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1.
The effect of phloretin, a dipolar organic compound, on single potassium channel currents of myelinateed nerve fibres of Xenopus laevis has been investigated, using inside-out patches prepared by the method of Jonas et al. (1989). The I channel, a potential dependent K channel with intermediate deactivation kinetics, was reversibly blocked by 20 µM phloretin applied on the inside; the block was strongest at negative membrane potentials and less pronounced at positive potentials. Phloretin shifted the curve relating open probability to membrane potential towards more positive potentials and reduced its slope and maximum. This confirms previous findings on the effect of phloretin on the voltage dependence of the fast macroscopic K conductance. Single channel conductance and deactivation kinetics were not altered by phloretin. Offprint requests to: Correspondence to: H. Meves  相似文献   

2.
3.
Summary Human red cells were prepared with various cellular Na+ and K+ concentrations at a constant sum of 156mm. At maximal activation of the K+ conductance,g K(Ca), the net efflux of K+ was determined as a function of the cellular Na+ and K+ concentrations and the membrane potential,V m , at a fixed [K+]ex of 3.5mm.V m was only varied from (V m E K)25 mV and upwards, that is, outside the range of potentials with a steep inward rectifying voltage dependence (Stampe & Vestergaard-Bogind, 1988).g K(Ca) as a function of cellular Na+ and K+ concentrations atV m =–40, 0 and 40 mV indicated a competitive, voltage-dependent block of the outward current conductance by cellular Na+. Since the present Ca2+-activated K+ channels have been shown to be of the multi-ion type, the experimental data from each set of Na+ and K+ concentrations were fitted separately to a Boltzmann-type equation, assuming that the outward current conductance in the absence of cellular Na+ is independent of voltage. The equivalent valence determined in this way was a function of the cellular Na+ concentration increasing from 0.5 to 1.5 as this concentration increased from 11 to 101mm. Data from a previous study of voltage dependence as a function of the degree of Ca2+ activation of the channel could be accounted for in this way as well. It is therefore suggested that the voltage dependence ofg K(Ca) for outward currents at (V m E K)>25 25 mV reflects a voltage-dependent Na+ block of the Ca2+-activated K+ channels.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Human peripheral blood monocytes cultured for varying periods of time were studied using whole-cell and single-channel patch-clamp recording techniques. Whole-cell recordings revealed both an outward K current activating at potentials >20 mV and an inwardly rectifying K current present at potentials negative to –60 mV. Tail currents elicited by voltage steps that activated outward current reversed nearE K, indicating that the outward current was due to a K conductance. TheI–V curve for the macroscopic outward current was similar to the mean single-channelI–V curve for the large conductance (240 pS in symmetrical K) calcium-activated K channel present in these cells. TEA and charybdotoxin blocked the whole-cell outward current and the single-channel current. Excised and cell-attached single-channel data showed that calcium-activated K channels were absent in freshly isolated monocytes but were present in >85% of patches from macrophages cultured for >7 days. Only 35% of the human macrophages cultured for >7 days exhibited whole-cell inward currents. The inward current was blocked by external barium and increased when [K] o increased. Inward-rectifying single-channel currents with a conductance of 28 pS were present in cells exhibiting inward whole-cell currents. These single-channel currents are similar to those described in detail in J774.1 cells (L.C. McKinney & E.K. Gallin,J. Membrane Biol. 103:41–53, 1988).  相似文献   

5.
