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1.
Depolarization-dependent outward currents were analyzed using the single-electrode voltage clamp technique in the dendritic membrane of an identified nonspiking interneuron (LDS interneuron) in situ in the terminal abdominal ganglion of crayfish. When the membrane was depolarized by more than 20 mV from the resting potential (65.0 ± 5.7 mV), a transient outward current was observed to be followed by a sustained outward current. Pharmacological experiments revealed that these outward currents were composed of 3 distinct components. A sustained component (I s) was activated slowly (half rise time > 5 msec) and blocked by 20 mM TEA. A transient component (I t1) that was activated and inactivated very rapidly (peak time < 2.5 msec, half decay time < 1.2 msec) was also blocked by 20 mM TEA. Another transient component (I t2) was blocked by 100 M 4AP, activated rapidly (peak time < 10.0 msec) and inactivated slowly (half decay time > 131.8 msec). Two-step pulse experiments have revealed that both sustained and transient components are not inactivated at the resting potential: the half-maximal inactivation was attained at –21.0 mV in I t1, and –38.0 mV in I t2. I s showed no noticeable inactivation. When the membrane was initially held at the resting potential level and clamped to varying potential levels, the half-maximal activation was attained at –36.0 mV in I s, –31.0 mV in I t1 and –40.0 mV in I t2. The activation and inactivation time constants were both voltage dependent. A mathematical model of the LDS interneuron was constructed based on the present electrophysiological records to simulate the dynamic interaction of outward currents during membrane depolarization. The results suggest that those membrane conductances found in this study underlie the outward rectification of the interneuron membrane as well as depolarization-dependent shaping of the excitatory synaptic potential observed in current-clamp experiments.  相似文献   

2.
Summary 1. The effects of bath-applied recombinant human interleukin-1 (rhIL-1) and interleukin-2 (rhIL-2) on the calcitonin (CT)-induced outward current recorded from identified neurons (R9–R12) ofAplysia kurodai were investigated with conventional voltage-clamp and pressure ejection techniques.2. Micropressure ejection of CT onto the soma of the neuron induced a slow outward current [I o(CT); 4–6 nA in amplitude, 30–40 sec in duration] associated with a decrease in input membrane conductance.3.I o(CT) was increased by hyperpolarization.4. The extrapolated reversal potential was +10 mV. Additionally,I o(CT) was sensitive to changes in (Na+)o but not to changes in (K+)o, (Ca2+)o, and (Cl)o.5. Micropressure-ejected forskolin produced a slow outward current similar to that induced by CT.6. Bath-applied rhIL-1 and rhIL-2 (10–40 U/ml) reduced the CT-induced current in identifiedAplysia neurons without affecting the resting membrane conductance or the holding current.7. The inhibitory effects of both cytokines on the current were completely reversible. Heat-inactivated rhIL-1 and rhIL-2 were without effect.8. These results suggest that the immunomodulators, IL-1 and IL-2, can modulate the CT-induced outward current associated with a decrease in Na+ conductance in the nervous system ofAplysia. Therefore, the study suggests that these cytokines may also serve as neuromodulators.  相似文献   

