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1.
Summary The membrane of mechanically prepared vesicles ofChara corallina has been investigated by patch-clamp techniques. This membrane consists of tonoplast as demonstrated by the measurement of ATP-driven currents directed into the vesicles as well as by the ATP-dependent accumulation of neutral red. Addition of 1mm ATP to the bath medium induced a membrane current of about 3.2 mA·m–2 creating a voltage across the tonoplast of about –7 mV (cytoplasmic side negative). On excised tonoplast patches, currents through single K+-selective channels have been investigated under various ionic conditions. The open-channel currents saturate at large voltage displacements from the equilibrium voltage for K+ with limiting currents of about +15 and –30 pA, respectively, as measured in symmetric 250mm KCl solutions. The channel is virtually impermeable to Na+ and Cl. However, addition of Na+ decreases the K+ currents. TheI–V relationships of the open channel as measured at various K+ concentrations with or without Na+ added are described by a 6-state model, the 12 parameters of which are determined to fit the experimental data.  相似文献   

2.
The aim of this work was to examine the effects of changes in external K+ concentration (K o ) around its physiological value, of various K+ channels blockers, including internal Cs+, of vacuolar H+-ATPase inhibitors and of the protonophore CCCP on the resting potential and the voltage-dependent K+ current of differentiated neuroblastoma x glioma hybrid NG108-15 cells using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique. The results are as follows: (i) under standard conditions (K o =5 mm) the membrane potential was –60±1 mV. It was unchanged when K o was decreased to 1 mm and was depolarized by 4±1 mV when Ko was increased to 10 mm. (ii) Internal Cs+ depolarized the membrane by 21±3 mV. (iii) The internal application of the vacuolar H+-ATPase inhibitors N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), NO 3 and bafilomycin A1 (BFA) depolarized the membrane by 15±2, 18±2 and 16±2 mV, respectively, (iv) When NEM or BFA were added to the internal medium containing Cs+, the membrane was depolarized by 45±1 and 42±2 mV, respectively. (v) The external application of CCCP induced a transient depolarization followed by a prolonged hyperpolarization. This hyperpolarization was absent in BFA-treated cells. The voltage-dependent K+ current was increased at negative voltages and decreased at positive voltages by NEM, BFA and CCCP. Taken together, these results suggest that under physiological conditions, the resting potential of NG108-15 neuroblastoma cells is maintained at negative values by both voltage-dependent K+ channels and an electrogenic vacuolar type H+-ATPase.This work was supported by a grant from INSERM (CRE 91 0906).  相似文献   

3.
Summary The mammalian urinary bladder contains in its apical membrane and cytoplasmic vesicles, a cation-selective channel or activating fragment which seems to partition between the apical membrane and the luminal (or vesicular space). To determine whether it is an activating fragment or whole channel, we first demonstrate that solution known to contain this moiety can be concentrated and when added back to the bladder causes a conductance increase, with a percent recovery of 139±25%. Next, we show that using tip-dip bilayer techniques (at 21°C) and a patch-clamp recorder, the addition of concentrated solution resulted in the appearance of discrete current shots, consistent with the incorporation of a channel (as opposed to an activating fragment) into the bilayer. The residency time of the channel in the bilayer was best described by the sum of two exponentials, suggesting that the appearance of the channel involves an association of the channel with the membrane before insertion. The channel is cation selective and more conductive to K+ than Na+ (by a factor of 1.6). It has a linearI–V relationship, but a singlechannel conductance that saturates as KCl concentration is raised. This saturation is best described by the Michaelis-Menten equation with aK m of 160mm KCl and aG max of 20 pS. The kinetics of the channel are complex, showing at least two open and two closed states.Since the characteristics of this channel are similar to a channel produced by the degradation of amiloride-sensitive Na+ channels by the proteolytic enzyme kallikrein (which is released by the cortical collecting duct of the kidney), we suggest that this channel then is not synthesized by the cell but is rather a degraded form of the epithelial Na+ channel.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Intact adrenal chromaffin granules and purified granule membrane ghosts were allowed to fuse with acidic phospholipid planar bilayer membranes in the presence of Ca2+ (1 mm). From both preparations, we were able to detect a large conductance potassium channel (ca. 160 pS in symmetrical 400 mm K+), which was highly selective for K+ over Na+ (P k/P Na = 11) as estimated from the reversal potential of the channel current. Channel activity was unaffected by charybdotoxin, a blocker of the [Ca2+] activated K+ channel of large conductance. Furthermore, this channel proved quite different from the previously described channels from other types of secretory vesicle preparations, not only in its selectivity and conductance, but also in its insensitivity to both calcium and potential across the bilayer. We conclude that the chromaffin granule membrane contains a K+-selective channel with large conductance. We suggest that the role of this channel may include ion movement during granule assembly or recycling, and do not rule out events leading to exocytosis.  相似文献   

