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.
Paramecium tetraurelia responds to extracellular GTP (≥ 10 nm) with repeated episodes of prolonged backward swimming. These backward swimming events cause repulsion from the stimulus and are the behavioral consequence of an oscillating membrane depolarization. Ion substitution experiments showed that either Mg2+ or Na+ could support these responses in wild-type cells, with increasing concentrations of either cation increasing the extent of backward swimming. Applying GTP to cells under voltage clamp elicited oscillating inward currents with a periodicity similar to that of the membrane-potential and behavioral responses. These currents were also Mg2+- and Na+-dependent, suggesting that GTP acts through Mg2+-specific (I Mg) and Na+-specific (I Na) conductances that have been described previously in Paramecium. This suggestion is strengthened by the finding that Mg2+ failed to support normal behavioral or electrophysiological responses to GTP in a mutant that specifically lacks I Mg (``eccentric'), while Na+ failed to support GTP responses in ``fast-2,' a mutant that specifically lacks I Na. Both mutants responded normally to GTP if the alternative cation was provided. As I Mg and I Na are both Ca2+-dependent currents, the characteristic GTP behavior could result from oscillations in intracellular Ca2+ concentration. Indeed, applying GTP to cells in the absence of either Mg2+ or Na+ revealed a minor inward current with a periodicity similar to that of the depolarizations. This current persisted when known voltage-dependent Ca2+ currents were blocked pharmacologically or genetically, which implies that it may represent the activation of a novel purinergic-receptor–coupled Ca2+ conductance. Received: 28 October 1996/Revised: 24 December 1996  相似文献   

2.
A Ca2+-activated (I Cl,Ca) and a swelling-activated anion current (I Cl,vol) were investigated in Ehrlich ascites tumor cells using the whole cell patch clamp technique. Large, outwardly rectifying currents were activated by an increase in the free intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+] i ), or by hypotonic exposure of the cells, respectively. The reversal potential of both currents was dependent on the extracellular Cl concentration. I Cl,Ca current density increased with increasing [Ca2+] i , and this current was abolished by lowering [Ca2+] i to <1 nm using 1,2-bis-(o-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N′,N′-tetra-acetic acid (BAPTA). In contrast, activation of I Cl,vol did not require an increase in [Ca2+] i . The kinetics of I Cl,Ca and I Cl,vol were different: at depolarized potentials, I Cl,Ca as activated in a [Ca2+] i - and voltage-dependent manner, while at hyperpolarized potentials, the current was deactivated. In contrast, I Cl,vol exhibited time- and voltage-dependent deactivation at depolarized potentials and reactivation at hyperpolarized potentials. The deactivation of I Cl,vol was dependent on the extracellular Mg2+ concentration. The anion permeability sequence for both currents was I > Cl > gluconate. I Cl,Ca was inhibited by niflumic acid (100 μm), 5-Nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino)benzoic acid (NPPB, 100 μm) and 4,4′-diisothiocyano-2,2′-stilbenedisulfonic acid (DIDS, 100 μm), niflumic acid being the most potent inhibitor. In contrast, I Cl,vol was unaffected by niflumic acid (100 μm), but abolished by tamoxifen (10 μm). Thus, in Ehrlich cells, separate chloride currents, I Cl,Ca and I Cl,vol, are activated by an increase in [Ca2+] i and by cell swelling, respectively. Received: 12 November 1997/Revised: 5 February 1998  相似文献   

3.
Intracellular dialysis with the solution containing the G protein activator, AlF complex, induced an inward nonselective cation current (I NS) at −55 mV in chromaffin cells. Amplitudes of I NS induced by dialysis with ATP-free AlF solutions progressively diminished as cells were pretreated with cyanide, a mitochondrial inhibitor. After a 10-min pretreatment, generation of I NS by the AlF complex depended on exogenous ATP delivered from pipette solution. The relationship between amplitudes of I NS and concentrations of MgATP was well expressed by a rectangular hyperbola with an EC50 of 0.265 mm. This result suggests that the cyanide treatment almost depleted ATP near the plasma membrane. On the other hand, a similar cyanide treatment of adrenal medullary preparations did not induce a marked decrease in cellular ATP content. GTP, ITP, or UTP could not substitute for ATP in generation of I NS by the AlF complex. Similarly, the substitution of ATP with non- or poorly hydrolyzable ATP analogues did not aid in generating I NS. Bath application of the kinase inhibitor, H-7 (100 μm), suppressed AlF-induced I NS in a manner depending on intracellular Mg2+. We conclude that ATP is a prerequisite for generation of I NS as a phosphoryl donor and that mitochondria is the main source of ATP. Received: 17 April 1996/Revised: 26 July 1996  相似文献   