3.
Effects of odorants on voltage-gated ionic channels were investigated in isolated newt olfactory receptor cells by using the whole cell version of the patch–clamp technique. Under voltage clamp, membrane depolarization to voltages between −90 mV and +40 mV from a holding potential (Vh) of −100 mV generated time- and voltage-dependent current responses; a rapidly (< 15 ms) decaying initial inward current and a late outward current. When odorants (1 mM amyl acetate, 1 mM acetophenone, and 1 mM limonene) were applied to the recorded cell, the voltage-gated currents were significantly reduced. The dose-suppression relations of amyl acetate for individual current components (Na+ current: INa, T-type Ca2+ current: ICa,T, L-type Ca2+ current: ICa,L, delayed rectifier K+ current: IKv and Ca2+-activated K+ current: IK(Ca)) could be fitted by the Hill equation. Half-blocking concentrations for each current were 0.11 mM (INa), 0.15 mM (ICa,T), 0.14 mM (ICa,L), 1.7 mM (IKv), and 0.17 mM (IK(Ca)), and Hill coefficient was 1.4 (INa), 1.0 (ICa,T), 1.1 (ICa,L), 1.0 (IKv), and 1.1 (IK(Ca)), suggesting that the inward current is affected more strongly than the outward current. The activation curve of INa was not changed significantly by amyl acetate, while the inactivation curve was shifted to negative voltages; half-activation voltages were −53 mV at control, −66 mV at 0.01 mM, and −84 mV at 0.1 mM. These phenomena are similar to the suppressive effects of local anesthetics (lidocaine and benzocaine) on INa in various preparations, suggesting that both types of suppression are caused by the same mechanism. The nonselective blockage of ionic channels observed here is consistent with the previous notion that the suppression of the transduction current by odorants is due to the direst blockage of transduction channels.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Using the patch-clamp technique, we recorded whole-cell calcium current from isolated cardiac myocytes dissociated from the apical ventricles of 7-day and 14-day chick embryos. In 70% of 14-day cells after 24 hr in culture, two component currents could be separated from totalI Ca activated from a holding potential (V h) of –80 mV. L-type current (I L) was activated by depolarizing steps fromV h –30 or –40 mV. The difference current (I T) was obtained by subtractingI L, fromI Ca.I T could also be distinguished pharmacologically fromI L in these cells.I T was selectively blocked by 40–160 m Ni2+, whereasI L was suppressed by 1 m D600 or 2 m nifedipine. The Ni2+-resistant and D600-resistant currents had activation thresholds and peak voltages that were near those ofI T andI L defined by voltage threshold, and resembled those in adult mammalian heart. In 7-day cells,I T andI L could be distinguished by voltage threshold in 45% (S cells), while an additional 45% of 7-day cells were nonseparable (NS) by activation voltage threshold. Nonetheless, in mostNS cells,I Ca was partly blocked by Ni2+ and by D600 given separately, and the effects were additive when these agents were given together. Differences among the cells in the ability to separateI T andI L by voltage threshold resulted largely from differences in the position of the steady-state inactivation and activation curves along the voltage axis. In all cells at both ages in which the steady-state inactivation relation was determined with a double-pulse protocol, the half-inactivation potential (V 1/2) of the Ni2+-resistant currentI L averaged –18 mV. In contrast,V 1/2 of the Ni2+-sensitiveI T was –60 mV in 14-day cells, –52 mV in 7-dayS cells, and –43 mV in 7-day NS cells. The half-activation potential was near –2 mV forI L at both ages, but that ofI T was –38 mV in 14-day and –29 mV in 7-day cells. Maximal current density was highly variable from cell to cell, but showed no systematic differences between 7-day and 14-day cells. These results indicate that the main developmental change that occurs in the components ofI Ca is a negative shift with, embryonic age in the activation and inactivation relationships ofI T along the voltage axis.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of cisapride on L-type Ca2+ current (I Ca,L) was studied in guinea pig ventricular myocytes using a whole-cell voltage-clamp technique and a conventional action potential recording method. Myocytes were held at –40 mV, and internally dialyzed and externally perfused with Na+- and K+-free solutions; cisapride elicited a concentration-dependent block of peakI Ca,L, with a half-maximum inhibition concentration (IC50) of 46.9 µM. There was no shift in the reversal potential, nor any change in the shape of the current-voltage relationship ofI Ca,L in the presence of cisapride. Inhibition of cisapride was not associated with its binding to serotonin or to -adrenergic receptors because ketanserin, SB203186, and prazosin had no effect on the inhibitory action of cisapride onI Ca,L. Cisapride elicited a tonic block and a use-dependent block ofI Ca,L. These blocking effects were voltage dependent as the degree of inhibition at –40 mV was greater than that at –70 mV. Cisapride shifted the steady-state inactivation curve ofI Ca,L in the negative direction, but had no effect on the steady-state activation curve. Cisapride also delayed the kinetics of recovery ofI Ca,L from inactivation. At a slow stimulation frequency (0.1 Hz), the action potential duration in guinea pig papillary muscles showed biphasic effects; it was prolonged by lower concentrations of cisapride, but shortened by higher concentrations. These findings suggest that cisapride preferentially binds to the inactivated state of L-type Ca2+ channels. The inhibitory effect of cisapride onI Ca,L might play an important role in its cardiotoxicity under pathophysiological conditions, such as myocardial ischemia.  相似文献   

