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1.
Two-microelectrode voltage clamp studies were performed on the somata of Hermissenda Type B photoreceptors that had been isolated by axotomy from all synaptic interaction as well as any impulse-generating (i.e., active) membrane. In the presence of 2-10 mM 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) and 100 mM tetraethylammonium ion (TEA), which eliminated two previously described voltage-dependent potassium currents (IA and the delayed rectifier), a voltage-dependent outward current was apparent in the steady state responses to command voltage steps more positive than -40 mV (absolute). This current increased with increasing external Ca++. The magnitude of the outward current decreased and an inward current became apparent following EGTA injection. Substitution of external Ba++ for Ca++ also made the inward current more apparent. This inward current, which was almost eliminated after being exposed for approximately 5 min to a solution in which external Ca++ was replaced with Cd++, was maximally activated at approximately 0 mV. Elevation of external potassium allowed the calcium (ICa++) and calcium-dependent K+ (IC) currents to be substantially separated. Command pulses to 0 mV elicited maximal ICa++ but no IC because no K+ currents flowed at their new reversal potential (0 mV) in 300 mM K+. At a holding potential of -60 mV, which was now more negative than the potassium equilibrium potential, EK+, in 300 mM K+, IC appeared as an inward tail current after positive command steps. The voltage dependence of ICa++ was demonstrated with positive steps in 100 mM Ba++, 4-AP, and TEA. Other data indicated that in 10 mM Ca++, IC underwent pronounced and prolonged inactivation whereas ICa++ did not. When the photoreceptor was stimulated with a light step (with the membrane potential held at -60 mV), there was also a prolonged inactivation of IC. In elevated external Ca++, ICa++ also showed similar inactivation. These data suggest that IC may undergo prolonged inactivation due to a direct effect of elevated intracellular Ca++, as was previously shown for a voltage-dependent potassium current, IA. These results are discussed in relation to the production of training-induced changes of membrane currents on retention days of associative learning.  相似文献   

2.
Membrane properties of isolated mudpuppy taste cells   总被引:13,自引:3,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
The voltage-dependent currents of isolated Necturus lingual cells were studied using the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. Nongustatory surface epithelial cells had only passive membrane properties. Small, spherical cells resembling basal cells responded to depolarizing voltage steps with predominantly outward K+ currents. Taste receptor cells generated both outward and inward currents in response to depolarizing voltage steps. Outward K+ currents activated at approximately 0 mV and increased almost linearly with increasing depolarization. The K+ current did not inactivate and was partially Ca++ dependent. One inward current activated at -40 mV, reached a peak at -20 mV, and rapidly inactivated. This transient inward current was blocked by tetrodotoxin (TTX), which indicates that it is an Na+ current. The other inward current activated at 0 mV, peaked at 30 mV, and slowly inactivated. This more sustained inward current had the kinetic and pharmacological properties of a slow Ca++ current. In addition, most taste cells had inwardly rectifying K+ currents. Sour taste stimuli (weak acids) decreased outward K+ currents and slightly reduced inward currents; bitter taste stimuli (quinine) reduced inward currents to a greater extent than outward currents. It is concluded that sour and bitter taste stimuli produce depolarizing receptor potentials, at least in part, by reducing the voltage-dependent K+ conductance.  相似文献   