4.
The reactive disulfide 4,4′-dithiodipyridine (4,4′DTDP) was added to single cardiac ryanodine receptors (RyRs) in lipid bilayers. The activity of native RyRs, with cytoplasmic (cis) [Ca2+] of 10−7 m (in the absence of Mg2+ and ATP), increased within ∼1 min of addition of 1 mm 4,4′-DTDP, and then irreversibly ceased 5 to 6 min after the addition. Channels, inhibited by either 1 mm cis Mg2+ (10−7 m cis Ca2+) or by 10 mm cis Mg2+ (10−3 m cis Ca2+), or activated by 4 mm ATP (10−7 m cis Ca2+), also responded to 1 mm cis 4,4′-DTDP with activation and then loss of activity. P o and mean open time (T o ) of the maximally activated channels were lower in the presence of Mg2+ than in its absence, and the number of openings within the long time constant components of the open time distribution was reduced. In contrast to the reduced activation by 1 mm 4,4′-DTDP in channels inhibited by Mg2+, and the previously reported enhanced activation by 4,4′-DTDP in channels activated by Ca2+ or caffeine (Eager et al., 1997), the activation produced by 1 mm cis 4,4′-DTDP was the same in the presence and absence of ATP. These results suggest that there is a physical interaction between the ATP binding domain of the cardiac RyR and the SH groups whose oxidation leads to channel activation. Received: 8 September 1997/Revised: 20 January 1998  相似文献   

5.
To study K+ channels in the basolateral membrane of chloride-secreting epithelia, rat tracheal epithelial monolayers were cultured on permeable filters and mounted into an Ussing chamber system. The mucosal membrane was permeabilized with nystatin (180 μg/ml) in the symmetrical high K+ (145 mm) Ringer solution. During measurement of the macroscopic K+ conductance properties of the basolateral membrane under a transepithelial voltage clamp, we detected at least two types of K+ currents: one is an inwardly rectifying K+ current and the other is a slowly activating outwardly rectifying K+ current. The inwardly rectifying K+ current is inhibited by Ba2+. The slowly activating K+ current was potentiated by cAMP and inhibited by clofilium, phorbol 12-myristae 13-acetate (PMA) and lowering temperature. This is consistent with the biophysical characteristics of I SK channel. RT-PCR analysis revealed the presence of I SK cDNA in the rat trachea epithelia. Although 0.1 mm Ba2+ only had minimal affect on short-circuit current (I sc) induced by cAMP in intact epithelia, 0.1 mm clofilium strongly inhibited it. These results indicate that I SK might be important for maintaining cAMP-induced chloride secretion in the rat trachea epithelia. Received: 1 March 1996/Revised: 5 August 1996  相似文献   

6.
Chronic KCl-induced depolarization of Paramecium tetraurelia enhances Ca2+-dependent backward swimming behavior over a period of 8–24 hr. Here, we investigated the electrophysiological mechanisms underlying this adaptive phenomenon using voltage-clamp techniques. Cells that had been adapted to 20 mm KCl showed several significant changes in the properties of the Ca2+ current that mediates ciliary reversal in Paramecium (I Ca ), including a positive shift in voltage sensitivity and a significant slowing of inactivation. In seeking an explanation for these changes, we examined the effects of chronic depolarization on mutants that do not normally express a Ca2+ current or swim backward. Surprisingly, pawn B mutant cells slowly regained the ability to reverse their cilia during KCl exposure with a time course that mirrored behavioral adaptation of the wild type. This behavior was accompanied by expression of a novel Ca2+ current (I QUEEN ) whose voltage sensitivity was shifted positive with respect to the wild-type Ca2+ current and that was slow to inactivate. Coincidental expression of I QUEEN in the wild type during adaptation would readily explain the observed changes in I Ca kinetics. We also examined the effects of chronic depolarization on Dancer, a mutant suggested previously to have an I Ca inactivation defect. The mutant phenotype could be suppressed or exaggerated greatly by manipulating extracellular KCl concentration, suggesting that Dancer lesion instead causes inappropriate regulation of I QUEEN . Received: 23 April 1999/Revised: 29 June 1999  相似文献   

