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1.
Drosophila has proved to be a valuable system for studying the structure and function of ion channels. However, relatively little is known about the regulation of ion channels, particularly that of Ca2+ channels, in Drosophila. Physiological and pharmacological differences between invertebrate and mammalian L‐type Ca2+ channels raise questions on the extent of conservation of Ca2+ channel modulatory pathways. We have examined the role of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) cascade in modulating the dihydropyridine (DHP)‐sensitive Ca2+ channels in the larval muscles of Drosophila, using mutations and drugs that disrupt specific steps in this pathway. The L‐type (DHP‐sensitive) Ca2+ channel current was increased in the dunce mutants, which have high cAMP concentration owing to cAMP‐specific phosphodiesterase (PDE) disruption. The current was decreased in the rutabaga mutants, where adenylyl cyclase (AC) activity is altered thereby decreasing the cAMP concentration. The dunce effect was mimicked by 8‐Br‐cAMP, a cAMP analog, and IBMX, a PDE inhibitor. The rutabaga effect was rescued by forskolin, an AC activator. H‐89, an inhibitor of protein kinase‐A (PKA), reduced the current and inhibited the effect of 8‐Br‐cAMP. The data suggest modulation of L‐type Ca2+ channels of Drosophila via a cAMP‐PKA mediated pathway. While there are differences in L‐type channels, as well as in components of cAMP cascade, between Drosophila and vertebrates, main features of the modulatory pathway have been conserved. The data also raise questions on the likely role of DHP‐sensitive Ca2+ channel modulation in synaptic plasticity, and learning and memory, processes disrupted by the dnc and the rut mutations. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 39: 491–500, 1999  相似文献   

2.
The adenylate cyclase/cAMP signaling pathway and adult mushroom bodies (MBs) have been shown to play an important role in sleep regulation in Drosophila. The amnesiac (amn) gene, encodes a neuropeptide that is homologous with vertebrate pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide (PACAP), is expressed in dorsal paired medial (DPM) neurons and is required for the middle-term memory (MTM) in flies. However, the role of amn on regulation of sleep is as yet unknown. Here we provide evidence that amn plays a major role on sleep maintenance and onset in Drosophila. Flies with the amnesiac allele, loss-of-function amnX8 mutation, showed a fragmented sleep pattern and short sleep latency. Moreover, homeostatic regulation was disrupted in amnX8 mutants after sleep deprivation. Sleep maintenance was also influenced by disruption of neurotransmission in DPM neurons with increased sleep bout number and decreased sleep bout length. Furthermore, age-related sleep fragmentation and initiation were inhibited in amnX8 mutant flies. These data suggest that amn is required in initiation and maintenance of sleep.  相似文献   

3.
We investigated the effects of chronically lowered cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) on the morphology and physiology of the Drosophila larval neuromuscular junction, using two fly lines in which cAMP was significantly lower than normal in the nervous system: (a) transgenic flies in which the dunce (dnc) gene product was overexpressed in the nervous system, and (b) flies mutant for the rutabaga gene (rut1) which have reduced adenylyl cyclase activity. In comparison with controls, larvae with reduced cAMP exhibited a smaller number of synaptic varicosities. This effect was more pronounced in transgenic larvae, in which the reduction of neural cAMP was more pronounced. Synaptic transmission was also reduced in both cases, as evidenced by smaller excitatory junctional potentials (EJPs). Synaptic currents recorded from individual synaptic varicosities of the neuromuscular junction indicated almost normal transmitter release properties in transgenic larvae and a modest impairment in rut1 larvae. Thus, reduction in EJP amplitude in transgenic larvae is primarily due to reduced innervation, while in rut1 larvae it is attributable to the combined effects of reduced innervation and a mild impairment of transmitter release. We conclude that the major effect of chronically lowered cAMP is reduction of innervation rather than impairment of transmitter release properties. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 40: 1–13, 1999  相似文献   