3.
Light-induced currents were measured with a two-microelectrode voltage clamp of type B photoreceptor somata, which had been isolated by axotomy from all synaptic interactions as well as from all membranes capable of generating impulse activity. In artificial seawater (ASW), light elicited a transient early inward current, INa+, which depended on Na+o and had a linear current-voltage relation and an extrapolated reversal potential of 30-40 mV (absolute). In 0-Na+ ASW, light elicited a transient short-latency outward current that dependent on K+o, increased exponentially with more positive voltages (greater than or equal to -40 mV), and reversed at -70 to -75 mV. This outward current was not blocked by Ca++ channel blockers (e.g., Cd++, Co++) or substitution of Ba++o, for Ca++o, but was reduced by iontophoretic injection of EGTA. In both ASW and 0-Na+ ASW, light also elicited a delayed, apparently inward current, which was associated with a decreased conductance, depended on K+o, increased exponentially with more positive voltages (greater than or equal to -40 mV), reversed at the equilibrium potential for K+ flux in elevated K+o was eliminated by substitution of Ba++o for Ca++o, and was greatly reduced by Cd++o or Co++o. Thus, light elicited an early Ca++-dependent K+ current, IC, and a prolonged decrease of IC. Iontophoretic injection of Ca++ through a third microelectrode caused prolonged reduction of both IC and the light-induced decrease of IC, but did not alter ICa++ or the current-voltage relation of IC. Ruthenium red (1 microM) in the external medium caused a prolongation of the light-induced decrease of IC. Iontophoretic injection of EGTA often eliminated the light-induced IC decrease while decreasing peak IC (during depolarizing steps to -5 or 0 mV) by less than one-half. EGTA injection, on the average, did not affect steady state IC but reduced the light-induced decrease of steady state IC to approximately one-third of its original magnitude. The prolonged IC decrease, elicited by dim light in the absence of light-induced IC or INa+, was more completely eliminated by EGTA injection. It was concluded that light, in addition to inducing a transient inward Na+ current, causes both a transient increase and a prolonged decrease of IC via elevation of Ca++i.  相似文献   

4.
Apart from their primary function as balance sensors, Hermissenda hair cells are presynaptic neurons involved in the Ca(2+)-dependent neuronal plasticity in postsynaptic B photoreceptors that accompanies classical conditioning. With a view to beginning to understand presynaptic mechanisms of plasticity in the vestibulo-visual system, a locus for conditioning-induced neuronal plasticity, outward currents that may govern the excitability of hair cells were recorded by means of a whole-cell patch-clamp technique. Three K+ currents were characterized: a 4-aminopyridine-sensitive transient outward K+ current (IA), a tetraethyl ammonium-sensitive delayed rectifier K+ current (IK,V), and a Ca(2+)-activated K+ current (IK,Ca). IA activates and decays rapidly; the steady-state activation and inactivation curves of the current reveal a window current close to the apparent resting voltage of the hair cells, suggesting that the current is partially activated at rest. By modulating firing frequency and perhaps damping membrane oscillations, IA may regulate synaptic release at baseline. In contrast, IK,V and IK,Ca have slow onset and exhibit little or no inactivation. These two K+ currents may determine the duration of the repolarization phase of hair-cell action potentials and hence synaptic release via Ca2+ influx through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. In addition, IK,Ca may be responsible for the afterhyperpolarization of hair cell membrane voltage following prolonged stimulation.  相似文献   

5.
The ionic currents of smooth muscle cells isolated from the ctenophore Mnemiopsis were examined by using conventional two-electrode voltage clamp and whole-cell patch clamping methods. Several separable currents were identified. These include: (1) a transient and (2) a steady-state voltage-activated inward current; both are tetrodotoxin (TTX) and saxitoxin (STX) insensitive, partly reduced by decreasing external Ca2+ or Na+ or by addition of 5 mM Co2+, D-600 or verapamil and are totally blocked with 5 mM Cd2+; (3) an early, transient, cation-dependent, outward K+ current (IKCa/Na); (4) a transient, voltage-activated, outward K+ current provisionally identified as IA; (5) a delayed, steady-state, voltage-activated outward K+ current (IK) and (6) a late, transient, outward K+ current which is blocked by Cd2+ and evident only during long voltage pulses. Despite their phylogenic origin, most of these currents are similar to currents identified in many vertebrate smooth and cardiac muscle preparations, and other excitable cells in higher animals.  相似文献   

