protein stability is not apparently changed. The data suggest that MAPKAPK2 suppression may have a significant role in the differential regulation of muscle target proteins when ground squirrels enter torpor.  相似文献   

14.
Changes in fluorescence intensity of thiodicarbocyanine, DiS-C3(5), were correlated with direct microelectrode potential measurements in red blood cells from Amphiuma means and applied qualitatively to evaluate the effects of extracellular Ca2+, K+ and pH on the membrane potential of human red cells. Increasing extracellular [Ca2+] from 1.8 to 15 mM causes a K+-dependent hyperpolarization and decrease in fluorescence intensity in Amphiuma red cells. Both the hyperpolarization and fluorescence change disappear when the temperature is raised from 17 to 37°C. No change in fluorescence intensity is observed in human red cells with comparable increase in extracellular Ca2+ in the temperature range 5–37°C. Increasing the extracellular pH, however, causes human red cells to respond to an increase in extracellular Ca2+ with a significant but temporary loss in fluorescence intensity. This effect is blocked by EGTA, quinine or by increasing extracellular [K+], indicating that at elevated extracellular pH, human erythrocytes respond to an increase in extracellular Ca2+ with an opening of K+ channels and associated hyperpolarization of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

15.
In two species of hibernators, hamsters and ground squirrels, erythrocytes were collected by heart puncture and the K content of the cells of hibernating individuals was compared with that of awake individuals. The K concentration of hamsters did not decline significantly during each bout of hibernation (maximum period of 5 days) but in long-term bouts in ground squirrels (i.e. more than 5 days) the K concentration of cells dropped significantly. When ground squirrels were allowed to rewarm the K content of cells rose toward normal values within a few hours. Erythrocytes of both hamsters and ground squirrels lose K more slowly than those of guinea pigs (nonhibernators) when stored in vitro for up to 10 days at 5°C. In ground squirrels the rate of loss of K during storage is the same as in vivo during hibernation, and stored cells taken from hibernating ground squirrels also lose K at the same rate. The rate of loss of K from guinea pig cells corresponded with that predicted from passive diffusion unopposed by transport. The actual rate of loss of K from ground squirrel cells was slower than such a predicted rate but corresponded with it when glucose was omitted from the storage medium or ouabain was added to it. Despite the slight loss of K that may occur in hibernation, therefore, the cells of hibernators are more cold adapted than those of a nonhibernating mammal, and this adaptation depends in part upon active transport.  相似文献   

16.
Arousal from hibernation requires thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue, a process that is stimulated by β-adrenergic signals, leading to a rise in intracellular 3′,5′-cyclic adenosine monophosphate AMP (cAMP) and activating cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) to phosphorylate a suite of target proteins and activate lipolysis and uncoupled respiration. To determine whether specific adaptations (perhaps temperature-dependent) facilitate PKA kinetic properties or protein-phosphorylating ability, the catalytic subunit of PKA (PKAc) from interscapular brown adipose of the ground squirrel Spermophilus richardsonii, was purified (final specific activity = 279 nmol phosphate transferred per min per mg protein) and characterized. Physical properties of PKAc included a molecular weight of 41 kDa and an isoelectric point of 7.8 ± 0.08. A change in assay temperature from a euthermic value (37 °C) to one typical of hibernating body temperature (5 °C) had numerous significant effects on ground squirrel PKAc including: (a) pH optimum rose from 6.8 at 37 °C to 8.7 at 5 °C, (b) Km values at 37 °C for Mg.ATP (49.2±3.4 M) and for two phosphate acceptors, Kemptide (50.0±5.5 M) and Histone IIA (0.41 ± 0.05 mg/ml) decreased by 53%, 80% and 51%, respectively, at 5 °C, and (c) inhibition by KCl, NaCl and NH4Cl was reduced. However, temperature change had little or no effect on Km values of rabbit PKAc, suggesting a specific positive thermal modulation of the hibernator enzyme. Arrhenius plots also differed for the two enzymes; ground squirrel PKAc showed a break in the Arrhenius relationship at 9 °C and activation energies that were 29.1 ± 1.0 kJ/mol for temperatures >9 °C and 2.3-fold higher at 68.1 ± 2.1 kJ/mol for temperatures <9 °C, whereas the rabbit enzyme showed a breakpoint at 17 °C with a 13-fold higher activation energy over the lower temperature range. However, fluorescence analysis of PKAc in the absence of substrates, showed a linear change in fluorescence intensity and wavelength of maximal fluorescence over the entire temperature range; this suggested that the protein conformational change indicated by the break in the Arrhenius plot was substrate-related. Temperature change also affected the Hill coefficient for cAMP dissociation of the ground squirrel PKA holoenzyme which rose from 1.12 ± 0.18 at 37 °C to 2.19 ± 0.07 at 5 °C, making the release of catalytic subunits at low temperature much more responsive to small changes in cAMP levels. Analysis of PKAc function via in vitro incubations of extracts of ground squirrel brown adipose with 32P-ATP + cAMP in the presence versus absence of a PKA inhibitor, also revealed major differences in the patterns of phosphoproteins, both between euthermic and hibernating animals as well as between 37 and 5 °C incubation temperatures; this suggests that there are both different targets of PKAc phosphorylation in the hibernating animal and that temperature affects the capacity of PKAc to phosphorylate different targets. Both of these observations, plus the species-specific and temperature-dependent changes in ground squirrel PKAc kinetic properties, suggest differential control of the enzyme in vivo at euthermic versus hibernating body temperatures in a manner that would facilitate a rapid and large activation of the enzyme during arousal from torpor. Accepted: 10 July 1998  相似文献   