4.
Neuritogenesis is essential in establishing the neuronal circuitry. An important intracellular signal causing neuritogenesis is cAMP. In this report, we showed that an increase in intracellular cAMP stimulated neuritogenesis in neuroblastoma N2A cells via a PKA‐dependent pathway. Two voltage‐gated K+ (Kv) channel blockers, 4‐aminopyridine (4‐AP) and tetraethylammonium (TEA), inhibited cAMP‐stimulated neuritogenesis in N2A cells in a concentration‐dependent manner that remarkably matched their ability to inhibit Kv currents in these cells. Consistently, siRNA knock down of Kv1.1, Kv1.4, and Kv2.1 expression reduced Kv currents and inhibited cAMP‐stimulated neuritogenesis. Kv1.1, Kv1.4, and Kv2.1 channels were expressed in the cell bodies and neurites as shown by immunohistochemistry. Microfluorimetric imaging of intracellular [K+] demonstrated that [K+] in neurites was lower than that in the cell body. We also showed that cAMP‐stimulated neuritogenesis may not involve voltage‐gated Ca2+ or Na+ channels. Taken together, the results suggest a role of Kv channels and enhanced K+ efflux in cAMP/PKA‐stimulated neuritogenesis in N2A cells. J. Cell. Physiol. 226: 1090–1098, 2011. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Accumulation of amyloid (Aβ) peptides has been suggested to be the primary event in Alzheimer's disease. In neurons, K+ channels regulate a number of processes, including setting the resting potential, keeping action potentials short, timing interspike intervals, synaptic plasticity, and cell death. In particular, A‐type K+ channels have been implicated in the onset of LTP in mammalian neurons, which is thought to underlie learning and memory. A number of studies have shown that Aβ peptides alter the properties of K+ currents in mammalian neurons. We set out to determine the effects of Aβ peptides on the neuronal A‐type K+ channels of Drosophila. Treatment of cells for 18 h with 1 μM Aβ1‐42 altered the kinetics of the A‐type K+ current, shifting steady‐state inactivation to more depolarized potentials and increasing the rate of recovery from inactivation. It also caused a decrease in neuronal viability. Thus it seems that alteration in the properties of the A‐type K+ current is a prelude to the amyloid‐induced death of neurons. This alteration in the properties of the A‐type K+ current may provide a basis for the early memory impairment that was observed prior to neurodegeneration in a recent study of a transgenic Drosophila melanogaster line over‐expressing the human Aβ1‐42 peptide. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol, 2006  相似文献   

6.
The resting potassium current (I KI ) in gerbil dissociated type I vestibular hair cells has been characterized under various ionic conditions in whole cell voltage-clamp. When all K+ in the patch electrode solution was replaced with Na+, (Na+) in or Cs+, (Cs+) in , large inward currents were evoked in response to voltage steps between −90 and −50 mV. Activation of these currents could be described by a Hodgkin-Huxley-type kinetic scheme, the order of best fit increasing with depolarization. Above ∼−40 mV currents became outward and inactivated with a monoexponential time course. Membrane resistance was inversely correlated with external K+ concentration. With (Na+) in , currents were eliminated when K+ was removed from the external solution or following extracellular perfusion of 4-aminopyridine, indicating that currents flowed through I KI channels. Also, reduction of K+ entry through manipulation of membrane potential reduced the magnitude of the outward current. Under symmetrical Cs+, 0 K+ conditions I KI is highly permeable to Cs+. However, inward currents were reduced when small amounts of external K+ were added. Higher concentrations of K+ resulted in larger currents indicating an anomalous mole fraction effect in mixtures of external Cs+ and K+. Received: 23 June 1999/Revised: 27 September 1999  相似文献   