6.
Calcium channels were expressed inXenopus oocytes by means of messenger RNA extracted from the rat thalamo-hypothalamic complex, mRNA(h). Inward barium currents,I Ba, were recorded in Cl-free extracellular solution with 40 mM Ba2+ as a charge carrier, using two-microelectrode technique. Depolarizations from a very negative holding potential (V h=–120 mV) began to activateI Ba at about –80 mV; this current peaked at –30 to –20 mV and reversed at +50 mV, indicating that I Ba may be transferred through the low voltage-activated (LVA) calcium channels. The time-dependent inactivation of the current during a prolonged depolarization to –20 mV was quite slow, followed a single exponential decay with a time constant of 1550 msec, and contained a residual component constituting 30% of the maximum amplitude. The current could not be completely inactivated at any holding potential. As expected for LVA current, a steady-state inactivation curve was shifted towards negative potentials. It could be described by the Boltzmann's equation with the half-inactivation potential of –78 mV, slope factor of 15 mV, and residual level of 0.3. ExpressedI Ba could be blocked by flunarizine (K d=0.42 µM), nifedipine (K d=10 µM), and amiloride at a 500 µM concentration. Among the inorganic Ca2+ channel blockers, the most potent was La3+ (K d=0.48 µM), while Cd2+ and Ni2+ were not very selective and almost thousand-fold less effective (K d=0.52 mM andK d=0.62 mM, respectively) than La3+. Our data show that mRNA(h) induces expression in the oocytes of almost exclusively LVA Ca2+ channels with voltage-dependent and pharmacological properties very similar to those observed for T-type Ca2+ current in native hypothalamic neurons, though kinetic properties of the expressed and natural currents are somewhat different.Neirofiziologiya/Neurophysiology, Vol. 27, No. 3, pp. 183–189, May–June, 1995.  相似文献   

7.
Voltage-gated whole-cell currents were recorded from cultured microglial cells which had been developed in the presence of the macrophage/microglial growth factor granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor. Outward K+ currents (I K) were most prominent in these cells. I Kcould be activated at potentials more positive than –40 mV. Half-maximal activation of I Kwas achieved at –13.8 mV and half-maximal inactivation of I Kwas determined at –33.8 mV. The recovery of I Kfrom inactivation was described by a time constant of 7.9 sec. For a tenfold change in extracellular K+ concentration the reversal potential of I Kshifted by 54 mV.Extracellularly applied 10 mm tetraethylammonium chloride reduced I K by about 50%, while 5 mm 4-aminopyridine almost completely abolished I K. Several divalent cations (Ba2+, Cd2+, Co2+, Zn2+) reduced current amplitudes and shifted the activation curve of I Kto more positive values. Charybdotoxin (IC50 = 1.14 nm) and noxiustoxin (IC50=0.89 nm) blocked I Kin a concentration-dependent manner, whereas dendrotoxin and mast cell degranulating peptide had no effect on the current amplitudes.  相似文献   

8.
Summary We examined the variability of occurrence and frequency of voltage-dependent whole-cell currents in human peripheral blood monocyte-derived macrophages (HMDM) maintained in culture for up to three weeks. An increase in cell capacitance from an average value of 9 pF on the day of isolation to 117 pF at 14 days accompanied growth and differentiation in culture. The average resting potential was approximately –34 mV for cells beyond two days in culture. Cells exhibited a voltage-and time-dependent outward current upon membrane depolarization above approximately –30 mV, which appeared to be composed of a number of separate currents with variable expression from donor to donor. Three of these currents are carried by K+. The frequency of each outward current type was calculated for 974 cells obtained from 36 donors. The HMDMs in these studies exhibited two 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) sensitive, time-dependent outward currents (I A andI B ) that could be differentiated on the basis of the presence or absence of steady-state inactivation in the physiological potential range, time course of inactivation during maintained depolarization, as well as threshold of activation. The 4-AP-insensitive outward current activated at approximately 10 mV. One component of the 4-AP insensitive-outward current (I C ) could be blocked by external TEA and by the exchange of internal Cs+ or Na+ for K+. The probability of observingI B andI C appeared to be donor dependent. Following total replacement of internal K+ with Cs+, two additional currents could be identified (i) a delayed component of outward current (I D ) remained which could be blocked by low concentrations of external Zn2+ (4 m) and was insensitive to anion replacement in the external solution and (ii) a Cl current with a reversal potential which shifted in the presence of external anion replacement and which was irreversibly inhibited by the stilbene SITS. The activation of a prominent time-independent inward currents was often observed with increasing hyperpolarization. This inward current was blocked by external Ba2+ and corresponded to the inwardly rectifying K+ current. Neither inward nor outward current expression appeared dependent on whether cells were differentiated in adherent or suspension culture nor was there demonstrable differential current expression observed upon transition from suspension to adherent form.  相似文献   

