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1.
The action of the antiarrhythmic drug ethmozine on sodium channels of the membrane was studied in experiments on single from Ranvier nodes by the voltage clamp method. Application of ethmozine to both the outer and the inner side of the membrane reduced the amplitude of the sodium current INa; the kinetics of this current and steady-state inactivation of the sodium channels were unchanged. Tonic and phasic (transient, stimulus-dependent) components can be distinguished in the ethmozine block of the sodium current. Tonic blockage of the sodium current develops slowly and can be potentiated by high-frequency stimulation of the membrane. The possible nature of the tonic block is discussed. The stimulus-dependent blockade of the sodium current deepens with an increase in the frequency and amplitude of depolarizing stimuli. Prolonged membrane depolarization does not evoke any additional blocking of the sodium current. It is concluded that the stimulus-dependent blockade is due to interaction between ethomizine and open sodium channels. Modification of the channels by batrachotoxin (preventing inactivation of the sodium channels) makes them insensitive to ethmozine. Increasing the potassium ion concentration on the outer side of the membrane was found to reduce the tonic effect of ethmozine and to potentiate the stimulus-dependent blockade. The action of ethmozine was compared with the effects of tertiary and quaternary local anesthetics.A. V. Vishnevskii Institute of Surgery, Academy of Medical Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 13, No. 4, pp. 380–389, July–August, 1981.  相似文献   

2.
The inhibition of sodium and potassium currents in frog myelinated fibres by ajmaline (AM) and its quaternary derivative, N-propyl ajmaline (NPA), depends on voltage-clamp pulses and the state of channel gating mechanisms. The permanently charged NPA and protonated AM interact only (or mainly) with open channels, while unprotonated AM affects preferently inactivated Na channels. Inhibition of Na currents by NPA and AM does not depend on the current direction and Na ion concentration in external or internal media. In contrast only the outward potassium currents can be blocked by NPA and AM; the inward potassium currents in high K+ ions external media are resistant to the blocking action of these drugs. The voltage dependence of ionic current inhibition by charged drugs suggests the location of their binding sites in the inner mouths of Na and K channels. Judging by the kinetics of current restoration after cessation of pulsing, the drug-binding site complex is much more stable in Na than in potassium channels. Batrachotoxin and aconitine, unlike veratridine and sea anemone toxin, decrease greatly the affinity of Na channel binding sites to NPA and AM. The effects of NPA and AM are compared with those of local anesthetics and other amine blocking drugs.  相似文献   

3.
Effects of different local anesthetics of sodium permeability were studied in single nerve fibres of frog by the method of voltage clamp. Inhibition of sodium current by externally applied tertiary anesthetics, procaine and trimecaine, was the sum of a potentially independent block (reduced PrmNa) and slow sodium inactivation with time constants ranging from tens to hundreds of ms depending on membrane potential (at room temperature). Externally applied uncharged benzocaine produced a potentially independent block only. According to dose-response curves both processes are one-to-one reactions. In the case of trimecaine equilibrium constant the reaction responsible for reduction of PNa is about 0.3 mM, while that for slow inactivation is more than ten times less (0.02 mM). Increasing pH from 5.6 to 8.5 markedly accelerated the slow inactivation process at all potential values. Divalent cations Ca2+ and Ni2+ shifted the steady-state slow inactivation curve along the potential axis and simultaneously reduced slow inactivation at the saturation level. Permanently charged quaternary trimecaine was ineffective when applied externally. Internally applied tertiary anesthetics and quaternary trimecaine as well as externally applied quaternary derivative of lidocaine QX-572 produced a progressively irreversible block enhanced by depolarization and inhibition reversibly increased by repetitive short-term depolarization (frequency-dependent inhibition). Inhibition of sodium currents by repetitive stimulation observed also in the case of externally applied tertiary anesthetics is due mainly to slow inactivation. The data suggests the existence of several types of receptor sites through which local anesthetics exert their blocking action on sodium permeability.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of the two local anesthetics tetracaine and procaine and a quaternary amine derivative of lidocaine, QX314, on sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release have been examined by incorporating the purified rabbit skeletal muscle Ca2+ release channel complex into planar lipid bilayers. Recordings of potassium ion currents through single channels showed that Ca(2+)- and ATP-gated channel activity was reduced by the addition of the tertiary amines tetracaine and procaine to the cis (cytoplasmic side of SR membrane) or trans (SR lumenal) side of the bilayer. Channel open probability was lowered twofold at tetracaine and procaine concentrations of approximately 150 microM and 4 mM, respectively. Hill coefficients of 2.0 and greater indicated that the two drugs inhibited channel activity by binding to two or more cooperatively interacting sites. Unitary conductance of the K(+)- conducting channel was not changed by 1 mM tetracaine in the cis and trans chambers. In contrast, cis millimolar concentrations of the quaternary amine QX314 induced a fast blocking effect at positive holding potentials without an apparent change in channel open probability. A voltage-dependent block was observed at high concentrations (millimolar) of tetracaine, procaine, and QX314 in the presence of 2 microM ryanodine which induced the formation of a long open subconductance. Vesicle-45Ca2+ ion flux measurements also indicated an inhibition of the SR Ca2+ release channel by tetracaine and procaine. These results indicate that local anesthetics bind to two or more cooperatively interacting high-affinity regulatory sites of the Ca2+ release channel in or close to the SR membrane. Voltage-dependent blockade of the channel by QX314 in the absence of ryanodine, and by QX314, procaine and tetracaine in the presence of ryanodine, indicated one low-affinity site within the conduction pathway of the channel. Our results further suggest that tetracaine and procaine may primarily inhibit excitation-contraction coupling in skeletal muscle by binding to the high-affinity, regulatory sites of the SR Ca2+ release channel.  相似文献   