We used the patch-clamp technique to identify and characterize the electrophysiological, biophysical, and pharmacological properties of K+ channels in enzymatically dissociated ventricular cells of the land pulmonate snail Helix. The family of outward K+ currents started to activate at –30 mV and the activation was faster at more depolarized potentials (time constants: at 0 mV 17.4 ± 1.2 ms vs. 2.5 ± 0.1 ms at + 60 mV). The current waveforms were similar to those of the A-type family of voltage-dependent K+ currents encoded by Kv4.2 in mammals. Inactivation of the current was relatively fast, i.e., 50.2 ± 1.8% of current was inactivated within 250 ms at + 40 mV. The recovery of K+ channels from inactivation was relatively slow with a mean time constant of 1.7 ± 0.2 s. Closer examination of steady-state inactivation kinetics revealed that the voltage dependency of inactivation was U-shaped, exhibiting less inactivation at more depolarized membrane potentials. On the basis of this phenomenon, we suggest that a channel encoded by Kv2.1 similar to that in mammals does exist in land pulmonates of the Helix genus. Outward currents were sensitive to 4-aminopyridine and tetraethylammonium chloride. The last compound was most effective, with an IC50 of 336 ± 142 µmol l–1. Thus, using distinct pharmacological and biophysical tools we identified different types of voltage-gated K+ channels. Present address for S.A.K.: Brigham and Womens Hospital, Cardiovascular Division, Harvard Medical School, 75 Francis St., Thorn 1216, Boston, MA 02115.  相似文献   

6.
Ion conductance and ion selectivity of potassium channels in snail neurones   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Summary Delayed potassium channels were studied in internally perfused neurone somata from land snails. Relaxation and fluctuation analysis of this class of ion channels revealed Hodgkin-Huxley type K channels with an average single channel conductance ( K) of 2.40±0.15 pS. The conductance of open channels is independent of voltage and virtually all K channels seem to be open at maximum K conductance (g K) of the membrane. Voltage dependent time constants of activation ofg K, calculated from K current relaxation and from cut-off frequencies of power spectra, are very similar indicating dominant first-order kinetics. Ion selectivity of K channels was studied by ion substitution in the external medium and exhibited the following sequence: T1+>K+>Rb+>Cs+>NH 4 + >Li+>Na+. The sequence of the alkali cations does not conform to any of the sequences predicted by Eisenman's theory. However, the data are well accommodated by a new theory assuming a single rate-limiting barrier that governs ion movement through the channel.This paper is dedicated to the memory of Walther Wilbrandt.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The K conductance (g K) kinetics were studied in voltage-clamped frog nodes (Rana ridibunda) in double-pulse experiments. The Cole-Moore translation forg Kt curves associated with different initial potentials (E) was only observed with a small percentage of fibers. The absence of the translation was found to be caused by the involvement of an additional, slow,g K component. This component cannot be attributed to a multiple-state performance of the K channel. It can only be accounted for by a separate, slow K channel, the fast channel being the same as then 4 K channel inR. pipiens.The slow K channel is characterized by weaker sensitivity to TEA, smaller density, weaker potential (E) dependence, and somewhat more negativeE range of activation than the fast K channel. According to characteristics of the slow K system, three types of fibers were found. In Type I fibers (most numerous) the slow K channel behaves as ann 4 HH channel. In Type II fibers (the second largest group found) the slow K channel obeys the HH kinetics within a certainE range only; beyond this range the exponential decline of the slowg K component is preceded by anE-dependent delay, its kinetics after the delay being the same as those in Type I fibers. In Type III fibers (rare) the slow K channel is lacking, and it is only in these fibers that the Cole-Moore translation of the measuredg Kt curves can be observed directly.The physiological role of the fast and slow K channel in amphibian nerves is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The conductance of the Ca2+-activated K+ channel (g K(Ca)) of the human red cell membrane was studied as a function of membrane potential (V m ) and extracellular K+ concentration ([K+]ex). ATP-depleted cells, with fixed values of cellular K+ (145mm) and pH (7.1), and preloaded with 27 m ionized Ca were transferred, with open K+ channels, to buffer-free salt solutions with given K+ concentrations. Outward-current conductances were calculated from initial net effluxes of K+, correspondingV m , monitored by CCCP-mediated electrochemical equilibration of protons between a buffer-free extracellular and the heavily buffered cellular phases, and Nernst equilibrium potentials of K ions (E K) determined at the peak of hyperpolarization. Zero-current conductances were calculated from unidirectional effluxes of42K at (V m –E K)0, using a single-file flux ratio exponent of 2.7. Within a [K+]ex range of 5.5 to 60mm and at (V m –E K) 20 mV a basic conductance, which was independent of [K+]ex, was found. It had a small voltage dependence, varying linearly from 45 to 70 S/cm2 between 0 and –100 mV. As (V m –E K) decreased from 20 towards zero mVg K(Ca) increased hyperbolically from the basic value towards a zero-current value of 165 S/cm2. The zero-current conductance was not significantly dependent on [K+]ex (30 to 156mm) corresponding toV m (–50 mV to 0). A further increase ing K(Ca) symmetrically aroundE K is suggested as (V m –E K) becomes positive. Increasing the extracellular K+ concentration from zero and up to 3mm resulted in an increase ing K(Ca) from 50 to 70 S/cm2. Since the driving force (V m –E K) was larger than 20 mV within this range of [K+]ex this was probably a specific K+ activation ofg K(Ca). In conclusion: The Ca2+-activated K+ channel of the human red cell membrane is an inward rectifier showing the characteristic voltage dependence of this type of channel.  相似文献   

9.