9.
V. A. Bouryi 《Neurophysiology》1998,30(4-5):301-304
Barium currents through ion channels formed by α1-subunit of L-type Ca2+ channel (I α1) were recorded from cultured chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. The cells were stably transfected with either a cardiac or a smooth muscle (SM) variant of α1-subunit. TheI α1 in both cases exhibited similar fast voltage-dependent activation kinetics and slow apparent inactivation kinetics. With 10 mM Ba2+ in the bath solution,I α1 was activated at potentials more positive than −40 mV, peaked between 0 and +10 mV, and reversed at about +50 mV. In addition to slow apparent inactivation of inward current, both subunits provided an extremely slow voltage-dependent inactivation at potentials more positive than −100 mV, with half-maximum inactivation at −43.4 mV for cardiac and −41.4 mV for SM α1-subunits. The onset of inactivation as well as recovery from this process were within a time range of minutes. The voltage dependence of steady-state inactivation could be fitted by the sum of two Boltzmann's equations with slope factors of about 12 mV and 5 mV. A less sloped component has its midpoints at −75.6 and −63.7 mV, and a steeper component has its midpoints at −42.8 and −37.7 mV for cardiac and SM α1-subunits, respectively. Relative contribution of the steeper component was higher in both subunits (0.86 and 0.66 for cardiac and SM subunits, respectively). For comparison, the inactivation curves for 5-sec-long conditioning prepulses could be fitted by single Boltzmann's distribution with a 20 mV more positive midpoint and a slope factor of about 13 mV. In contrast to the steady-state inactivation curves, they showed considerable overlap with the steady-state activation curve. Our results reflect functional consequences of known sequence differences between α1-subunits of the cardiac and SM L-type Ca2+ channels and could be used in structural modeling of Ca2+ channel gating. In addition, they show that depolarization-induced window current has a transient nature and decays with the development of extremely slow inactivation. This is the first demonstration that slow inactivation of the L-type Ca2+ channel is an intrinsic property of its α1-subunits.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Although an outwardly rectifying K+-conductance has been described in murine peritoneal macrophages and a murine macrophage cell line, the expression of this conductance in human monocyte-derived macrophages (HMDMs) is rare. Whole-cell current recordings in this study were obtained from HMDMs differentiated in adherent culture for varying periods of time following isolation and compared to currents obtained in human alveolar macrophages (HAMs) obtained from bronchoalveolar lavage. These studies were undertaken to compare ionic current expression in the in vitro differentiated macrophage to that of a human tissue macrophage. HAMs are the major population of immune and inflammatory cells in the normal lung and are the most readily available source of human tissue macrophages. Of the 974 HMDMs in the study obtained from a total of 36 donors, we were able to observe the presence of the inactivating outward current (I A ) which exhibited voltage-dependent availability in only 49 (or 5%) of the cells. In contrast, whole-cell current recordings from HAMs, revealed a significantly higher frequency ofI A expression (50% in a total of 160 cells from 26 donors). In the alveolar cell, there was no correlation observed between cell size and peakI A amplitude, nor was there a relationship between peakI A amplitude and time in culture. The current in both cell types was K+ selective and 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) sensitive.I A in both cell types inactivated with a time course which was weakly voltage-dependent and which exhibited a time constant of recovery from inactivation of approximately 30 sec. The time course of current inactivation was dependent upon the external K+ concentration. An increase in the time constant describing current decay was observed in elevated K+. Current activation was half-maximal at approximately –18 mV in normal bathing solution. Steady-state inactivation was half-maximal at approximately –44 mV. The presence of the outwardly rectifying K+ conductance may alter the potential of the mononuclear phagocyte to respond to extracellular signals mediating chemotaxis, phagocytosis, and tumoricidal functions.  相似文献   