5.
We have studied the effects of local anesthetics (dibucaine, tetracaine, lidocaine, and procaine) on calcium fluxes through the plasma membrane of synaptosomes. All these local anesthetics inhibit the ATP-dependent calcium uptake by inverted plasma membrane vesicles at concentrations close to those that promote an effective blockade of the action potential. The values obtained for the K0.5 of inhibition of calcium uptake are the following: 23 microM (dibucaine), 0.44 mM (lidocaine), 1.5 mM (procaine), and 0.8 mM (tetracaine). There is a good correlation between these K0.5 values and the concentrations of the local anesthetics that inhibit the Ca2(+)-dependent Mg2(+)-ATPase of these membranes. In addition, except for procaine, these local anesthetics stimulate severalfold the Ca2+ outflow via the Na+/Ca2+ exchange in these membranes. This effect, however, is observed at concentrations slightly higher than those that effectively inhibit the ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake, e.g., 80-700 microM dibucaine, 2-10 mM lidocaine, and 1-3 mM tetracaine. The results suggest that the Ca2+ buffering of neuronal cytosol is altered by these anesthetics at pharmacological concentrations.  相似文献   

6.
The purpose of the present study was to examine the characteristics of Na+ channel modification by batrachotoxin (BTX) in cardiac cells, including changes in channel gating and kinetics as well as susceptibility to block by local anesthetic agents. We used the whole cell configuration of the patch clamp technique to measure Na+ current in guinea pig myocytes. Extracellular Na+ concentration and temperature were lowered (5-10 mM, 17 degrees C) in order to maintain good voltage control. Our results demonstrated that 1) BTX modifies cardiac INa, causing a substantial steady-state (noninactivating) component of INa, 2) modification of cardiac Na+ channels by BTX shifts activation to more negative potentials and reduces both maximal gNa and selectivity for Na+; 3) binding of BTX to its receptor in the cardiac Na+ channel reduces the affinity of local anesthetics for their binding site; and 4) BTX-modified channels show use-dependent block by local anesthetics. The reduced blocking potency of local anesthetics for BTX-modified Na+ channels probably results from an allosteric interaction between BTX and local anesthetics for their respective binding sites in the Na+ channel. Our observations that use-dependent block by local anesthetics persists in BTX-modified Na+ channels suggest that this form of extra block can occur in the virtual absence of the inactivated state. Thus, the development of use-dependent block appears to rely primarily on local anesthetic binding to activated Na+ channels under these conditions.  相似文献   