Gibberellic acid (GA3) stimulates K+ efflux from the barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Himalaya) aleurone. We investigated the mechanism of K+ flux across the plasma membrane of aleurone protoplasts using patch-clamp techniques. Potassium-ion currents, measured over the entire surface of the protoplast plasma membrane, were induced when the electrochemical gradient for K+ was inward (into the cytoplasm). The magnitude and voltage-dependence of this inward current were the same in protoplasts treated with GA3 and in control protoplasts (no GA3). Inward currents activated by negative shifts in the membrane potential (EM) from the Nernst potential for K+ (EK) showed membrane conductance to be a function of the electrochemical gradient (i.e. EM-EK). Single-channel influx currents of K+ were recorded in small patches of the plasma membrane. These channels had a single-channel conductance of 5–10 pS with 100 mM K+ on the inside and 10 mM K+ on the outside of the plasma membrane. Single-channel currents, like whole-cell currents, were the same in protoplasts treated with GA3 and control protoplasts. Voltage-gated efflux currents were found only in protoplasts tha thad been incubated without GA3. We conclude that K+ influx in the aleurone is mediated by channels and these membrane proteins are not greatly effected by GA3.Abbreviations and symbols FK Nernst potential for K+ - EM membrane potential - Erev reversal potential - GA3 gibberellic acid - Ki concentration of K+ inside the cell - Ko concentration of K+ outside the cell - R gas constant - S conductance (siemens) - T temperature (oK) - i ionic activity coefficient for internal (cytoplasmic) solution - o ionic activity coefficient for external medium  相似文献   

10.
Hypoxia-induced shortening of the action potential duration, attributed to activation of the ATP-sensitive potassium (KATP) channels, occurs to a much greater extent in ventricular cells from diabetic rats. This study examined whether the KATP channels are altered in streptozotocin-diabetic myocardium. In inside-out patches from ventricular myocytes (with symmetrical 140 mM [K+]), inward KATP currents (at potentials negative to the K+ reversal potential) were similar in amplitude in control and diabetic patches (slope conductances: 69 and 74 pS, respectively). However, outward single-channel currents were larger for channels from diabetic heart cells than from control cells (e.g., at +75 mV the diabetic channel currents were 3.7 ± 0.3 pA vs. 2.7 ± 0.1 pA for control currents, p < 0.05), due to reduced inward rectification of diabetic channel currents. There was no difference in open and closed times between control and diabetic channels. The IC50 for ATP inhibition of the KATP channel single-channel currents was 11.4 M for control currents and 4.7 M for diabetic channel currents. Thus, the major difference found between KATP channels from control and diabetic hearts was the greater outward diabetic single-channel current, which may contribute to the enhanced sensitivity to hypoxia (or ischemia) in diabetic hearts.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Ionic conductances of rabbit osteoclasts were investigated using both whole-cell and cell-attached configurations of the patch-clamp recording technique. The predominant conductance found in these cells was an inwardly rectifying K+ conductance. Whole-cell currents showed an N-shaped current-voltage (I–13;V) relation with inward current activated at potentials negative to EK. When external K+ was varied, I-V curves shifted 53 mV/10-fold change in [K+]out, as predicted for a K+-selective channel. Inward current was blocked by Ba2+ and showed a time-dependent decline at negative potentials, which was reduced in Na+-free external solution. Inward single-channel currents were recorded in the cell-attached configuration. Single-channel currents were identified as inward-rectifier K+ channels based on the following observations: (i) Unitary I-V relations rectified, with only inward current resolved. (ii) Unitary conductance () was 31 pS when recorded in the cell-attached configuration with 140 mm K+ in the pipette and was found to be dependent on [K+]. (iii) Addition of Ba2+ to the pipette solution abolished single-channel events. We conclude that rabbit osteoclasts possess inwardly rectifying K+ channels which give rise to the inward current recorded at negative potentials in the whole-cell configuration. This inwardly rectifying K+ current may be responsible for setting the resting membrane potential and for dissipating electrical potential differences which arise from electrogenic transport of protons across the osteoclast ruffled border.This work was supported by The Arthritis Society and the Medical Research Council of Canada. M.E.M.K. was supported by a fellowship, S.J.D. a development Grant and S.M.S. a scholarship from the Medical Research Council. We thank Dr. Zu Gang Zheng for help with scanning microscopy.  相似文献   

12.