6.
We have examined the role of Ca++ in phototransduction by manipulating the intracellular Ca++ concentration in physiologically active suspensions of isolated and purified rod photoreceptors (OS-IS). The results are summarized by the following. Measurement of Ca++ content using arsenazo III spectroscopy demonstrates that incubation of OS-IS in 10 nM Ca++-Ringer's solution containing the Ca++ ionophore A23187 reduces their Ca++ content by 93%, from 1.3 to 0.1 mol Ca++/mol rhodopsin. Virtually the same reduction can be accomplished in 10 nM Ca++-Ringer's without ionophore, presumably via the plasma membrane Na/Ca exchange mechanism. Hundreds of photoresponses can be obtained from the Ca++-depleted OS-IS for at least 1 h in 10 nM Ca++-Ringer's with ionophore. The kinetics and light sensitivity of the photoresponse are essentially the same in the presence or absence of the ionophore in 10 nM Ca++. The addition of A23187 in 1 mM Ca++-Ringer's results in a Ca++ influx that rapidly suppresses the dark current and the photoresponse. This indicates that there is an intracellular site at which Ca++ can modulate the light-regulated conductance. Both the current and photoresponse can be restored if intracellular Ca++ is reduced by lowering the external Ca++ to 10 nM. During the transition from high to low Ca++, the response duration becomes shorter, which suggests that it can be regulated by a Ca++-dependent mechanism. If the dark current and the photoresponse are suppressed by adding A23187 in 1 mM Ca++-Ringer's, the subsequent addition of the cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor isobutylmethylxanthine can restore the current and photoresponse. This implies that under conditions where the rod can no longer control its intracellular Ca++, the elevation of cyclic GMP levels can restore light regulation of the channels. The persistence of normal flash responses under conditions where intracellular Ca++ levels are reduced and perturbed suggests that changes in the intracellular Ca++ concentration do not cause the closure of the light-regulated channel.  相似文献   

7.
Conversion of beating to bursting pacemaker activity: Action of quinidine   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
External quinidine converts the pacemaker neurone L-11, found in the Aplysia abdominal ganglion, from spontaneously "beating" to "bursting" discharge activity. Quinidine-induced bursting ceased when entry of Ca2+ ions into the cells was blocked in a Ca2+-free, Co2+-containing solution or if internal Ca2+ accumulation was prevented by the injection of EGTA. The analysis of membrane currents from voltage clamp experiments showed that quinidine blocks the Ca2+ inward current in a dose- and time-dependent manner. In addition, the currents were displaced to the left on the voltage axis, causing an increase of the inward current at negative membrane potentials. External quinidine suppresses the Ca2+-activated K+ current induced by intracellular Ca2+ injections and acts to prolong its decay phase. The slowing of the decay phase of the Ca2+-activated K+ current by quinidine was prevented after intracellular injection of EGTA, indicating that Ca2+ removal is impaired by the drug. It is suggested that the increase of Ca2+ inward current at negative potentials and the prolonged activation of the Ca2+-activated K+ current play a major role in causing the bursting discharge behavior in normally beating cells.  相似文献   

8.
Nonlinear charge movement (gating current) was studied by the whole-cell patch clamp method using cultured 17-d-old embryonic chick heart cells. Na+ and Ca++ currents were blocked by the addition of 10 microM TTX and 3 mM CoCl2; Cs+ replaced K+ both intra- and extracellularly. Linear capacitive and leakage currents were subtracted by a P/5 procedure. The small size (15 microns in diameter) and the lack of an organized internal membrane system in these myocytes permits a rapid voltage clamp of the surface membrane. Ca++ channel gating currents were activated positive to -60 mV; the rising phase was not distorted due to the system response time. The addition of BAY K 8644 (10(-6) M) caused a shortening of the time to peak of the Ca++ gating current, and a negative shift in the isochronal Qon vs. Vm curve. Qmax was unchanged by BAY K 8644. The voltage-dependent shift produced by BAY K 8644 is similar to that produced by isoproterenol (Josephson, I.R., and N. Sperelakis. 1990. Biophys. J. 57:305a. [Abstr.]). The results suggest that the binding of BAY K 8466 to one or more of the Ca++ channel subunits alters the kinetics and shifts the voltage dependence of gating. These changes in the gating currents can explain the parallel changes in the macroscopic Ca++ currents.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Ca and Na inward currents were recorded upon depolarizations inEuplotes after the blockage of K outward currents with intracellular Cs ions. The Na current was analyzed under voltage clamp and had the following properties: it activated to a maximum within 150 msec and partly inactivated during sustained voltage steps. It had a positive equilibrium potential between 25 and 30 mV and could be carried by Na or Li ions but not by K, choline or Tris ions. The current revealed a prominent associated inward tail current which deactivated with a single-exponential time constant of 118 msec. Both the current and its tail were strongly reduced after reduction of the extracellular Na concentration. Externally applied K channel blocker tetraethylammonium chloride did not block the current. Either EGTA injection into the cell or nonlethal deciliation with ethanol eliminated the current and its tail. These results indicate the existence of a Na conductance within the membrane ofEuplotes which is activated by the intracellular level of free Ca2+.  相似文献   