7.
We have measured the inhibitory potencies of local anesthetics (procaine, lidocaine, tetracaine and dibucaine) on ATP-mediated H+-translocation, Ca2+-transport and ATPase activity in membrane vesicles from Mycobacterium phlei. Procaine and lidocaine up to 1 mM concentration did not inhibit ATP-dependent H+-translocation, Ca2+-transport and ATPase activity. However, tetracaine and dibucaine at 0.2 mM concentration caused dissipation of the proton gradient, measured by the reversal of the quenching of fluorescence of quinacrine, and inhibition of active Ca2+-transport. Tetracaine (1 mM) inhibited membrane-bound ATPase activity without affecting solubilized F1-ATPase activity. Studies show that these local anesthetics do not prevent the inactivation of F0-F1 ATPase by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD). Binding of [14C]DCCD to F0-proteolipid component remained unchanged in the presence of tetracaine indicating that DCCD and tetracaine do not share common binding sites on the F0-proteolipid sector. The inhibition of H+-translocation and membrane-bound ATPase activity by tetracaine was substantially additive in the presence of vanadate.  相似文献   

8.
Some of the present in vitro experiments compare the degree of inhibition of fast axonal transport produced by tetracaine at neutral and at alkaline pH. In desheathed spinal nerves from bullfrog, 0.5 mM tetracaine reduced the quantity of [3H]leucine-labeled proteins which were transported to a ligature by 43% at pH 7.2 and by 96% at pH 8.2; separate experiments established that transport was not affected by the pH change in the absence of tetracaine. The relationship between pH and transport-blocking potency of tetracaine (pKa 8.2) is such that the local anesthetic is more potent when more uncharged form of the molecule is present; this may reflect the easier penetration across the axonal plasma membrane by the uncharged form of the tetracaine molecule. The axonal smooth endoplasmic reticulum has been attributed the function of a calcium reservoir, and it appeared possible that local anesthetics could block axonal transport by releasing calcium from this structure. However, the inhibition of transport produced by 1 mM tetracaine (pH 7.1) in sheathed nerves was approximately 80% both in nerves with a lower than normal calcium content (47% of normal) and in nerves with a normal calcium content; this result does not support the hypothesis that inhibition of axonal transport by local anesthetics is mediated by an increase in intracellular free Ca2+, but does not rule out the hypothesis either.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of vanadate (Na3VO4) on pancreatic B-cell function were studied in normal mouse islets. Vanadate did not affect basal insulin release but potentiated the effect of 7-30 mM glucose at concentrations of 0.1-1 mM. This effect was progressive and slowly reversible. It was abolished by omission of extracellular Ca2+ but unaffected by blockers of adrenergic or muscarinic receptors. Comparison of the changes in membrane potential, 86Rb efflux and 45Ca efflux that vanadate and ouabain produced in B-cells made it possible to exclude the hypothesis that vanadate increases insulin release by blocking the sodium pump. Vanadate was also without effect on cAMP levels. On the other hand, it markedly changed the characteristics of the Ca(2+)-dependent electrical activity and of the oscillations of cytoplasmic Ca2+ recorded in B-cells stimulated by 15 mM glucose. In the steady state, Ca2+ influx was increased by vanadate, and this resulted in a rise in cytoplasmic Ca2+. The exact mechanisms underlying these changes could not be established but a blockade of K channels was excluded. In the presence of LiCl, vanadate markedly increased inositol phosphate levels in islet cells. This effect was attenuated but not suppressed by omission of Ca2+. A small increase in inositol bisphosphate was still produced by vanadate in the absence of LiCl. These results suggest that vanadate both stimulates phosphoinositide breakdown and inhibits inositol phosphate degradation. In conclusion, vanadate does not induce insulin release, but markedly potentiates the stimulation by glucose. This property is not due to an inhibition of the sodium pump or to a rise in cAMP concentration. It results from a complex interplay between changes in B-cell membrane potential, phosphoinositide metabolism and Ca2+ handling.  相似文献   

10.
In our recent publication, we describe the local anesthetic (LA) inhibition of the prokaryotic voltage gated sodium channel NaChBac. Despite the numerous functional and putative structural differences with the mammalian sodium channels, the data show that LA compounds effectively and reversibly inhibit NaChBac channels in a concentration range similar to resting blockade on eukaryotic Navs. In addition to current reduction, LA application accelerated channel inactivation kinetics of NaChBac which could be accounted for in a simple state-model whereby local anesthetics increase the probability of entering the inactivated state. We have further explored what state (or states) local anesthetic blockade of NaChBac could pertain to eukaryotic sodium channels, and what molecular similarities exist between these disparate channel families. Here we show that the rate of recovery from inactivation remains unaffected in the presence of local anesthetics. Further, we show that two sites that support use-dependent inhibition in eukaryotic channels, do not affect block to the same extent when mutated in NaChBac channels. The data indicate that the molecular determinants and the inherent mechanisms for LA block are likely to be divergent between bacterial and eukaryotic Navs, but future experiments will help define possible similarities.  相似文献   