Summary It has previously been shown by Macey and Farmer (Biochim. Biophys. Acta 211:104–106, 1970) that phloretin inhibits urea transport across the human red cell membrane yet has no effect on water transport. Jennings and Solomon (J. Gen. Physiol. 67:381–397, 1976) have shown that there are separate lipid and protein binding sites for phloretin on the red cell membrane. We have now found that urea transport is inhibited by phloretin binding to the lipids with aK 1 of 25±8 m in reason-able agreement with theK D of 54±5 m for lipid binding. These experiments show that lipid/protein interactions can alter the conformational state of the urea transport protein. Phloretin binding to the protein site also modulates red cell urea transport, but the modulation is opposed by the specific stilbene anion transport inhibitor, DIDS (4,4-diisothiocyano-2,2-stilbene disulfonate), suggesting a linkage between the urea transport protein and band 3. Neither the lipid nor the protein phloretin binding site has any significant effect on water transport. Water transport is, however, inhibited by up to 30% in a pH-dependent manner by DIDS binding, which suggests that the DIDS/band 3 complex can modulate water transport.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Summary Guard cells of higher plants control transpirational water loss and gas exchange for photosynthesis by opening and closing pores in the epidermis of the leaf. To power these turgordriven movements, guard cells accumulate (and lose) 200 to 400mm (1 to 3 pmol/cell) K+, fluxes thought to pass through K+ channels in the guard cells plasma membrane. Steady-state current-voltage (I–V) relations of intactVicia guard cells frequently show large, outward-going currents at potentials approaching 0 mV. Since this current could be carried by K+ channels, its pharmacology and dependence on external K+ (K v + ) has been examined under voltage clamp over an extended potential range. Measurements were carried out on cells which showed little evidence of primary electrogenic transport, thus simplifying analyses. Clamping these cells away from the free-running membrane potential (V m ) revealed an outward-rectifying current with instantaneous and time-dependent components, and sensitive to the K+ channel blocker tetraethylammonium chloride. The current declined also under metabolic blockade with NaCN and in the presence of diethylstilbesterol, responses which were attributed to secondary effects of these inhibitors. The putative K+ current rose with voltage positive toV m but it decayed over two voltage ranges, one negative toV m and one near +100 mV, to give steady-stateI–V relations with two regions of negative (slope) conductance. Voltage-dependent and kinetic characteristics of the current were affected by K v + and followed the K+ equilibrium potential. Against a (presumably) low background of primary ion transport, the K+ current contributed appreciably to charge balance atV m in 0.1mm as well as in 1 to 10mm K v + . Thus, gating of these K+ channels compensates for the prevailing K+ conditions to ensure net K+ movement out of the cell.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Unitary K+ currents in single cells isolated from ventricular muscle of newborn rat hearts were measured in response to different potentials and [K] o . TheI/V curves were linear for potentials more negative than the zero-current voltage: especially in high [K] o (150nm KCl), no clear outward currents could be detected indicating a drastic rectification in the inward direction. The channel is mainly selective to K+ but Na+ ions are also carried (P Na/P K=0.056). The channel conductance is proportional to the square root of [K] o but Na+ ions seem to have a facilitatory effect on K, the single-channel conductance. The channel activity, measured asP o, i.e. the probability to find the channel in open state, decreased as the membrane was hyperpolarized. This behavior was tentatively explained by an inactivation process as the membrane becomes more negative. The rate constants of the transitions between the different states were calculated according to a C–O–C model. A control of the gating process by permeant ion K+ was postulated, based on the increase of one of the rate constants from the closed to the open state with [K] o . Finally, the macroscopicI/V curves calculated fromP o and i, the unit current, were found to be characteristic of a ion-blocked inward rectifier.