7.
We have obtained evidence that the Ca2+-selective current activated by Ca2+ store depletion (Ca2+ release-activated Ca2+ current; I crac) in Jurkat T lymphocytes is augmented in a time-dependent manner by Ca2+ itself. Whole cell patch clamp experiments employed high cytosolic Ca2+-buffering conditions to passively deplete Ca2+ stores. Rapidly switching to nominally Ca2+-free extracellular buffer instantaneously reduced I crac measured at −100 mV to leak current level. Unexpectedly, readmission of 2 mm Ca2+ instantaneously restored only 38 ± 5% (mean ±sem; n = 9) of the full I crac amplitude. The remainder reappeared in a monotonic time-dependent manner over 10 to 20 sec. Rapid vs. slow intracellular Ca2+ chelators did not alter this process, and inorganic I crac blockers did not regenerate it, arguing against an intracellular site of action. The effect was specific to Ca2+: introduction of the permeant ions, Ba2+ or Sr2+, failed to invoke time-dependent I crac reappearance. Moreover, equimolar substitution of Ba2+ for Ca2+ initially produced Ba2+ current of similar magnitude to the full Ca2+ current, but the Ba2+ current decayed monotonically to <50% of its initial amplitude in <20 sec. Conversely, return to Ca2+ produced a time-dependent increase in I crac to its larger Ca2+ permeation level. Thus Ca2+ appears to selectively promote a reversible transition of I crac that results in larger current flux, and at least partially explains the selectivity of this current for Ca2+ over other divalent ions. Received: 30 August 1995/Revised: 7 November 1995  相似文献   

8.
The relationship between relative cell volume and time-dependent changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+] i ) during exposure to hypotonicity was characterized in SV-40 transformed rabbit corneal epithelial cells (tRCE) (i). Light scattering measurements revealed rapid initial swelling with subsequent 97% recovery of relative cell volume (characteristic time (τ vr ) was 5.9 min); (ii). Fura2-fluorescence single-cell imaging showed that [Ca2+] i initially rose by 216% in 30 sec with subsequent return to near baseline level after another 100 sec. Both relative cell volume recovery and [Ca2+] i transients were inhibited by either: (a) Ca2+-free medium; (b) 5 mm Ni2+ (inhibitor of plasmalemma Ca2+ influx); (c) 10 μm cyclopiazonic acid, CPA (which causes depletion of intracellular Ca2+ content); or (d) 100 μm ryanodine (inhibitor of Ca2+ release from intracellular stores). To determine the temporal relationship between an increased plasmalemma Ca2+ influx and the emptying of intracellular Ca2+ stores during the [Ca2+] i transients, Mn2+ quenching of fura2-fluorescence was quantified. In the presence of CPA, hypotonic challenge increased plasmalemma Mn2+ permeability 6-fold. However, Mn2+ permeability remained unchanged during exposure to either: 1.100 μm ryanodine; 2.10 μm CPA and 100 μm ryanodine. This report for the first time documents the time dependence of the components of the [Ca2+] i transient required for a regulatory volume decrease (RVD). The results show that ryanodine sensitive Ca2+ release from an intracellular store leads to a subsequent increase in plasmalemma Ca2+ influx, and that both are required for cells to undergo RVD. Received: 7 November 1996/Revised: 6 January 1997  相似文献   