11.
In our recent publication, we describe the local anesthetic (LA) inhibition of the prokaryotic voltage gated sodium channel NaChBac. Despite the numerous functional and putative structural differences with the mammalian sodium channels, the data show that LA compounds effectively and reversibly inhibit NaChBac channels in a concentration range similar to resting blockade on eukaryotic Navs. In addition to current reduction, LA application accelerated channel inactivation kinetics of NaChBac which could be accounted for in a simple state-model whereby local anesthetics increase the probability of entering the inactivated state. We have further explored what state (or states) local anesthetic blockade of NaChBac could pertain to eukaryotic sodium channels, and what molecular similarities exist between these disparate channel families. Here we show that the rate of recovery from inactivation remains unaffected in the presence of local anesthetics. Further, we show that two sites that support use-dependent inhibition in eukaryotic channels, do not affect block to the same extent when mutated in NaChBac channels. The data indicate that the molecular determinants and the inherent mechanisms for LA block are likely to be divergent between bacterial and eukaryotic Navs, but future experiments will help define possible similarities.  相似文献   

12.
Sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles are used here as model membrane system to question the hypothesis of enhancement of permeability of cations by anesthetics, particularly that of Ca2+ and of Mg2+. The effects of dibucaine (up to 800 microM), tetracaine (up to 2 mM), lidocaine (up to 10 mM) and procaine (up to 10 mM) on the permeability of these membranes to Ca2+ and Mg2+ have been measured. We have used an experimental approach based on the light scattering method (Kometani, T. and Kasai, M. (1978) J. Membrane Biol. 41, 295-308). It has been found that all the local anesthetics cited above markedly increase the permeability of sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles to Mg2+ and, in the concentration range tested herein, only dibucaine and tetracaine increase the permeability to Ca2+. The kinetic analysis of the time dependence of the light-scattering data after the osmotic shock shows that, in the absence of local anesthetics, the Mg2+ influx can be described as proceeding through a unique type of channel. However, Ca2+ influx appears to involve two channel of different kinetic properties. Because the relative fraction of both types of Ca2+ channel is similar to the average ratio between light and heavy vesicles in unfractionated sarcoplasmic reticulum, we suggest that each type of channel can be preferentially located in one of these fractions. The determined rate constants for Ca2+ permeability through both types of channel are 0.77 +/- 0.08 min-1 (fast channels) and 0.025 +/- 0.005 min-1 (slow channels) and that for Mg2+ is 0.08 +/- 0.02 min-1. These results agree with data obtained by other groups using different experimental approaches. Dibucaine and tetracaine significantly alter the rate of Mg2+ and Ca2+ influx through the slow channels. In addition, these two local anesthetics also produce the effect that the Mg2+ influx cannot be described with only one exponential process, thus suggesting a differential effect on vesicles of different density. The increase of Ca2+ and Mg2+ permeability by dibucaine and by tetracaine is found at concentrations of these drugs that do not produce a noticeable inhibition of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity of sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles.  相似文献   

13.
1. In voltage-clamp experiments on frog myelinated nerve fibers, the effects of nine synthetic derivatives of batrachotoxin (BTX) obtained from 7,8-dihydrobatrachotoxinin A (DBTX-A) on Na+ currents (INa) have been investigated. 2. Both of 20 alpha-esters of DBTX-A with 2,4,5-trimethylpyrrol-3-carboxylic acid (DBTX-P) and benzoic acid (DBTX) at a 10(-5) M concentration caused modification of INa qualitatively similar to that induced by BTX. 3. The quaternary derivative of DBTX (QDBTX) produced such changes in INa only at a 5.10(-4) M concentration, apparently due to its much lower lipid solubility. 4. Replacement of a -CH2- by a -C = O. group in the homomorpholine ring near the tertiary nitrogen atom abolished the DBTX activity, strongly suggesting the necessity of tertiary nitrogen protonation for the toxin interaction with the channel receptor. 5. Transfer of an 11-hydroxygroup from the alpha- to the beta-position in the DBTX molecule did not decrease its activity in spite of the fact that in the beta-position this group is sterically very hindered. The activity of 11 beta-DBTX is at variance with the prediction of Codding's (1983) "oxygen triad" hypothesis. 6. DBTX-A and compounds obtained from DBTX by oxidation of the 11 alpha-hydroxygroup (K-DBTX), acetylation (Ac-DBTX), or reduction of the hemiketal moiety (H2DBTX) even at a concentration as high as 10(-3) M were able to modify only a very small fraction of the Na channels. However, a clear-cut reversible blocking action on both normal and modified Na channels was observed. 7. These results led us to conclude that BTX modifies the Na channels only in the charged form and hemiketal and 20 alpha-ester moieties provide adequate disposition of toxin on the receptor surface. The inability of H2DBTX, DBTX-A, and K-DBTX and Ac-DBTX to modify most of the Na channels can be explained by a low "probability of correct disposition" of these ligands on the receptor surface.  相似文献   