11.
Voltage clamp technique was used to study macroscopic ionic currents in Rana esculenta oocytes. Depolarization steps led to the activation of a single type of outward current (I out) when contaminant potassium and calcium-dependent chloride currents were pharmacologically inhibited. The voltage threshold of I out activation was 10 mV and this current, which did not inactivate, presented a deactivation the time constant of 73±21 msec (n=26) corresponding to a membrane voltage of –60 mV. Its reversal potential (E rev) was dependent on the magnitude of the depolarization and also on pulse duration. These changes in E rev were thought to reflect intracellular ion depletion occurring during activation of the remaining outward current. Furthermore, the activation threshold of I out was clearly affected by modifications in extracellular and intracellular H+ concentrations. Indeed, intracellular alkalinization (evoked by external application of ammonium chloride) or extracellular acidification induced a rightward shift in the activation threshold while intracellular acidification (evoked by external application of sodium acetate) or extracellular alkalinization shifted this threshold toward a more negative value. Lastly, I out was dramatically reduced by divalent cations such as Cd2+, Ni2+ or Zn2+ and was strongly decreased by 4 Aminopyridine (4-AP), wellknown H+ current antagonists already described in many cell types. Therefore, it was suggested that the outward current was prominently carried by H+ ions, which may play a key role in the regulation of intracellular pH and subsequent pH dependent processes in Rana oocyte.  相似文献   

12.
The dependence of sodium-calcium exchange current (I Na(Ca)) through the membrane of isolated secretory cells ofChironomus larva on pH of the extracellular solution was studied with the voltage-clamp technique with intracellular perfusion.I Na(Ca) evoked by hyperpolarization of the membrane from –20 to –60 mV was recorded within physiological values of Na+ and Ca2+ gradients. It was established that acidification of extracellular solution from pH 7.2 to 4.0 gradually decreased the amplitude ofI Na(Ca) with pK' — 3.72. In all cases at pH 3.0 an outward current of considerable amplitude emerged in response to membrane hyperpolarization. The reversal of the current occurred at pH around 3.25. A decrease inI Na(Ca) was due to protonation of acid ionogenic groups (quite possibly, of the residues of aspartic or glutamic amino acids), which had been involved in binding of cations. Alkalization of extracellular solution from pH 7.2 to 10.0 produced a gradual increase in theI Na(Ca) amplitude; pK' was in the pH range between 9 and 10. The increase inI Na(Ca) in alkaline medium was probably due to the appearance of negatively charged cations at binding sites, which could be carried by deprotonated thiosulfate groups of cysteine residues. This was indicated by the possibility of initial decrease inI Na(Ca) under the action of Hg2+ ions.Neirofiziologiya/Neurophysiology, Vol. 28, No. 4/5, pp. 193–196, July–October, 1996.  相似文献   