10.
Whole-cell voltage clamp recordings were made from photoreceptors of dissociated Drosophila ommatidia under conditions when the light- sensitive channels activate spontaneously, generating a "rundown current" (RDC). The Ca2+ and voltage dependence of the RDC was investigated by applying voltage steps (+80 to -100 mV) at a variety of extracellular Ca2+ concentrations (0-10 mM). In Ca(2+)-free Ringer large currents are maintained tonically throughout 50-ms-long voltage steps. In the presence of external Ca2+, hyperpolarizing steps elicit transient currents which inactivate increasingly rapidly as Ca2+ is raised. On depolarization inactivation is removed with a time constant of approximately 10 ms at +80 mV. The Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation is suppressed by 10 mM internal BAPTA, suggesting it requires Ca2+ influx. The inactivation is absent in the trp mutant, which lacks one class of Ca(2+)-selective, light-sensitive channel, but appears unaffected by the inaC mutant which lacks an eye-specific protein kinase C. Hyperpolarizing voltage steps applied during light responses in wild- type (WT) flies before rundown induce a rapid transient facilitation followed by slower inhibition. Both processes accelerate as Ca2+ is raised, but the time constant of inhibition (12 ms with 1.5 mM external Ca2+ at -60 mV) is approximately 10 times slower than that of the RDC inactivation. The Ca(2+)-mediated inhibition of the light response recovers in approximately 50-100 ms on depolarization, recovery being accelerated with higher external Ca2+. The Ca2+ and voltage dependence of the light-induced current is virtually eliminated in the trp mutant. In inaC, hyperpolarizing voltage steps induced transient currents which appeared similar to those in WT during early phases of the light response. However, 200 ms after the onset of light, the currents induced by voltage steps inactivated more rapidly with time constants similar to those of the RDC. It is suggested that the Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation of the light-sensitive channels first occurs at some concentration of Ca2+ not normally reached during the moderate illumination regimes used, but that the defect in inaC allows this level to be reached.  相似文献   

11.
Activation of ribosomal protein S6 kinase by epidermal growth factor (EGF), insulin, and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1) was studied in the human mammary tumor cell line ZR-75-1 in isotonic buffers. In contrast to growth factor-dependent S6 phosphorylation which is strongly dependent on extracellular pH (Chambard, J. C., and J. Pouyssegur. 1986. Exp. Cell Res. 164:282-294.) preincubation of cells in buffers with different pH values ranging from 7.5 to 6.5 had no effect on basal or EGF-stimulated S6 kinase activity. Replacement of extracellular Na+ with choline or replacement of extracellular Ca++ with EGTA also did not inhibit stimulation of S6 kinase by EGF. When intracellular Ca++ was buffered with the permeable Ca++ chelator quin2, EGF stimulation was reduced 50%. A similar inhibition of the EGF response was observed when cells were incubated in buffers with high K+ concentrations or in the presence of the K+ ionophore valinomycin. Insulin and IGF1 stimulation of S6 kinase were also inhibited by high K+ concentrations and by buffering intracellular Ca++. In contrast to the responses to EGF, insulin- and IGF1-activation of S6 kinase was enhanced when glucose was present and depended on the presence of bicarbonate in the medium. The results indicate that ionic signals generated by growth factors and insulin, such as increases in intracellular pH or Na+, do not seem to be involved in the activation of S6 kinase. However, effects of growth factors or insulin on membrane potential and/or K+ fluxes and redistribution of intracellular Ca++ may play a role in the activation process. Furthermore, the mechanism of insulin activation of S6 kinase is distinct from the growth factors by its dependency on extracellular bicarbonate.  相似文献   