14.
Bovine adrenocortical cells express bTREK-1 K(+) (bovine KCNK2) channels that are inhibited by ANG II through a Gq-coupled receptor by separate Ca(2+) and ATP hydrolysis-dependent signaling pathways. Whole cell and single patch clamp recording from adrenal zona fasciculata (AZF) cells were used to characterize Ca(2+)-dependent inhibition of bTREK-1. In whole cell recordings with pipette solutions containing 0.5 mM EGTA and no ATP, the Ca(2+) ionophore ionomycin (1 μM) produced a transient inhibition of bTREK-1 that reversed spontaneously within minutes. At higher concentrations, ionomycin (5-10 μM) produced a sustained inhibition of bTREK-1 that was reversible upon washing, even in the absence of hydrolyzable [ATP](i). BAPTA was much more effective than EGTA at suppressing bTREK-1 inhibition by ANG II. When intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) was buffered to 20 nM with either 11 mM BAPTA or EGTA, ANG II (10 nM) inhibited bTREK-1 by 12.0 ± 4.5% (n=11) and 59.3 ± 8.4% (n=4), respectively. Inclusion of the water-soluble phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)) analog DiC(8)PI(4,5)P(2) in the pipette failed to increase bTREK-1 expression or reduce its inhibition by ANG II. The open probability (P(o)) of unitary bTREK-1 channels recorded from inside-out patches was reduced by Ca(2+) (10-35 μM) in a concentration-dependent manner. These results are consistent with a model in which ANG II inhibits bTREK-1 K(+) channels by a Ca(2+)-dependent mechanism that does not require the depletion of membrane-associated PIP(2). They further indicate that the Ca(2+) source is located in close proximity within a "Ca(2+) nanodomain" of bTREK-1 channels, where [Ca(2+)](i) may reach concentrations of >10 μM. bTREK-1 is the first two-pore K(+) channel shown to be inhibited by Ca(2+) through activation of a G protein-coupled receptor.  相似文献   

15.
In this study we used barium currents through voltage gated L-type calcium channels (recorded in freshly isolated cells with a conventional patch-clamp technique) to elucidate the cellular action mechanism for volatile anesthetics. It was found that halothane and isoflurane inhibited (dose-dependently and voltage independently) Ba2+ currents through voltage gated Ca2+ channels. Half maximal inhibitions occurred at 0.64 ± 0.07 mM and 0.86 ± 0.1 mM. The Hill slope value was 2 for both volatile anesthetics, suggesting the presence of more than one interaction site. Current inhibition by volatile anesthetics was prominent over the whole voltage range without changes in the peak of the current voltage relationship. Intracellular infusion of the GDPβS (100 μM) together with staurosporine (200 nM) did not prevent the inhibitory effect of volatile anesthetics. Unlike pharmacological Ca2+ channel blockers, volatile anesthetics blocked Ca2+ channel currents at resting membrane potentials. In other words, halothane and isoflurane induced an ‘initial block’. After the first 4–7 control pulses, the cells were left unstimulated and anesthetics were applied. The first depolarization after the pause evoked a Ca2+ channel current whose amplitude was reduced to 41 ± 3.4% and to 57 ± 4.2% of control values. In an analysis of the steady-state inactivation curve for voltage dependence, volatile anesthetics induced a negative shift of the 50% inactivation of the calcium channels. By contrast, the steepness factor characterizing the voltage sensitivity of the channels was unaffected. Unitary L-type Ca2+ channels blockade occurred under cell-attached configuration, suggesting a possible action of volatile anesthetics from within the intracellular space or from the part of the channel inside the lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