13.
The Ca2+-conducting pathway of myocytes isolated from the cricket lateral oviduct was investigated by means of the whole-cell patch clamp technique. In voltage-clamp configuration, two types of whole cell inward currents were identified. One was voltage-dependent, initially activated at –40 mV and reaching a maximum at 10 mV with the use of 140 mM Cs2+-aspartate in the patch pipette and normal saline in the bath solution. Replacement of the external Ca2+ with Ba2+ slowed the current decay. Increasing the external Ca2+ or Ba2+ concentration increased the amplitude of the inward current and the current–voltage (I–V) relationship was shifted as expected from a screening effect on negative surface charges. The inward current could be carried by Na+ in the absence of extracellular Ca2+. Current carried by Na+ (I Na) was almost completely blocked by the dihydropyridine Ca2+ channel antagonist, nifedipine, suggesting that the I Na is through voltage-dependent L-type Ca2+ channels. The other inward current is voltage-independent and its I–V relationship was linear between –100 mV to 0 mV with a slight inward rectification at more hyperpolarizing membrane potentials when 140 mM Cs+-aspartate and 140 mM Na+-gluconate were used in the patch pipette and in the bath solution, respectively. A similar current was observed even when the external Na+ was replaced with an equimolar amount of K+ or Cs+, or 50 mM Ca2+ or Ba2+. When the osmolarity of the bath solution was reduced by removing mannitol from the bath solution, the inward current became larger at negative potentials. The I–V relationship for the current evoked by the hypotonic solution also showed a linear relationship between –100 mV to 0 mV. Bath application of Gd3+ (10 M) decreased the inward current activated by membrane hyperpolarization. These results clearly indicate that the majority of current activated by a membrane hyperpolarization is through a stretch-activated Ca2+-permeable nonselective cation channel (NSCC). Here, for the first time, we have identified voltage-dependent L-type Ca2+ channel and stretch-activated Ca2+-permeable NSCCs from enzymatically isolated muscle cells of the cricket using the whole-cell patch clamp recording technique.Abbreviations I Ca Ca2+ current - I Na Na+ current - I–V current–voltage - NSCC nonselective cation channel Communicated by G. Heldmaier  相似文献   

14.
H. Satoh 《Amino acids》1995,9(3):235-246
Summary Effects of taurine on the delayed rectifier K+ channel in isolated 10-day-old embryonic chick ventricular cardiomyocytes were examined at different intracellular Ca2+ concentrations ([Ca]i), using whole-cell voltage and current clamp techniques. Experiments were performed at room temperature (22°C). Test pulses were applied between -20 to +90m V from a holding potential of -40mV. When [Ca]i was pCa 7, addition of 10 and 20 mM taurine to the bath solution reduced the delayed rectifier K+ current (IK) at +90mV by 17.4 ± 2.8% (n = 5, P < 0.01) and 25.5 ± 2.6% (n = 5, P < 0.001), respectively. In contrast, when [Ca]i was pCa 10, IK at +90 mV was enhanced by 19.1 ± 3.1% (n = 7, P < 0.01) at 10mM taurine, and by 29.3 ± 2.4% (n = 7, P < 0.001) at 20mM taurine. The voltage of half-maximum activation (V1/2) was shifted in a hyperpolarizing direction; at pCa 7, the value was +0.2 ± 2.2mV (n = 5) in control and -10.6 ± 1.8mV (n = 5) in 20mM taurine. At pCa 10, the V1/2 value was +18.5 ± 4.6mV (n = 5) in control and +6.6 ± 5.2mV (n = 5) in taurine (20mM). Taurine decreased the action potential duration (APD) at pCa 10, but at pCa 7 did not affect it. In addition, taurine enhanced the transient outward current in a concentration-dependent manner. These results indicate that taurine modulates the delayed rectifier K+ channel, an effect dependent on [Ca]i and capable of regulating APD.  相似文献   

15.
The whole-cell patch-clamp method was used to study the membrane electrical properties of human adipocyte cells obtained by differentiating from precursors of human abdominal and mammary tissues. All differentiated cells exhibited outward currents with sigmoidal activation kinetics. The outward currents showed activation thresholds between –20 to –30 mV and slow inactivation. The ionic channels underlying the macroscopic current were highly selective for K+. Their selectivity was for typical K+ channels with relative permeabilities of K+>NH 4 + >Cs+>Na+. No evidence of any other type of voltage-gated channel was found. The potassium currents (I KV) were blocked reversibly by tetraethylammonium and barium. The IC 50 value and Hill coefficient of tetraethylammonium inhibition of I KV were 0.56 mM and 1.17 respectively. These results demonstrate that human adipose cells have voltage-dependent potassium currents.  相似文献   