5.
Summary K+ channels in inside-out patches from hamster insulin tumor (HIT) cells were studied using the patch-clamp technique. HIT cells provide a convenient system for the study of ion channels and insulin secretion. They are easy to culture, form gigaohm seals readily and secrete insulin in response to glucose. The properties of the cells changed with the passage number. For cell passage numbers 48 to 56, five different K+-selective channels ranging from 15 to 211 pS in symmetrical 140mm KCl solutions were distinguished. The channels were characterized by the following features: a channel with a conductance (in symmetrical 140mm KCl solutions) of 210 pS that was activated by noncyclic purine nucleotides and closed by H+ ions (pH=6.8); a 211 pS channel that was Ca2+-activated and voltage dependent; a 185 pS channel that was blocked by TEA but was insensitive to quinine or nucleotides; a 130 pS channel that was activated by membrane hyperpolarization; and a small conductance (15 pS) channel that was not obviously affected by any manipulation. As determined by radioimmunoassay, cells from passage number 56 secreted 917±128 ng/mg cell protein/48 hr of insulin. In contrast, cells from passage number 77 revealed either no channel activity or an occasional nonselective channel, and secreted only 29.4±8.5 ng/mg cell protein/48 hr of insulin. The nonselective channel found in the passage 77 cells had a conductance of 25 pS in symmetrical 140mm KCl solutions. Thus, there appears to be a correlation between the presence of functional K+ channels and insulin secretion.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Single K+-selective channels were studied in excised inside-out membrane patches from dissociated mouse toe muscle fibers. Channels of 74 pS conductance in symmetrical 160mm KCl solutions were blocked reversibly by 10 m internal ATP and thus identified as ATP-sensitive K+ channels. The channels were also blocked reversibly bymm concentrations of internal adenosine, adenine and thymine, but not by cytosine and uracil. The efficacy of the reversible channel blockers was higher when they were present in internal NaCl instead of KCl solutions. An irreversible inhibition of ATP-sensitive K+ channels was observed after application of several sulphydryl-modifying substances in the internal solution: 0.5mm chloramine-T, 50mm hydrogen peroxide or 2mm n-ethylmaleimide (NEM). Largeconductance Ca-activated K+ channels were not affected by these reagents. The presence of 1mm internal ATP prevents the irreversible inhibition of ATP-sensitive K+ channels by NEM. The results suggest that internal Na+ ions increase the affinity of the ATP-sensitive K+ channel to ATP and to other reversible channel blockers and that a functionally important SH-group is located at or near the ATP-binding site.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Patch-clamp techniques have been applied to characterize the channels in the basolateral membrane of resting (cimetidine-treated, nonacid secreting) oxyntic cells isolated from the gastric mucosa ofNecturus maculosa. In cell-attached patches with pipette solution containing 100mm KCl, four major classes of K+ channels can be distinguished on the basis of their kinetic behavior and conductance: (1) 40% of the patches contained either voltage-independent (a) or hyperpolarization-activated (b), inward-rectifying channels with short mean open times (16 msec fora, and 8 msec forb). Some channels showed subconductance levels. The maximal inward conductanceg max was 31±5 pS (n=13) and the reversal potentialE rev was atV p=–34±6 mV (n=9). (2) 10% of the patches contained depolarization-activated and inward-rectifying channels withg max=40 ±18 pS (n=3) andE rev was atV p=–31±5 mV (n=3). With hyperpolarization, the channels open in bursts with rapid flickerings within bursts. Addition of carbachol (1mm) to the bath solution in cell-attached patches increased the open probabilityP o of these channels. (3) 10% of the patches contained voltage-independent inward-rectifying channels withg max=21±3 pS (n=4) andE rev was atV p=–24±9 mV (n=4). These channels exhibited very high open probability (P o=0.9) and long mean open time (1.6 sec) at the resting potential. (4) 20% of the patches contained voltage-independent channels with limiting inward conductance of 26±2 pS (n=3) andE rev atV p=–33±3 mV (n=3). The channels opened in bursts consisting of sequential activation of multiple channels with very brief mean open times (10 msec). In addition, channels with conductances less than 6 pS were observed in 20% of the patches. In all nine experiments with K+ in the pipette solution replaced by Na+, unitary currents were outward, and inward currents were observed only for large hyperpolarizing potentials. This indicates that the channels are more selective for K+ over Na+ and Cl. A variety of K+ channels contributes to the basolateral K+ conductance of resting oxyntic cells.  相似文献   