7.
The patch clamp technique was applied to protoplasts isolated from the epidermis and pericycle of Arabidopsis roots and their plasma membrane currents investigated. In the whole cell configuration, all protoplasts from the epidermis exhibited depolarization‐activated time‐dependent outwardly rectifying (OR) currents whereas OR currents were present in only 50% of cells from the pericycle. The properties of the OR currents in the epidermis and pericycle were compared with respect to their selectivity, pharmacology and gating. The time‐dependent activation kinetics, selectivity and sensitivity to extracellular tetraethyl ammonium of the OR current in each cell type were not significantly different. The reversal potential (Erev) of the OR currents indicated that they were primarily due to the movement of K+. However, the gating properties of the OR currents from the epidermis differed markedly from those exhibited in the pericycle. Although both cell types displayed OR currents with voltage‐dependent gating modulated in a potassium‐dependent fashion [i.e. the activation threshold (V0.5) was displaced to more positive voltages as extracellular K+ increased], the OR currents in the epidermis also displayed voltage‐independent gating by extracellular K+ which dramatically regulated current density. In the present study, reducing extracellular K+ activity from 40 to 0.87 mm reduced the OR current density in epidermal cells by approximately 80%. The chord conductance of the OR current saturated as a function of extracellular K+ and could be fitted with a Michaelis–Menten function to yield a binding constant (Km) of 10.5 mm . The ability of other monovalent cations to substitute for K+‐gating of the OR currents was also investigated and shown to exhibit a relative sequence of K+ ≥ Rb+ > Cs+ > Na+ ≥ Li+ (Eisenmann sequence IV) with respect to efficacy of gating. Furthermore, single channel recordings demonstrated that channel activity rather than the single channel conductance was modulated by extracellular K+. In contrast, OR current density in the pericycle was largely independent of extracellular K+. It is suggested that the contrasting gating properties of the K+ channels in the epidermis and pericycle reflect their different physiological roles, particularly with respect to their role in K+ (nutrient) transport from the soil solution to the shoot.  相似文献   

8.
Analysis of the mechanisms underlying cardiac excitability can be faciliated greatly by mutations that disrupt ion channels and receptors involved in this excitability. With an extensive repertoire of such mutations, Drosophila provides the best available genetic model for these studies. However, the use of Drosophila for this purpose has been severely handicapped by lack of a suitable preparation of heart and a complete lack of knowledge about the ionic currents that underlie its excitability. We describe a simple preparation to measure heartbeat in Drosophila. This preparation was used to ask if heartbeat in Drosophila is myogenic in origin, and to determine the types of ion channels involved in influencing the heart rate. Tetrodotoxin, even at a high concentration of 40 μM, did not affect heart rate, indicating that heartbeat may be myogenic in origin and that it may not be determined by Na+ channels. Heart rate was affected by PN200–110, verapamil, and diltiazem, which block vertebrate L-type Ca2+ channels. Thus, L-type channels, which contribute to the prolonged plateau of action potentials in vertebrate heart, may play a role in Drosophila cardiac excitability. It also suggests that Drosophila heart is subject to a similar intervention by organic Ca2+ channel blockers as the vertebrate heart. A role for K+ currents in the function of Drosophila heart was suggested by an effect of tetraethylammonium, which blocks all the four identified K+ currents in the larval body wall muscles, and quinidine, which blocks the delayed rectifier K+ current in these muscles. The preparation described here also provides an extremely simple method for identifying mutations that affect heart rate. Such mutations and pharmacological agents will be very useful for analyzing molecular components of cardiac excitability in Drosophila. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
10.
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   

11.
K(+) currents in cultured Drosophila larval neurons have been classified into four categories according to their inactivation time constants, relative amplitude, and response to K(+) channel blockers 4-AP and tetraethylammonium. The percentage (65%) of neurons displaying K(+) currents which were reduced to 30% in amplitude by 5 mM cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) analog 8-bromo-cAMP in both Drosophila memory mutants rutabaga (rut) and amnesiac (amn) was significantly larger than that (50%) in wild type. This initial characterization provides evidence for altered K(+) currents in both rut and amn mutants. Arachidonic acid, a specifical inhibitor of Kv4 family (shal) K(+) channels, was found to inhibit K(+) currents in cultured Drosophila neurons, suggesting the presence of shal channels in these neurons.  相似文献   