9.
Large Conductance Ca2+-Activated K+ Channels in Human Meningioma Cells   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Cells from ten human meningiomas were electrophysiologically characterized in both living tissue slices and primary cultures. In whole cells, depolarization to voltages higher than +80 mV evoked a large K+ outward current, which could be blocked by iberiotoxin (100 nm) and TEA (half blocking concentration IC50= 5.3 mm). Raising the internal Ca2+ from 10 nm to 2 mm shifted the voltage of half-maximum activation (V 1/2) of the K+ current from +106 to +4 mV. Respective inside-out patch recordings showed a voltage- and Ca2+-activated (BK Ca ) K+ channel with a conductance of 296 pS (130 mm K+ at both sides of the patch). V 1/2 of single-channel currents was +6, −12, −46, and −68 mV in the presence of 1, 10, 100, and 1000 μm Ca2+, respectively, at the internal face of the patch. In cell-attached patches the open probability (P o ) of BK Ca channels was nearly zero at potentials below +80 mV, matching the activation threshold for whole-cell K+ currents with 10 nm Ca2+ in the pipette. Application of 20 μm cytochalasin D increased P o of BK Ca channels in cell-attached patches within minutes. These data suggest that the activation of BK Ca channels in meningioma cells does not only depend on voltage and internal Ca2+ but is also controlled by the cytoskeleton. Received 18 June 1999/Revised: 18 January 2000  相似文献   

10.
The modulation of I A K+ current by ten trivalent lanthanide (Ln3+) cations spanning the series with ionic radii ranging from 0.99 ? to 1.14 ? was characterized by the whole-cell patch clamp technique in bovine adrenal zona fasciculata (AZF) cells. Each of the ten Ln3+s reduced I A amplitude measured at +20 mV in a concentration-dependent manner. Smaller Ln3+s were the most potent and half-maximally effective concentrations (EC50s) varied inversely with ionic radius for the larger elements. Estimation of EC50s yielded the following potency sequence: Lu3+ (EC50= 3.0 μm) ≈ Yb3+ (EC50= 2.7 μm) > Er3+ (EC50= 3.7 μm) ≥ Dy3+ (EC50= 4.7 μm) > Gd3+ (EC50= 6.7 μm) ≈ Sm3+ (EC50= 6.9 μm) > Nd3+ (EC50= 11.2 μm) > Pr3+ (EC50= 22.3 μm) > Ce3+ (EC50= 28.0 μm) > La3+ (EC50= 33.7 μm). Ln3+s altered selected voltage-dependent gating and kinetic parameters of I A with a potency and order of effectiveness that paralleled the reduction of I A amplitude. Ln3+s markedly slowed activation kinetics and shifted the voltage-dependence of I A gating such that activation and steady-state inactivation occurred at more depolarized potentials. In contrast, Ln3+s did not measurably alter inactivation or deactivation kinetics and only slightly slowed kinetics of inactivated channels returning to the closed state. Replacement of external Ca2+ with Mg2+ had no effect on the concentration-dependent inhibition of I A by Ln3+s. In contrast to their action on I A K+ current, Ln3+s inhibited T-type Ca2+ currents in AZF cells without slowing activation kinetics. These results indicate that Ln3+ modulate I A K+ channels through binding to a site on I A channels located within the electric field but which is not specific for Ca2+. They are consistent with a model where Ln3+ binding to negative charges on the gating apparatus alters the voltage-dependence and kinetics of channel opening. Ln3+s modulate transient K+ and Ca2+ currents by two fundamentally different mechanisms. Received: 21 January 1997/Revised: 3 April 1998  相似文献   