12.
Membrane current and light response were recorded from rods of monkey and guinea pig by means of suction electrodes. The correlation between adaptation and the Na+/K+ pump was investigated by measuring light-dependent changes in sensitivity with and without inhibition of Na+/K+ ATPase by strophanthidin. Strophanthidin was found to reduce the dark current, to slow the time course of the photoresponse, and to increase light sensitivity. At concentrations between 20 and 500 nM, the pump inhibitor suppressed in a reversible way the current re-activation occurring during prolonged illumination and modified the light-dependent decrease in sensitivity, which in control conditions approximates to a Weber-Fechner function. The effects of the pump inhibitor on the adaptive properties of rods are associated with an increased time constant of the membrane current attributed to the operation of the Na+:Ca2+,K+ exchanger. The effects of rapid application of the pump inhibitor on the current re-activation are consistent with the idea that significant changes in the internal sodium occur in rods of mammals during background illumination and that they play an important role in the process of light adaptation.  相似文献   

13.
Human peripheral blood lymphocytes regulate their volumes in hypotonic solutions. In hypotonic media in which Na+ is the predominant cation, an initial swelling phase is followed by a regulatory volume decrease (RVD) associated with a net loss of cellular K+. In media in which K+ is the predominant cation, the rapid initial swelling is followed by a slower second swelling phase. 86Rb+ fluxes increased during RVD and returned to normal when the original volume was approximately regained. Effects similar to those induced by hypotonic stress could also be produced by raising the intracellular Ca++ level. In isotonic, Ca++- containing media cells were found to shrink upon addition of the Ca++ ionophore A23187 in K+-free media, but to swell in K+-rich media. Exposure to Ca++ plus A23187 also increased 86Rb+ fluxes. Quinine (75 microM), an inhibitor of the Ca++-activated K+ pathway in other systems blocked RVD, the associated K+ loss, and the increase in 86Rb+ efflux. Quinine also inhibited the volume changes and the increased 86Rb fluxes induced by Ca++ plus ionophore. The calmodulin inhibitors trifluoperazine, pimozide and chlorpromazine blocked RVD as well as Ca++ plus A23187-induced volume changes. Trifluoperazine also prevented the increase in 86Rb+ fluxes and K+ loss induced by hypotonicity. Chlorpromazine sulfoxide, a relatively ineffective calmodulin antagonist, was considerably less potent as an inhibitor of RVD than chlorpromazine. It is suggested than an elevation in cytoplasmic [Ca++], triggered by cell swelling, increases the plasma membrane permeability to K+, the ensuing increased efflux of K+, associated anions, and osmotically obliged water, leading to cell shrinking (RVD).  相似文献   

14.
Patch-clamp whole-cell and single-channel current recordings were made from pig pancreatic acinar cells to test the effects of quinine, quinidine, Ba2+ and Ca2+. Voltage-clamp current recordings from single isolated cells showed that high external concentrations of Ba2+ or Ca2+ (88 mM) abolished the outward K+ currents normally associated with depolarizing voltage steps. Lower concentrations of Ca2+ only had small inhibitory effects whereas 11 mM Ba2+ almost blocked the K+ current. 5.5 mM Ba2+ reduced the outward K+ current to less than 30% of the control value. Both external quinine and quinidine (200-500 microM) markedly reduced whole-cell outward K+ currents. In single-channel current studies it was shown that external Ba2+ (1-5 mM) markedly reduced the probability of opening of high-conductance Ca2+ and voltage-activated K+ channels whereas internal Ba2+ (6 X 10(-6) to 3 X 10(-5) M) caused activation at negative membrane potentials and inhibition at positive potentials. Quinidine (200-400 microM) evoked rapid chopping of single K+ channel openings acting both from the outside and inside of the membrane and in this way markedly reduced the total current passing through the channels.  相似文献   