12.
Fan LM  Wang YF  Wu WH 《Protoplasma》2003,220(3-4):143-152
Summary.  Patch-clamp whole-cell and single-channel recording techniques were used to investigate the regulation of outward K+ channels by external and internal protons in Brassica chinensis pollen protoplasts. Outward K+ currents and conductance were insensitive to external pH (pHo) except at pH 4.5. Maximal conductance (G max) for the outward K+ currents was inhibited at acidic external pH. Half-activation voltage (E 1/2) for the outward K+ currents shifted to more positive voltages along with the decrease in pHo. E 1/2 can be described by a modified Henderson–Hasselbalch equation expected from a single titratable binding site. The activation kinetics of the outward K+ channels was largely insensitive to pHo. An internal pH (pHi) of 4.5 significantly increased outward K+ currents and conductance. G max for the outward K+ currents decreased with elevations in pHi. In contrast to the effect of pHo, E 1/2 was shifted to more positive voltages with elevations in pHi. The outward K+ currents, G max and E 1/2 can be described by the modified Henderson–Hasselbalch equation. Furthermore, acidifying pHi accelerated the activation of the outward K+ currents significantly. The differences in electro-physiological properties among previously reported and currently described plant outward K+ channels may reflect differences in the structure of these channels. Received May 7, 2002; accepted July 9, 2002; published online November 29, 2002  相似文献   

13.
Patch-clamp experiments were performed on satellite glial cells wrapped around sympathetic neurons in the rabbit coeliac ganglion. With the cleaning method used, the glial cells could be kept in place and were directly accessible to the patch-clamp pipettes. Whole-cell recordings showed that glial cells had almost ohmic properties. Their resting potential (–79.1±1.2 mV) was found to be very nearly the same as the K+ reversal potential and 20 mV more negative than that of the neurons they encapsulated. Unitary currents from ionic channels present in the glial membrane were recorded in the cell-attached configuration with pipettes filled with various amounts of K+, Na+ and gluconate. Only K+-selective channels with slight inwardly rectifying properties (in the presence of 150 mM [K+]0) were detected. These channels were active (P 0=0.7–0.8) at the cell resting potential. The channel conductance, but not its opening probability, was dependent on the [K+] in the pipette. Cl-selective channels (outwardly rectifying and large conductance channels) were detected in excised patches.The properties of the K+ channels (increased inward current with [K+] and detectable outward current at low [K+]) are well suited for siphoning the K+ released by active neurons.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The tight-seal whole-cell recording method has been used to studyNecturus choroid plexus epithelium. A cell potential of –59±2 mV and a whole cell resistance of 56±6 M were measured using this technique. Application of depolarizing step potentials activated voltage-dependent outward currents that developed with time. For example, when the cell was bathed in 110mm NaCl Ringer solution and the interior of the cell contained a solution of 110mm KCl and 5nm Ca2+, stepping the membrane potential from a holding value of –50 to –10 mV evoked outward currents which, after a delay of greater than 50 msec, increased to a steady state in 500 msec. The voltage dependence of the delayed currents suggests that they may be currents through Ca2+-activated K_ channels. Based on the voltage dependence of the activation of Ca2+-activated K+ channels, we have devised a general method to isolate the delayed currents. The delayed currents were highly selective for K+ as their reversal potential at different K+ concentration gradients followed the Nernst potential for K+. These currents were reduced by the addition of TEA+ to the bath solution and were eliminated when Cs+ or Na+ replaced intracellular K+. Increasing the membrane potential to more positive values decreased both the delay and the half-times (t 1/2) to the steady value. Increasing the pipette Ca2+ also decreased the delay and decreasedt 1/2. For instance, when pipette Ca2+ was increased from 5 to 500nm, the delay andt 1/2 decreased from values greater than 50 and 150 msec to values less than 10 and 50 msec. We conclude that the delayed currents are K+ currents through Ca2+-activated K+ channels.At the resting membrane potential of –60 mV, Ca2+-activated K+ channels contribute between 13 to 25% of the total conductance of the cell. The contribution of these channels to cell conductance nearly doubles with membrane depolarization of 20–30 mV. Such depolarizations have been observed when cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) secretion is stimulated by cAMP and with intracellular Ca2+. Thus the Ca2+-activated K+ channels may play a specific role in maintaining intracellular K+ concentrations during CSF secretion.  相似文献   