11.
The effect of extracellular cation concentration and membrane voltage on the current carried by outward-rectifying K+ channels was examined in stomatal guard cells of Vicia faba L. Intact guard cells were impaled with double-barrelled microelectrodes and the K+ current was monitored under voltage clamp in 0.1–30 mm K+ and in equivalent concentrations of Rb+, Cs+ and Na+. From a conditioning voltage of −200 mV, clamp steps to voltages between −150 and +50 mV in 0.1 mm K+ activated current through outward-rectifying K+ channels (I K, out) at the plasma membrane in a voltage-dependent fashion. Increasing [K+] o shifted the voltage-sensitivity of I K, out in parallel with the equilibrium potential for K+ across the membrane. A similar effect of [K+] o was evident in the kinetics of I K, out activation and deactivation, as well as the steady-state conductance- (g K ) voltage relations. Linear conductances, determined as a function of the conditioning voltage from instantaneous I-V curves, yielded voltages for half-maximal conductance near −130 mV in 0.1 mm K+, −80 mV in 1.0 mm K+, and −20 mV in 10 mm K+. Similar data were obtained with Rb+ and Cs+, but not with Na+, consistent with the relative efficacy of cation binding under equilibrium conditions (K+≥ Rb+ > Cs+ > > Na+). Changing Ca2+ or Mg2+ concentrations outside between 0.1 and 10 mm was without effect on the voltage-dependence of g K or on I K, out activation kinetics, although 10 mm [Ca2+] o accelerated current deactivation at voltages negative of −75 mV. At any one voltage, increasing [K+] o suppressed g K completely, an action that showed significant cooperativity with a Hill coefficient of 2. The apparent affinity for K+ was sensitive to voltage, varying from 0.5 to 20 mm with clamp voltages near −100 to 0 mV, respectively. These, and additional data indicate that extracellular K+ acts as a ligand and alters the voltage-dependence of I K, out gating; the results implicate K+-binding sites accessible from the external surface of the membrane, deep within the electrical field, but distinct from the channel pore; and they are consistent with a serial 4-state reaction-kinetic model for channel gating in which binding of two K+ ions outside affects the distribution between closed states of the channel. Received: 27 November 1996/Revised: 4 March 1997  相似文献   

12.
Smooth muscle cells isolated from the secondary and tertiary branches of the rabbit mesenteric artery contain large Ca2+-dependent channels. In excised patches with symmetrical (140 mm) K+ solutions, these channels had an average slope conductance of 235 ± 3 pS, and reversed in direction at −6.1 ± 0.4 mV. The channel showed K+ selectivity and its open probability (P o ) was voltage-dependent. Iberiotoxin (50 nm) reversibly decreased P o , whereas tetraethylammonium (TEA, at 1 mm) reduced the unitary current amplitude. Apamin (200 nm) had no effect. The channel displayed sublevels around 1/3 and 1/2 of the mainstate level. The effect of [Ca2+] on P o was studied and data fitted to Boltzmann relationships. In 0.1, 0.3, 1.0 and 10 μm Ca2+, V 1/2 was 77.1 ± 5.3 (n= 18), 71.2 ± 4.8 (n= 16), 47.3 ± 10.1 (n= 11) and −14.9 ± 10.1 mV (n= 6), respectively. Values of k obtained in 1 and 10 μm [Ca2+] were significantly larger than that observed in 0.1 μm [Ca2+]. With 30 μm NS 1619 (a BKCa channel activator), V 1/2 values were shifted by 39 mV to the left (hyperpolarizing direction) and k values were not affected. TEA applied intracellularly, reduced the unitary current amplitude with a K d of 59 mm. In summary, BKCa channels show a particularly weak sensitivity to intracellular TEA and they also display large variation in V 1/2 and k. These findings suggest the possibility that different types (isoforms) of BKCa channels may exist in this vascular tissue. Received: 22 December 1997/Revised: 27 March 1998  相似文献   

13.
The presence and localization of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels of L-type were investigated in intestinal cells of the Atlantic cod. Enterocytes were loaded with the fluorescent Ca2+ probe, fure-2/AM and changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentrations ([Ca2+] i ) were measured, in cell suspensions, in the presence of high potassium levels (100 mm), BAY K-8644 (5 μm), nifedipine (5 μm) or ω-conotoxin (1 μm). L-type Ca2+ channels were visualized on intestinal sections using the fluorescent dihydropyridine (-)-STBodipy. Depolarization of the plasma membrane produced a rapid (within 5 sec) and transient (at basal levels after 21 sec) increase in [Ca2+] i . BAY K-8644 increased the [Ca2+] i by 7.2%. Cells in a Ca2+-free buffer increased [Ca2+] i after addition of 10 mm Ca2+, and this increase was abolished by nifedipine in both depolarizing and normal medium but not by ω-conotoxin. Single cell experiments using video microscopy revealed that enterocytes remained polarized several hours after preparation and that the Ca2+ entry and extrusion occurred at specific and different regions of the enterocyte outer membrane. Fluorescent staining of L-type Ca2+ channels in the intestinal mucosa showed the most intense staining at the brushborder membrane. These results demonstrate the presence of voltage gated L-type Ca2+ channels in enterocytes from the Atlantic cod. The channels are mainly located at the apical side of the cells, and there is a polarized uptake of Ca2+ into the enterocytes. This suggests that the L-type Ca2+ channels are involved in the transcellular Ca2+ entry into the enterocytes. Received: 21 August 1997/Revised: 15 April 1998  相似文献   