16.
Calcium channels were expressed inXenopus laevis oocytes by means of matrix RNA (mRNA) extracted from the cerebellum (RNAc) and forebrain (RNAfb). In these oocytes, inward barium currents,I Ba, evoked by 40 mM Ba2+ were investigated using a double microelectrode technique. Currents expressed after injection of both RNAc and RNAfb (further referred to as RNAc- and RNAfb-expressed currents) showed a voltage-dependent characteristic typical of high-threshold calcium channels of mammalian neurons. The threshold of activation was about –40 mV, the maximum amplitude was observed at +20 mV and reversal potential at +60 mV. In both groups of oocytes, no expression of low- or high-threshold calcium channels of other types was observed. Although in both cases the expression ofI Ba had similar macrokinetics, characteristics of their stationary inactivation differed. The half-inactivation potential ranged between –32 and –16 mV, and the slope factor was 28 and 16.6 mV in RNAfb- and RNAc-injected oocytes, respectively. In both cases,I Ba were insensitive to dihydropyridines; however their relation to other pharmacological agents was different. RNAfb-expressedI Ba was completely blocked by Cd2+ (K d=10 µM) and depressed up to 70% by -conotoxin (1 µM), being insensitive to either whole spider toxin fromAgelenopsis aperta venom or to its FTX fraction. On the contrary, RNAc-expressedI Ba was more sensitive to Cd2+ (K d=0.1 µM), stable to -conotoxin, and suppressed up to 75–90% by wholeA. aperta toxin in a dilution of 1:10000, and by FTX at a concentration of 0.5 µM. The findings allow us to suggest that the forebrain and cerebellum of mammals are the structures, whose mRNA differ and provide predominant expression of voltage-dependent calcium channels of N- and P-types, respectively.Neirofiziologiya/Neurophysiology, Vol. 26, No. 6, pp. 427–436, November–December, 1994.  相似文献   

17.
We investigated the effects of 2 and 4 mM 4-aminopyridine (4-AP, – blocker of the transient outward current Ito) on the electrophysiological response to regional ischemia and reperfusion. Spontaneously beating rat hearts were subjected to coronary occlusion (10 min) followed by reperfusion. The surface electrogram and the membrane potential from subepicardial left ventricular cells were recorded throughout. The basal effect of 4-AP was a dose dependent increase in the action potential duration (APD90) without changes in the resting potential or the heart rate. During early ischemia resting depolarization (from 87.4 ± 1.9–70.1 ± 2.5 mV in the controls) was enhanced by 4 mM, 4-AP (84.3 ± 1.4 mV vs. 61.7 ± 1.3 mV) whereas APD90 increased by 73.5%. These effects resulted in a marked reduction in the duration of diastolic intervals that led to conduction failure and aborted responses. A partial recovery was found by the end of ischemia concomitant with APD90 shortening in both, control and 4-AP treated hearts. On reperfusion, 4-AP did not influence the initial incidence of ventricular tachyarrhythmias but decreased their duration from 531.5 ± 56.3–260.7 ± 100 sec (2 mM) and to 75.6 ± 10.5 sec (4 mM). These data confirm others obtained by Henry et al. [11] in isolated cells indicating that ischemia induces sequential changes in several K+ conductances. In addition, they show that changes in action potential characteristics may exert beneficial effects on reperfusion arrhythmias by acting on the arrhythmic substrate without suppressing the trigger mechanism.  相似文献   

18.
Voltage-clamp experiments were performed on single bovine adrenal fasciculata cells in short-term primary culture using either standard (broken membrane) or perforated whole-cell patch clamp recording. The membrane current measured with the perforated method was dominated by a very stable transient outward current. By contrast, the transient outward current recorded using the standard method was unstable. The reversal potential of the transient outward current varied linearly with the logarithm of [K+] e with a slope of 47 mV per decade. The onset of activation was sigmoidal and was fitted with a power function where n= 4. Time constants ranged from 1 to 4 msec with a maximum at −25 mV. The steady-state activation curve spanned the voltage range −50 to +80 mV without reaching a clear maximum. During a pulse, the current decayed in a biexponential manner. Time constants τ1 and τ2 were voltage-dependent and ranged from 50 to 200 msec respectively for a voltage step at +50 mV. The steady-state inactivation was dependent on the conditioning pulse duration. Using short conditioning pulses (1.2 sec), the curve which spanned the voltage range −40 to −20 mV, was 15 mV more positive than that obtained with longer conditioning pulses (60 sec). Time constants of this ``very slow inactivation' process (τvs) determined for voltage steps at −60 and −50 mV were 15 and 10 sec respectively. A ``facilitation process' of the peak current was observed when the duration or the amplitude of conditioning pulses were increased in the voltage range −100 to −50 mV. Recovery from inactivation followed a biexponential time course which seemed a mixture of both inactivation processes. In some experimental conditions, isolated cells were able to produce overshooting action potentials. These results are discussed in relation with the membrane electrogenesis of this cell type. Received: 14 November 1994/Revised: 24 October 1995  相似文献   