15.
β-Adrenergic Modulation of Glial Inwardly Rectifying Potassium Channels   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Abstract: Cultured spinal cord astrocytes (2–13 days in vitro) express several different potassium current types, including delayed rectifier, transient A-type, and inward rectifier (Kir) K+ currents. Of these, Kir is believed to be of critical importance in the modulation of extracellular [K+] in the CNS. Using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique, we analyzed modulation of Kir currents by β-adrenergic receptor activation. The selective β-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol (1–100 µM) and epinephrine (1–100 µM) each reduced peak Kir current amplitudes to 52.7 ± 12.5 and 63.6 ± 7.0%, respectively, at 100 µM. Forskolin (KD of ~25 µM), an activator of adenylate cyclase (AC), and dibutyryl-cyclic AMP (1 mM), a membrane-permeable analogue of cyclic AMP (cAMP), were each used to increase [cAMP]i, the product of AC, and resulted in similar reductions of Kir currents. By contrast, 1,9-dideoxyforskolin (1–50 µM), a forskolin analogue that does not activate AC, did not affect Kir currents, indicating that AC activity is a required element for Kir modulation. Three inhibitors of PKA—Rp-adenosine 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphothioate, H-7, and adenosine 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate-dependent protein kinase inhibitor—failed to inhibit Kir current reduction by β-adrenergic agonists. These results indicate that β-adrenergic receptor ligands can modulate Kir currents and suggest that this modulation involves activation of AC but not protein kinase A. Such modulation may provide a mechanism by which neurons can modulate glial Kir currents and thereby may affect glial K+“spatial buffering” in the CNS.  相似文献   

16.
The Arabidopsis thaliana cDNA, KAT1 encodes a hyperpolarization-activated K+ (K+ in ) channel. In the present study, we identify and characterize dominant negative point mutations that suppress K+ in channel function. Effects of two mutations located in the H5 region of KAT1, at positions 256 (T256R) and 262 (G262K), were studied. The co-expression of either T256R or G262K mutants with KAT1 produced an inhibition of K+ currents upon membrane hyperpolarization. The magnitude of this inhibition was dependent upon the molar ratio of cRNA for wild-type to mutant channel subunits injected. Inhibition of KAT1 currents by the co-expression of T256R or G262K did not greatly affect the ion selectivity of residual currents for Rb+, Na+, Li+, or Cs+. When T256R or G262K were co-expressed with a different K+ channel, AKT2, an inhibition of the channel currents was also observed. Voltage-dependent Cs+ block experiments with co-expressed wild type, KAT1 and AKT2, channels further indicated that KAT1 and AKT2 formed heteromultimers. These data show that AKT2 and KAT1 are able to co-assemble and suggest that suppression of channel function can be pursued in vivo by the expression of the dominant negative K + in channel mutants described here. Received: 2 July 1998/Revised: 23 October 1998  相似文献   