16.
Smooth muscle cells normally do not possess fast Na+ channels, but inward current is carried through two types of Ca2+ channels: slow (L type) Ca2+ channels and fast (T type) Ca2+ channels. Whole-cell voltage clamp was done on single smooth muscle cells isolated from the longitudinal layer of the 18-day pregnant rat uterus. Depolarizing pulses, applied from a holding potential of -90 mV, evoked two types of inward current, fast and slow. The fast inward current decayed within 30 ms, depended on [Na]o, and was inhibited by tetrodotoxin (TTX) (K0.5 = 27 nM). The slow inward current decayed slowly, was dependent on [Ca]o (or Ba2+), and was inhibited by nifedipine. These results suggest that the fast inward current is a fast Na+ channel current and that the slow inward current is a Ca2+ slow channel current. A fast-inactivating Ca2+ channel current was not evident. We conclude that the ion channels that generate inward currents in pregnant rat uterine cells are TTX-sensitive fast Na+ channels and dihydropyridine-sensitive slow Ca2+ channels. The number of fast Na+ channels increased during gestation. The averaged current density increased from 0 on day 5, to 0.19 on day 9, to 0.56 on day 14, to 0.90 on day 18, and to 0.86 pA/pF on day 21. This almost linear increase occurs because of an increase in the fraction of cells that possess fast Na+ channels. The Ca2+ channel current density was also higher during the latter half of gestation. These results indicate that the fast Na+ channels and Ca2+ slow channels in myometrium become more numerous as term approaches, and we suggest that the fast Na+ current may be involved in spread of excitation. Isoproterenol (beta-agonist) did not affect either ICa(s) or INa(f), whereas Mg2+ (K0.5 = 12 mM) and nifedipine (K0.5 = 3.3 nM) depressed ICa(s). Oxytocin had no effect on INa(f) and actually depressed ICa(s) to a small extent. Therefore, the tocolytic action of beta-agonists cannot be explained by an inhibition of ICa(s), whereas that of Mg2+ can be so explained. The stimulating action of oxytocin on uterine contractions cannot be explained by a stimulation of ICa(s).  相似文献   

17.
Study of the excitatory sodium current (INa) intact heart muscle has been hampered by the limitations of voltage clamp methods in multicellular preparations that result from the presence of large series resistance and from extracellular ion accumulation and depletion. To minimize these problems we voltage clamped and internally perfused freshly isolated canine cardiac Purkinje cells using a large bore (25-microns diam) double-barreled flow-through glass suction pipette. Control of [Na+]i was demonstrated by the agreement of measured INa reversal potentials with the predictions of the Nernst relation. Series resistance measured by an independent microelectrode was comparable to values obtained in voltage clamp studies of squid axons (less than 3.0 omega-cm2). The rapid capacity transient decays (tau c less than 15 microseconds) and small deviations of membrane potential (less than 4 mV at peak INa) achieved in these experiments represent good conditions for the study of INa. We studied INa in 26 cells (temperature range 13 degrees-24 degrees C) with 120 or 45 mM [Na+]o and 15 mM [Na+]i. Time to peak INa at 18 degrees C ranged from 1.0 ms (-40 mV) to less than 250 microseconds (+ 40 mV), and INa decayed with a time course best described by two time constants in the voltage range -60 to -10 mV. Normalized peak INa in eight cells at 18 degrees C was 2.0 +/- 0.2 mA/cm2 with [Na+]o 45 mM and 4.1 +/- 0.6 mA/cm2 with [Na+]o 120 mM. These large peak current measurements require a high density of Na+ channels. It is estimated that 67 +/- 6 channels/micron 2 are open at peak INa, and from integrated INa as many as 260 Na+ channels/micron2 are available for opening in canine cardiac Purkinje cells.  相似文献   