14.
Removal of extracellular Ca2+ activates ion channels in the plasma membrane of defolliculated oocytes of the South Africa clawed toad Xenopus laevis. At present, there is controversy about the nature of the Ca2+-inactivated ion channels. Recently, we identified one of these channels as a Ca2+-inactivated Cl channel (CaIC) using single channel analysis. In this work we confirm and extend previous observations on the CaIC by presenting a decisive extension of the regulation and inhibition profile. CaIC current is reversibly blocked by the divalent and trivalent cations Zn2+ (half-maximal blocker concentration, K1/2= 8 μm), Cu2+ (K1/2= 120 μm) and Gd3+ (K1/2= 20 μm). Furthermore, CaIC is inhibited by the specific Cl channel blocker NPPB (K1/2≈ 3 μm). Interestingly, CaIC-mediated currents are further sensitive to the cation channel inhibitor amiloride (500 μm) but insensitive to its high affinity analogue benzamil (100 μm). An investigation of the pH-dependence of the CaIC revealed a reduction of currents in the acidic range. Using simultaneous measurements of membrane current (I m ), conductance (G m ) and capacitance (C m ) we demonstrate that Ca2+ removal leads to instant activation of CaIC already present in the plasma membrane. Since C m remains constant upon Ca2+ depletion while I m and G m increase drastically, no exocytotic transport of CaIC from intracellular pools and functional insertion into the plasma membrane is involved in the large CaIC currents. A detailed overview of applicable blockers is given. These blockers are useful when oocytes are utilized as an expression system for foreign proteins whose investigations require Ca2+-free solutions and disturbances by CaIC currents are unwanted. We further compare and discuss our results with data of Ca2+-inactivated cation channels reported by other groups. Received: 18 June 1999/Revised: 13 August 1999  相似文献   

15.
Swelling-activated Cl currents (I Cl,swell ) have been characterized in a mouse renal inner medullary collecting duct cell line (mIMCD-K2). Currents activated by exposing the cells to hypotonicity exhibited characteristic outward rectification and time- and voltage-dependent inactivation at positive potentials and showed an anion selectivity of I > Br > Cl > Asp. NPPB (100 μm) inhibited the current in a voltage independent manner, as did exposure to 10 μm tamoxifen and 500 μm niflumic acid (NFA). In contrast, DIDS (100 μm) blocked the current with a characteristic voltage dependency. These characteristics of I Cl,swell in mIMCD-K2 cells are essentially identical to those of heterologously expressed cardiac CLC-3. A defining feature of CLC-3 is that activation of PKC by PDBu inhibits the conductance. In mIMCD-K2 cells preincubation with PDBu (100 nm) prevented the activation of I Cl,swell by hypotonicity. However, PDBu inhibition of I Cl,swell was reversed after PDBu withdrawal, but this was refractory to subsequent PDBu inhibition. Activation of either the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) or Ca2+ activated Cl conductance (CaCC), which are coexpressed in mIMCD-K2 cells prior to PDBu treatment, abolished the PDBu inhibition of I Cl,swell . Control of I Cl,swell by PKC therefore depends on the physiological status of the cell. In intact mIMCD-K2 layers in Ussing chambers, forskolin stimulation of an inward short-circuit current (due to transepithelial Cl secretion via apical CFTR) was inhibited by cell swelling upon hypotonic exposure at the basolateral surface. Activation of I Cl,swell is therefore capable of regulating transepithelial Cl secretion and suggests that I Cl,swell is located at the basolateral membrane. PDBu exposure prior to or during hypotonic challenge was ineffective in reversing the swelling-activated inhibition of Cl secretion, but tamoxifen (100 μm) abolished the hypotonic inhibition of forskolin-stimulated short-circuit current (I sc ). RT-PCR analysis confirmed expression of mRNA for members of the CLC family, including both CLC-2 and 3, in the mIMCD-K2 cell line. Received: 24 February 2000/Revised: 26 May 2000  相似文献   