15.
Interactions between endothelial cells and extracellular matrix proteins are important determinants of endothelial cell signaling. Endothelial adhesion to fibronectin through alpha(v)beta(3) integrins or the engagement and aggregation of luminal alpha(v)beta(3) receptors by vitronectin triggers Ca2+ influx. However, the underlying signaling mechanisms are unknown. The electrophysiological basis of alpha(v)beta(3) integrin-mediated changes in endothelial cell Ca2+ signaling was studied using whole cell patch clamp and microfluorimetry. The resting membrane potential of bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells averaged -60 +/- 3 mV. In the absence of intracellular Ca2+ buffering, the application of soluble vitronectin (200 microg/ml) resulted in activation of an outwardly rectifying K+ current at holding potentials from -50 to +50 mV. Neither a significant shift in reversal potential (in voltage clamp mode) nor a change in membrane potential (in current clamp mode) occurred in response to vitronectin. Vitronectin-activated current was significantly inhibited by pretreatment with the alpha(v)beta(3) integrin antibody LM609 by exchanging extracellular K+ with Cs+ or by the application of iberiotoxin, a selective inhibitor of large-conductance, Ca2+-activated K+ channels. With intracellular Ca2+ buffered by EGTA in the recording pipette, vitronectin-activated K+ current was abolished. Fura-2 microfluorimetry revealed that vitronectin induced a significant and sustained increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration, although vitronectin-induced Ca2+ current could not be detected. This is the first report to show that an endothelial cell ion channel is regulated by integrin activation, and this K+ current likely plays a crucial role in maintaining membrane potential and a Ca2+ driving force during engagement and activation of endothelial cell alpha(v)beta(3) integrin.  相似文献   

16.
A slowly inactivating potassium current in native oocytes of Xenopus laevis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Membrane currents were recorded in voltage-clamped oocytes of Xenopus laevis in response to voltage steps. We describe results obtained in oocytes obtained from one donor frog, which showed an unusually large outward current upon depolarization. Measurements of reversal potentials of tail currents in solutions of different K+ concentration indicated that this current is carried largely by K+ ions. It was strongly reduced by extracellular application of tetraethylammonium, though not by Ba2+ or 4-aminopyridine. Removal of surrounding follicular cells did not reduce the K+ current, indicating that it arises across the oocyte membrane proper. Activation of the K+ conductance was first detected with depolarization to about -12 mV, increased with a limiting voltage sensitivity of 3 mV for an e-fold change in current, and was half-maximally activated at about +10 mV. The current rose following a single exponential timecourse after depolarization, with a time constant that shortened from about 400 ms at -10 mV to about 15 ms at +80 mV. During prolonged depolarization the current inactivated with a time constant of about 4 s, which did not alter greatly with potential. The K+ current was independent of Ca2+, as it was not altered by addition of 10 mM Mn2+ to the bathing medium, or by intracellular injection of EGTA. Noise analysis of K+ current fluctuations indicated that the current is carried by channels with a unitary conductance of about 20 ps and a mean open lifetime of about 300 ms (at room temperature and potential of +10 to +20 mV).  相似文献   

17.
Action potentials were recorded from serotonergic dorsal raphe (DR) neurons acutely isolated from the adult rat brain. Action potential waveforms were used as command potentials for whole-cell patch-clamp studies to investigate the Ca2+ and K+ currents underlying action potentials and the modulatory effects of 5-Hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) on them. These data were compared with currents elicited by using rectangular voltage steps of the type commonly used in voltage-clamp experiments. In the same cell, 5-HT simultaneously augmented K+ currents and inhibited Ca2+ currents. Experimental conditions were chosen which allowed us to examine the action of 5-HT on K+ and Ca2+ currents simultaneously or in isolation; 5-HT produced a larger inhibition of calcium current during an action potential waveform compared with that measured by using rectangular steps of voltage. A possible explanation for this finding is that the maximal inhibition is seen immediately after a voltage jump and then decreases with time. Action potentials are, in general, so brief that little time-dependent relief of block is observed. Most of the inhibition of Ca2+ current resulted from a direct effect on Ca2+ channels rather than a shortening of the action potential. The inhibition of Ca2+ current by 5-HT also decreased the Ca(2+)-activated K+ currents. These results suggest that 5-HT reduces DR neuron excitability by the simultaneous activation of K+ channel currents open at the resting potential and the suppression of Ca2+ channel currents.  相似文献   