17.
Multiple types of voltage‐activated calcium (Ca2+) channels are present in all nerve cells examined so far; however, the underlying functional consequences of their presence is often unclear. We have examined the contribution of Ca2+ influx through N‐ and L‐ type voltage‐activated Ca2+ channels in sympathetic neurons to the depolarization‐induced activation of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the rate‐limiting enzyme in norepinephrine (NE) synthesis, and the depolarization‐induced release of NE. Superior cervical ganglia (SCG) were decentralized 4 days prior to their use to eliminate the possibility of indirect effects of depolarization via preganglionic nerve terminals. The presence of both ω‐conotoxin GVIA (1 μM), a specific blocker of N‐type channels, and nimodipine (1 μM), a specific blocker of L‐type Ca2+ channels, was necessary to inhibit completely the stimulation of TH activity by 55 mM K+, indicating that Ca2+ influx through both types of channels contributes to enzyme activation. In contrast, K+ stimulation of TH activity in nerve fibers and terminals in the iris could be inhibited completely by ω‐conotoxin GVIA alone and was unaffected by nimodipine as previously shown. K+ stimulation of NE release from both ganglia and irises was also blocked completely when ω‐conotoxin GVIA was included in the medium, while nimodipine had no significant effect in either tissue. These results indicate that particular cellular processes in specific areas of a neuron are differentially dependent on Ca2+ influx through N‐ and L‐type Ca2+ channels. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 40: 137–148, 1999  相似文献   

18.
Zhou C  Qi C  Zhao J  Wang F  Zhang W  Li C  Jing J  Kang X  Chai Z 《Neurochemical research》2011,36(6):1116-1123
Interleukin-1β (IL-1β) is a multifunctional proinflammatory cytokine that plays a key role in the injuries and diseases of the central nervous system (CNS). A voltage-gated Na+ channel is essential for the excitability and electrical properties of neurons. However, it is not known whether IL-1β directly affects the central Na+ channels. In the present study, we examined the effects of IL-1β on Na+ currents in cultured cortical neurons using patch-clamp recording. Our results showed that IL-1β suppressed Na+ currents through its receptor in a time- and dose-dependent manner, but did not alter the voltage-dependent activation and inactivation. PKC and then p38 MAPK were involved in this inhibition. The spike amplitude was also inhibited by IL-1β in the doses that decreased the Na+ currents. Our findings revealed the inhibition of chronic IL-1β treatment on voltage-gated Na+ channels in the CNS, and showed that the action potential (AP) amplitude was reduced by IL-1β due to a decrease of Na+ currents.  相似文献   

19.
Single-chloride-channel currents were recorded from primary cultured Drosophila neurons by means of the gigaohm-seal patch-clamp technique. Small inward-going current channels were observed in excised inside-out patches with the external face of the membrane exposed to bathing solutions devoid of K+, Na+, and Ca2+. The inward current was affected by changing the anions but not the cations bathing the cytoplasmic face of the patch. Complete replacement of CI? by glutamate eliminated the current. The current was maintained with intracellular solutions containing NO3? in place of CI?. The single-channel conductance was estimated to be 7 ps with CI?, and 11 ps with NO3? at 10°C. Possible functions of this anion-selective channel have been discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The K+ channel KCNQ1 (KVLQT1) is a voltage-gated K+ channel, coexpressed with regulatory subunits such as KCNE1 (IsK, mink) or KCNE3, depending on the tissue examined. Here, we investigate regulation and properties of human and rat KCNQ1 and the impact of regulators such as KCNE1 and KCNE3. Because the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) has also been suggested to regulate KCNQ1 channels we studied the effects of CFTR on KCNQ1 in Xenopus oocytes. Expression of both human and rat KCNQ1 induced time dependent K+ currents that were sensitive to Ba2+ and 293B. Coexpression with KCNE1 delayed voltage activation, while coexpression with KCNE3 accelerated current activation. KCNQ1 currents were activated by an increase in intracellular cAMP, independent of coexpression with KCNE1 or KCNE3. cAMP dependent activation was abolished in N-terminal truncated hKCNQ1 but was still detectable after deletion of a single PKA phosphorylation motif. In the presence but not in the absence of KCNE1 or KCNE3, K+ currents were activated by the Ca2+ ionophore ionomycin. Coexpression of CFTR with either human or rat KCNQ1 had no impact on regulation of KCNQ1 K+ currents by cAMP but slightly shifted the concentration response curve for 293B. Thus, KCNQ1 expressed in Xenopus oocytes is regulated by cAMP and Ca2+ but is not affected by CFTR. Received: 13 December 2000/Revised: 30 March 2001  相似文献   

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