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of the auxins indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and 1-napthylene acetic acid (NAA) on K+ channels and their control was examined in stomatal guard cells of Vicia faba L. Intact guard cells were impaled with multibarrelled microelectrodes to record membrane potentials and to monitor K+ channel currents under voltage clamp during exposures to 0.1–100 µM IAA and NAA. Following impalements, challenge with either IAA or NAA in the presence of 10 mM KCl resulted in the concerted modulation of at least four different currents with distinct kinetic characteristics and concentration dependencies. Equivalent concentrations of benzoic acid were wholly without effect. Most striking, current carried by inward-rectifying K+ channels (IK,in) exhibited a bimodal response to both IAA and NAA which was reversed on washing the auxins from the bathing medium. The steady-state current was augmented 1.3- to 2-fold at concentrations between 0.1 and 10 µM and antagonized at concentrations near 30 µM and above. Auxin agonism of IK,in was time- and voltage-independent. By contrast, IK,in inactivation at the higher auxin concentrations was marked by a voltage-dependence and slowing of the kinetics for current activation. Inactivation of IK,in by the auxins was relieved when cytoplasmic pH (pHi) was clamped near 7.0 in the presence of 30 mM Na+-butyrate. In addition to the control of IK,in, current carried by a second class of (outward-rectifying) K+ channels rose in a monotonic and largely voltage-independent manner with auxin concentrations about 10 µM and above, and IAA and NAA also activated an inward-going current with a voltage dependence characteristic of guard cell anion channels. Further changes in background current were consistent with a limited activation of the H+-ATPase. Over the concentration range examined, the auxins evoked membrane hyperpolarizations and depolarizations of up to ±12–19 mV, depending on the free-running membrane potential prevailing before auxin additions. Prolonging exposures to 100 µM auxin beyond 3–5 min frequently elicited rapid transitions to voltages near EK as well as regenerative action potentials. However, in every case the voltage response was a predictable consequence of auxin action on the K+ channels and, at 100 µM auxin, on the anion current. These results demonstrate a control of K+ channel activity by auxin, consistent with the roles of these channels in mediating K+ flux for stomatal movements; the data associate a bimodal characteristic with the activity of IK,in, implicating pHi as a putative intermediate in its control, and offer strong evidence for a multiplicity of signal cascades evoked by auxin; finally, they highlight a coordinate modulation of transport activities by auxin, thereby drawing a close analogy to the pattern of stimulus-response coupling in abscisic acid.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of sodium metabisulfite (SMB), a general food preservative, on potassium currents in rat dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons were investigated using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique. SMB increased the amplitudes of both transient outward potassium currents and delayed rectifier potassium current in concentration- and voltage-dependent manner. The transient outward potassium currents (TOCs) include a fast inactivating (A-current or I A) current and a slow inactivating (D-current or I D) current. SMB majorly increased IA, and ID was little affected. SMB did not affect the activation process of transient outward currents (TOCs), but the inactivation curve of TOCs was shifted to more positive potentials. The inactivation time constants of TOCs were also increased by SMB. For delayed rectifier potassium current (I K), SMB shifted the activation curve to hyperpolarizing direction. SMB differently affected TOCs and I K, its effects major on A-type K+ channels, which play a role in adjusting pain sensitivity in response to peripheral redox conditions. SMB did not increase TOCs and I K when adding DTT in pipette solution. These results suggested that SMB might oxidize potassium channels, which relate to adjusting pain sensitivity in pain-sensing DRG neurons.  相似文献   

18.