19.
Summary We have studied current (I Str) through the Na, K pump in amphibian oocytes under conditions designed to minimize parallel undesired currents. Specifically,I Str was measured as the strophanthidin-sensitive current in the presence of Ba2–, Cd2+ and gluconate (in place of external Cl). In addition,I Str was studied only after the difference currents from successive applications and washouts of strophanthidin (Str) were reproducible. The dose-response relationship to Str in four oocytes displayed a meanK 0.5 of 0.4 m, with 2–5 m producing 84–93% pump' block. From baseline data with 12 Na+-preloaded oocytes, voltage clamped in the range [–170, +50 mV] with and without 2–5 m Str, the averageI Str depended directly onV m up to a plateau at 0 mV with interpolated zero current at –165 mV. In three oocytes, lowering the external [Na+] markedly decreased the voltage sensitivity ofI p , while producing only a small change in the maximal outwardI Str. In contrast, decreasing the external [K+] from 25 to 2.5mm reducedI Str at 0 mV without substantially affecting its voltage dependence. At K+ concentrations of 1mm, both the absolute value ofI Str at 0 mV and the slope conductance were reduced. In eight oocytes, the activation of the averagedI Str by [K+] o over the voltage interval [–30, +30 mV] was well fit by the Hill equation, with K=1.7±0.4mm andnH (the minimum number of K+ binding sites) =1.7±0.4. The results unequivocally establish that the cardiotonic-sensitive current ofRana oocytes displays only a positive slope conductance for [K+] o >1mm. There is therefore no need to postulate more than one voltage-sensitive step in the cycling of the Na, K pump under physiologic conditions. The effects of varying external Na+ and K+ are consistent with results obtained in other tissues and may reflect an ion-well effect.  相似文献   

20.
Many of the structural domains involved in Ca2+ channel (CACN) inactivation are also involved in determining their sensitivity to antagonist inhibition. We hypothesize that differences in inactivation properties and their structural determinants may suggest candidate domains as targets for the development of novel, selective antagonists. The characteristics of Ca2+ current (ICa) inactivation, steady-state inactivation (SSIN), and recovery from inactivation were studied in freshly dispersed smooth muscle cells from rabbit portal vein (RPV) using whole-cell, voltage-clamp methods. The time course of inactivation could be represented by two time constants. Increasing ICa by increasing [Ca2+]o or with more negative holding potentials decreased both time constants. With Sr2+, Ba2+, or Na+ as the charge carrier, ICa inactivation was also represented by two time constants, both of which were larger than those found with Ca2+. With Ca2+, Sr2+, or Ba2+ as the charge carrier, both time constants had minimum values near the voltage associated with maximum current. When Na+ (140 mM) was the charge carrier, voltages for Imax (−20 mV) or τmin (o mV) did not correspond. SSIN of ICa had a half-maximum voltage of −32±4 mV for Ca2+, −43 mV±5 mV for Sr2+, −41±5 mV for Ba2+, and −68±6 mV for Na+. The slope factor for SSIN per e-fold voltage change was 6.5±0.2 mV for Ca2+, 6.8±0.3 for Sr2+, and 6.6±0.2 for Ba2+, representing four equivalent charges. When Na+ or Li+ was the charge carrier, the slope factor was 13.5±0.7 mV, representing two equivalent charges. For ICa in rat left ventricular (rLV) myocytes, there was no difference in the slope factor of SSIN for Ca2+ and Na+. The rate of recovery of ICa from inactivation varied inversely with recovery voltage and was independent of the charge carrier. These results suggest that inactivation of ICa in PV myocytes possess an intrinsic voltage dependence that is modified by Ca2+. For RPV but not rLV ICa, the charge of the permeating ion confers the voltage-dependency of SSIN.  相似文献   

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