16.
A Ca2+-activated Cl conductance in rat submandibular acinar cells was identified and characterized using whole-cell patch-clamp technique. When the cells were dialyzed with Cs-glutamate-rich pipette solutions containing 2 mm ATP and 1 μm free Ca2+ and bathed in N-methyl-d-glucamine chloride (NMDG-Cl) or Choline-Cl-rich solutions, they mainly exhibited slowly activating currents. Dialysis of the cells with pipette solutions containing 300 nm or less than 1 nm free Ca2+ strongly reduced the Cl currents, indicating the currents were Ca2+-dependent. Relaxation analysis of the ``on' currents of slowly activating currents suggested that the channels were voltage-dependent. The anion permeability sequence of the Cl channels was: NO 3 (2.00) > I (1.85) ≥ Br (1.69) > Cl (1.00) > bicarbonate (0.77) ≥ acetate (0.70) > propionate (0.41) ≫ glutamate (0.09). When the ATP concentration in the pipette solutions was increased from 0 to 10 mm, the Ca2+-dependency of the Cl current amplitude shifted to lower free Ca2+ concentrations by about two orders of magnitude. Cells dialyzed with a pipette solution (pCa = 6) containing ATP-γS (2 mm) exhibited currents of similar magnitude to those observed with the solution containing ATP (2 mm). The addition of the calmodulin inhibitors trifluoperazine (100 μm) or calmidazolium (25 μm) to the bath solution and the inclusion of KN-62 (1 μm), a specific inhibitor of calmodulin kinase, or staurosporin (10 nm), an inhibitor of protein kinase C to the pipette solution had little, if any, effect on the Ca2+-activated Cl currents. This suggests that Ca2+/Calmodulin or calmodulin kinase II and protein kinase C are not involved in Ca2+-activated Cl currents. The outward Cl currents at +69 mV were inhibited by NPPB (100 μm), IAA-94 (100 μm), DIDS (0.03–1 mm), 9-AC (300 μm and 1 mm) and DPC (1 mm), whereas the inward currents at −101 mV were not. These results demonstrate the presence of a bicarbonate- and weak acid-permeable Cl conductance controlled by cytosolic Ca2+ and ATP levels in rat submandibular acinar cells. Received: 9 January 1996/Revised: 20 May 1996  相似文献   

17.
One of the main effects of abscisic acid (ABA) is to induce net loss of potassium salts from guard cells enabling the stomata to close. K+ is released from the vacuole into the cytosol and then to the extracellular space. The effects of increasing cytosolic K+ on the voltage- and time-dependence of the outwardly rectifying K+-current (I K,out) in guard cell protoplasts (GCP) was examined in the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. The same quantitative analysis was performed in the presence of ABA at different internal K+ concentrations ([K+] i ). Varying [K+] i in the patch pipette from 100 to 270 mm increased the magnitude of I K,out in a nonlinear manner and caused a negative shift in the midpoint (V 0.5) of its steady-state activation curve. External addition of ABA (10–20 μm) also increased the magnitude of I K,out at all [K+] i , but caused a shift in V 0.5 of the steady-state activation curve only in those GCP loaded with 150 mm internal K+ or less. Indeed, V 0.5 did not shift upon addition of ABA when the [K+] i was above 150 mm and up to 270 mm, i.e., the shift in V 0.5 caused by ABA depended on the [K+] i . Both increase in [K+] i and external addition of ABA, decreased (by ≈ 20%) the activation time constant (τ n ) of I K,out. The small decrease in τ n , in both cases, was found to be independent of the membrane voltage. The results indicate that ABA mimics the effect of increasing cytoplasmic K+, and suggest that ABA may increase I K,out and alter V 0.5 of its steady-state activation curve via an enhancement in cytosolic K+. This report describes for the first time the effects of [K+] i on the voltage- and time-dependence of I K,out in guard cells. It also provides an explanation for the quantitative (total membrane current) and qualitative (current kinetics) differences found between intact guard cells and their protoplasts. Received: 1 December 1995/Revised: 8 May 1996  相似文献   