18.
The role of pacemaker properties in vertebrate respiratory rhythm generation is not well understood. To address this question from a comparative perspective, brain stems from adult turtles were isolated in vitro, and respiratory motor bursts were recorded on hypoglossal (XII) nerve rootlets. The goal was to test whether burst frequency could be altered by conditions known to alter respiratory pacemaker neuron activity in mammals (e.g., increased bath KCl or blockade of specific inward currents). While bathed in artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF), respiratory burst frequency was not correlated with changes in bath KCl (0.5-10.0 mM). Riluzole (50 microM; persistent Na(+) channel blocker) increased burst frequency by 31 +/- 5% (P < 0.05) and decreased burst amplitude by 42 +/- 4% (P < 0.05). In contrast, flufenamic acid (FFA, 20-500 microM; Ca(2+)-activated cation channel blocker) reduced and abolished burst frequency in a dose- and time-dependent manner (P < 0.05). During synaptic inhibition blockade with bicuculline (50 microM; GABA(A) channel blocker) and strychnine (50 muM; glycine receptor blocker), rhythmic motor activity persisted, and burst frequency was directly correlated with extracellular KCl (0.5-10.0 mM; P = 0.005). During synaptic inhibition blockade, riluzole (50 microM) did not alter burst frequency, whereas FFA (100 microM) abolished burst frequency (P < 0.05). These data are most consistent with the hypothesis that turtle respiratory rhythm generation requires Ca(2+)-activated cation channels but not pacemaker neurons, which thereby favors the group-pacemaker model. During synaptic inhibition blockade, however, the rhythm generator appears to be transformed into a pacemaker-driven network that requires Ca(2+)-activated cation channels.  相似文献   

19.
Spontaneous calcium release from purified light sarcoplasmic reticulum has been previously described (Palade, P., Mitchell, R. D., and Fleischer, S. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 8098-8107) and found to be distinct from several other forms of Ca2+ release. Ca2+ release occurs after a lag period following active Ca2+ preloading and depletion of extravesicular Ca2+. In the present study, we find that local anesthetics inhibit spontaneous Ca2+ release, in a time-dependent manner, varying considerably in the preincubation time required to exert maximal effect. At pH 7.0, hydrophilic and mostly charged local anesthetics, such as procaine, procainamide, and N-(2,6-dimethylphenyl carbamoyl methyl)triethyl ammonium bromide, inhibit Ca2+ release only after long preincubations (hours), whereas more hydrophobic local anesthetics are effective after only a short incubation (minutes) with sarcoplasmic reticulum. The more hydrophobic anesthetics take somewhat longer to reach equilibrium, as studied by inhibition of unidirectional Ca2+ efflux, and there is a direct relationship between hydrophobic partition coefficient and half-time to reach equilibrium. Agents known to inhibit permeability pathways for monovalent cations i.e. K+ channel blockers (decamethonium and n-dodecane-1, 12-N,N,N,N',N',N'-hexamethyl-bis-ammonium) or the anion blocker (4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid), do not inhibit spontaneous Ca2+ release. Carbonyl cyanide m-fluorophenylhydrazone, a protonophore, and gramicidin D, a monovalent cation ionophore, have no effect on Ca2+ release whether local anesthetics are present or not, while the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 relieves inhibition of Ca2+ release by local anesthetics. Ruthenium red does not inhibit spontaneous Ca2+ release. These findings suggest that the binding site(s) for local anesthetics is located on the inner face of the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane and that local anesthetics interact directly with a Ca2+ channel rather than with other permeability pathways which might indirectly influence Ca2+ channel gating.  相似文献   

20.
Previous studies have shown that an adenosine triphosphate-dependent calcium uptake activity in lysed brain synaptosomes is attributable to the neuronal endoplasmic reticulum elements. The present study has examined the effects of tetracaine, lidocaine, and dibucaine on this calcium uptake process. The adenosine triphosphate-dependent uptake of 45Ca2+ was measured (in the absence and in the presence of drug) by Millipore filtration and liquid scintillation spectrometry. The local anesthetics studied exhibited a biphasic effect on 45Ca2+ uptake by lysed synaptosomes from rat brain cortex. High concentrations (5 mM tetracaine, 50 mM lidocaine, 0.6 mM dibucaine) inhibited the uptake of 45Ca2+; the order of potency for this effect was dibucaine greater than tetracaine greater than lidocaine. Lower concentrations of these local anesthetics produced either no effect on 45Ca2+ uptake (2 mM tetracaine or 30 mM lidocaine) or a stimulation of 45Ca2+ uptake (1 mM tetracaine, 10 mM lidocaine, and 0.3 mM or 0.1 mM dibucaine); the order of potency for stimulation of 45Ca2+ uptake was dibucaine greater than tetracaine greater than lidocaine.  相似文献   

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