Ionic currents responsible for the action potential in scorpion muscle fibers were characterized using a three-intracellular microelectrode voltage clamp applied at the fiber ends (8–12°C). Large calcium currents (I Ca) trigger contractile activation in physiological saline (5 mm Ca) but can be studied in the absence of contractile activation in a low Ca saline (2.5 mm). Barium (Ba) ions (1.5–3 mm) support inward current but not contractile activation.Ca conductance kinetics are fast (time constant of 3 msec at 0 mV) and very voltage dependent, with steady-state conductance increasing e-fold in approximately 4 mV. Half-activation occurs at –25 mV. Neither I Ca nor I Ba show rapid inactivation, but a slow, voltage-dependent inactivation eliminates I Ca at voltages positive to –40 mV. Kinetically, scorpion channels are more similar to L-type Ca channels in vertebrate cardiac muscle than to those in skeletal muscle.Outward K currents turn on more slowly and with a longer delay than do Ca currents, and K conductance rises less steeply with voltage (e-fold change in 10 mV; half-maximal level at 0 mV). K channels are blocked by externally applied tetraethylammonium and 3,4 diaminopyridine.This work was supported by a grant from the NIH (NS-17510) to W.F.G. and a NRSA award to T.S. (GM-09921).  相似文献   

19.
Asymmetric displacement currents, Ig, were measured in squid axons at different hydrostatic pressures, P, up to 60 MPa. Potassium and sodium currents were abolished by intracellular Cs+ and TEA+, by extracellular Tetrodotoxin (TTX), and by Na+ substitution with Tris+. The time course of Ig became progressively slower with increasing pressure, and the amplitude decreased. With appropriate scaling in time and amplitude, Ig records at any given P could be made to superimpose very well with those obtained at atmospheric pressure. The same scaling factors yielded a good superposition of all records obtained for voltage steps to membrane potentials in the range-30 to +42 mV. The ratio between the amplitude and time factors was larger than unity and increased with P, indicating a progressive decrease (up to 35% at 60 MPa) of the total charge displaced, Q, with no significant change in its voltage dependence. The time-scaling factor increased exponentially with P, as expected if all the steps involved in the opening of a sodium channel, and producing a major charge redistribution, have the same activation volume, V g 17 cm3/mol. This value is roughly one-half of that characterizing the pressure dependence of sodium current activation, suggesting that some late, rate-limiting step in the opening of sodium channels has a large activation volume without being accompanied by an easily detected charge movement.Part of the decrease of Q with pressure could be attributed to an increase in sodium inactivation. However, we cannot exclude the possibility that there is a reversible reduction in the number of fast activating sodium channels, similar to the phenomenon that has been reported to occur at low temperatures (Matteson and Armstrong 1982).  相似文献   

20.
Summary The outer membrane of mechanically prepared protoplasmic droplets fromAcetabularia mediterranea has been investigated by patch-clamp techniques. These membranes are shown to consist of physiologically intact plasmalemma. With the Cl pump inhibited, microscopic currents through K+-selective channels were studied. These currents compare well with macroscopic K+ currents as previously determined by standard microelectrode techniques and tracer flux measurements. There is about one K+ channel per m2 in the plasmalemma. The current-voltage relationship (I–V curve) of the main open channel (channel A) is sigmoid over a voltage range between about –100 and +100 mV with saturation currents of about ±10 pA. A second species (or different state of channel A) of K+-selective channels (channel B) differs from channel A by smaller saturation currents (about ±7 pA) and a much smaller open probability. The open probability of channel A increases from almost zero at large negative voltages to about 1/2 at large positive voltages. Taking the closed times into account, the mean steady-stateI–V curve of channel A displays outward rectification about the equilibrium voltage for K+ and negative slope conductance at larger negative voltages. The open channelI–V curve of the open channels A and B, the changes of theI–V curve of the open channel A upon variation of the external K+ concentration, as well as the mean steady-stateI–V curves of channel A are described by simple reaction kinetic models, the parameters of which are determined to fit the experimental data. The results are discussed with respect to data from other K+ channels in plants and with respect to regulation of the cytoplasmic K+ concentration inAcetabularia.  相似文献   

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