18.
The pharmacological profile of a voltage-independent Ca2+-activated potassium channel of intermediate conductance (IK(Ca2+)) present in bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAEC) was investigated in a series of inside-out and outside-out patch-clamp experiments. Channel inhibition was observed in response to external application of ChTX with a half inhibition concentration of 3.3 ± 0.3 nm (n= 4). This channel was insensitive to IbTX, but channel block was detected following external application of MgTX and StK leading to the rank order toxin potency ChTX > StK > MgTX >>IbTX. A reduction of the channel unitary current amplitude was also measured in the presence of external TEA, with half reduction occurring at 23 ± 3 mm TEA (n= 3). The effect of TEA was voltage insensitive, an indication that TEA may bind to a site located on external side of the pore region of this channel. Similarly, the addition of d-TC to the external medium caused a reduction of the channel unitary current amplitude with half reduction at 4.4 ± 0.3 mm (n= 4). In contrast, application of d-TC to the bathing medium in inside-out experiments led to the appearance of long silent periods, typical of a slow blocking process. Finally, the IK(Ca2+) in BAEC was found to be inhibited by NS1619, an activator of the Ca2+-activated potassium channel of large conductance (Maxi K(Ca2+)), with a half inhibition value of 11 ± 0.8 μm (n= 4). These results provide evidence for a pharmacological profile distinct from that reported for the Maxi K(Ca2+) channel, with some features attributed to the voltage-gated KV1.2 potassium channel. Received: 6 November 1997/Revised: 19 February 1998  相似文献   

19.
Single channel and [3H]ryanodine binding measurements were performed to test for a direct functional interaction between 2,3-butanedione 2-monoxime (BDM) and the skeletal and cardiac muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release channels (ryanodine receptors). Single channel measurements were carried out in symmetric 0.25 m KCl media using the planar lipid bilayer method. BDM (1–10 mm) activated suboptimally Ca2+-activated (0.5–1 μm free Ca2+) single, purified and native cardiac and skeletal release channels in a concentration-dependent manner by increasing the number of channel events without a change of single channel conductances. BDM activated the two channel isoforms when added to either side of the bilayer. At a maximally activating cytosolic Ca2+ concentration of 20 μm, BDM was without effect on the cardiac channel, whereas it inhibited skeletal channel activities with IC50≈ 2.5 mm. In agreement with single channel measurements, high-affinity [3H]ryanodine binding to the two channel isoforms was increased in a concentration-dependent manner at ≤1 μm Ca2+. BDM was without a noticeable effect at low (≤0.01 μm) Ca2+ concentrations. At 20 μm Ca2+, BDM inhibited the skeletal but not cardiac channel. These results suggest that BDM regulates the Ca2+ release channels from the sarcoplasmic reticulum of skeletal and cardiac muscle in a concentration, Ca2+ and tissue-dependent manner. Received: 31 December 1998/Revised: 9 March 1999  相似文献   

20.
Muscarinic m3 receptor-mediated changes in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]l) occur by activation of Ca2+ release channels present in the endoplasmic reticulum membrane and Ca2+ entry pathways across the plasma membrane. In this report we demonstrate the coupling of m3 muscarinic receptors to the activation of a voltage-insensitive, cation-selective channel of low conductance (3.2 ± 0.6 pS; 25 mm Ca2+ as charge carrier) in a fibroblast cell line expressing m3 muscarinic receptor clone (A9m3 cells). Carbachol (CCh)-induced activation of the cation-selective channel occurred both in whole cell and excised membrane patches (CCh on the external side), suggesting that the underlying mechanism involves receptor-channel coupling independent of intracellular messengers. In excised inside-out membrane patches from nonstimulated A9m3 cells GTP (10 μm) and GDP (10 μm) activated cation-selective channels with conductances of approximately 4.3 and 3.3 pS, (25 mm Ca2+ as charge carrier) respectively. In contrast, ATP (10 μm), UTP (10 μm) or CTP (10 μm) failed to activate the channel. Taken together, these results suggest that carbachol and guanine nucleotides regulate the activation of a cation channel that conducts calcium. Received: 14 November 1996/Revised: 4 April 1997  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