18.
After the offset of illumination, barnacle photoreceptors undergo a large hyperpolarization that lasts seconds or minutes. We studied the mechanisms that generate this afterpotential by recording afterpotentials intracellularly from the medial photoreceptors of the giant barnacle Balanus nubilus. The afterpotential has two components with different time-courses: (a) an earlier component due to an increase in conductance to K+ that is not blocked by extracellular tetraethylammonium ion (TEA+) or 3-aminopyridine (3-AP) and (b) a later component that is sensitive to cardiac glycosides and that requires extracellular K+, suggesting that it is due to an electrogenic Na+ pump. The K+ conductance component increases in amplitude with increasing CA++ concentration and is inhibited by extracellular Co++; the Co++ inhibition can be overcome by increasing the Ca++ concentration. Thus, the K+ conductance component is Ca++ dependent. An afterpotential similar to that evoked by a brief flash of light is generated by depolarization with current in the dark and by eliciting Ca++ action potentials in the presence of TEA+ in the soma, axon, or terminal regions of the photoreceptor. The action potential undershoot is generated by an increase in conductance to K+ that is resistant to TEA+ and 3-AP and inhibited by Co++. The similarity in time-course and pharmacology of the hyperpolarization afterpotentials elicited by (a) a brief flash of light, (b) depolarization with current, and (c) an action potential indicates that Ca++-dependent K+ channels throughout the photoreceptor membrane are responsible for all three hyperpolarizing events.  相似文献   

19.
We examined the effect of high concentration K+ (50 mM K+) stimulation to neurosecretory GH3 cells under voltage clamp control and unexpectedly found a considerable increase in the inward current evoked by depolarizing pulses. This augmented current was present in Na+-free solution containing Ca2+, tetraethylammonium+ and tetrodotoxin and showed similarity in its voltage dependence to the Ca+ channel current in the control (5 mM K+) solution. The augmented current was significantly reduced by Ca2+ channel blockers, Co2+ (5 mM) and nifedipine (2.5 microM), and was increased by the raise of external Ca2+ concentration. Correspondingly, Quin-2 experiments in GH3 cells showed that the rise in cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration in response to high K+ stimulation was suppressed by the same concentration of nifedipine. These data suggest that, in addition to its depolarizing effect, high K+ may modify voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels such that they exhibit increased permeability although their voltage dependence of activation and pharmacological sensitivity remain largely unchanged.  相似文献   

20.
Bradykinin-induced K+ currents, membrane hyperpolarization, as well as rises in cytoplasmic Ca2+ and cGMP levels were studied in endothelial cells cultured from pig aorta. Exposure of endothelial cells to 1 microM bradykinin induced a whole-cell K+ current and activated a small-conductance (approximately 9 pS) K+ channel in on-cell patches. This K+ channel lacked voltage sensitivity, was activated by increasing the Ca2+ concentration at the cytoplasmic face of inside-out patches and blocked by extracellular tetrabutylammonium (TBA). Bradykinin concomitantly increased membrane potential and cytoplasmic Ca2+ of endothelial cells. In high (140 mM) extracellular K+ solution, as well as in the presence of the K(+)-channel blocker TBA (10 mM), bradykinin-induced membrane hyperpolarization was abolished and increases in cytoplasmic Ca2+ were reduced to a slight transient response. Bradykinin-induced rises in intracellular cGMP levels which reflect Ca(2+)-dependent formation of EDRF(NO) were clearly attenuated in the presence of TBA (10 mM). Our results suggest that bradykinin hyperpolarizes pig aortic endothelial cells by activation of small-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels. Opening of these K+ channels results in membrane hyperpolarization which promotes Ca2+ entry, and consequently, NO synthesis.  相似文献   

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