17.
(1) Contrary to what has usually been assumed, (Na+ + K+)-ATPase slowly hydrolyses AdoPP[NH]P in the presence of Na+ + Mg2+ to ADP-NH2 and Pi. The activity is ouabain-sensitive and is not detected in the absence of either Mg2+ or Na2+. The specific activity of the Na+ + Mg2+ dependent AdoPP[NH]P hydrolysis at 37°C and pH 7.0 is 4% of that for ATP under identical conditions and only 0.07% of that for ATP in the presence of K+. The activity is not stimulated by K+, nor can K+ replace Na+ in its stimulatory action. This suggests that phosphorylation is rate-limiting. Stimulation by Na+ is positively cooperative with a Hill coefficient of 2.4; half-maximal stimulation occurs at 5–9 mM. The Km value for AdoPP[NH]P is 17 μM. At 0°C and 21°C the specific activity is 2 and 14%, respectively, of that at 37°C. AMP, ADP and AdoPP[CH2]P are not detectably hydrolysed by (Na+ + K+)-ATPase in the presence of Na+ + Mg2+. (2) In addition, AdoPP[NH]P undergoes spontaneous, non-enzymatic hydrolysis at pH 7.0 with rate constants at 0, 21 and 37°C of 0.0006, 0.006 and 0.07 h?1, respectively. This effect is small compared to the effect of enzymatic hydrolysis under comparable conditions. Mg2+ present in excess of AdoPP[NH]P reduces the rate constant of the spontaneous hydrolysis to 0.005 h?1 at 37°C, indicating that the MgAdoPP[NH]P complex is virtually stable to spontaneous hydrolysis, as is also the case for its enzymatic hydrolysis. (3) A practical consequence of these findings is that AdoPP[NH]P binding studies in the presence of Na+ + Mg2+ with enzyme concentrations in the mg/ml range are not possible at temperatures above 0°C. On the other hand, determination of affinity in the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase reaction by competition with ATP at low protein concentrations (μg/ml range) remains possible without significant hydrolysis of AdoPP[NH]P even at 37°C.  相似文献   

18.
The patch-clamp technique of cell-attached and inside-out configurations was used to study the single potassium channels in isolated guinea pig hepatocytes. The single potassium channels in isolated guinea pig hepatocytes were recorded at different K+ concentrations. A linear single-channel current-voltage relationship was obtained at the voltage range of -80 to -20 mV with slope conductance of 70 ± 6 pS (n = 10). Under symmetrical high K+ concentration of 148 mM in the cell-attached patch membrane, the I-V curve exhibited a mild inward rectification at potentials positive to +20 mV. The values of reversal potential was +5 ± 2 mV (n = 10). When the external potassium concentration ([K+]0) was decreased to 74 mM and 20 mM, the slope conductance was decreased to 48 ± 2 pS (n = 4) and 24 ± 3 pS (n = 3), respectively. The reversal potential was changed by 58 mV for a tenfold change in [K+]0, indicating that this channel was highly selective for K+. Open probabilities (P0) of the channel were 73-93% without apparent voltage dependence. The distributions of open time of the channels were fitted to two exponentials, while those of closed time were fitted to three exponentials, exhibiting no voltage dependence. The success rate of K+ channel activity to be recorded was 28% at room temperature, and there were no increases in the success rate nor in the channel opening probabilities at a temperature of 34-36°C. P0 in inside-out patches was not changed by application of 1 μM Ca2+ nor 1 mM Mg2+ to the internal side of patch membranes. It is concluded that a novel type of the K+ channels in guinea pig hepatocytes had different properties of slope conductance, channel kinetics, and sensitivity to [Ca2+]i, from those in other species. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) was purified to homogeneity from the liver of euthermic (37 degrees C body temperature) and hibernating (torpid, 5 degrees C body temperature) Richardson's ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii). SDS-PAGE yielded a subunit molecular weight of 59.5+/-2 kDa for both enzymes, but reverse phase and size exclusion HPLC showed native molecular weights of 335+/-5 kDa for euthermic and 320+/-5 kDa for hibernator GDH. Euthermic and hibernator GDH differed substantially in apparent Km values for glutamate, NH4+, and alpha-ketoglutarate, as well as in Ka and IC50 values for nucleotide and ion activators and inhibitors. Kinetic properties of each enzyme were differentially affected by assay temperature (37 versus 5 degrees C). For example, the Km for alpha-ketoglutarate of euthermic GDH was higher at 5 degrees C (3.66+/-0.34 mM) than at 37 degrees C (0.10+/-0.01 mM), whereas hibernator GDH had a higher affinity for alpha-ketoglutarate at 5 degrees C (Km was 0.98+/-0.08 mM at 37 degrees C and 0.43+/-0.02 mM at 5 degrees C). Temperature effects on Ka ADP values of the enzymes followed a similar pattern; GTP inhibition was strongest with the euthermic enzyme at 37 degrees C and weakest with hibernator GDH at 5 degrees C. Entry into hibernation leads to stable changes in the properties of ground squirrel liver GDH that allow the enzyme to function optimally at the prevailing body temperature.  相似文献   

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