8.
We studied the effects of H2O/D2O substitution on the permeation and gating of the large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels inChara gymnophylla droplet membrane using the patchclamp technique. The selectivity sequence of the channel was: K+>Rb+≫Li+, Na+, Cs+ and Cl. The conductance of this channel in symmetric 100mm KCl was found to be 130 pS. The single channel conductance was decreased by 15% in D2O as compared to H2O. The blockade of channel conductance by cytosolic Ca2+ weakened in D2O as a result of a decrease in zero voltage Ca2+ binding affinity by a factor of 1.4. Voltage-dependent channel gating was affected by D2O primarily due to the change in Ca2+ binding to the channel during the activation step. The Hill coefficient for Ca2+ binding was 3 in D2O and around 1 in H2O. The values of the Ca2+ binding constant in the open channel conformation were 0.6 and 6 μm in H2O and D2O, respectively, while the binding in the closed conformation was much less affected by D2O. The H2O/D2O substitution did not produce a significant change in the slope of channel voltage dependence but caused a shift as large as 60 mV with 1mm internal Ca2+.  相似文献   

9.
The permeation of K+ and Na+ through the pore of a K+ channel from the plasma membrane of rye roots was studied in planar 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl phosphatidylethanolamine bilayers. The pore contains at least two ion-binding sites which can be occupied simultaneously. This was indicated by: (i) biphasic relationships with increasing cation concentration of both channel conductance at the zero-current (reversal) potential of the channel (E rev) and unitary-current at a specified voltage and (ii) a decline in E rev in the presence of equimolar Na+ (cis):K+ (trans) as the cation concentration was increased. To determine the spatial characteristics and energy profiles for K+ and Na+ permeation, unitary-current/ voltage data for the channel were fitted to a three energy-barrier, two ion-binding site (3B2S) model. The model allowed for simultaneous occupancy of binding sites and ionic repulsion within the pore, as well as surface potential effects. Results suggested that energy peaks and energy wells (ion binding sites) were situated asymmetrically within the electrical distance of the pore, the trans energy-well being closer to the center of the pore than its cis counterpart; that the energy profile for K+ permeation differed significantly from that of Na+ in having a higher cis energy peak and a deeper cis energy well; that cations repelled each other within the pore and that vestibule surface charge was negligible. The model successfully simulated various aspects of K+ and Na+ permeation including: (i) the complexities in current rectification over a wide range of contrasting ionic conditions; (ii) the biphasic relationships with increasing cation concentration of both channel conductance at E rev and unitary-current at a specified voltage; (iii) the decline in E rev in equimolar Na+ (cis):K+ (trans) as cation concentrations were increased and (iv) the complex relationships between mole fraction and E rev at total cation concentrations of 100 and 300 mm.We thank Prof. O. Alvarez (Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile) for supplying the computer program AJUSTE and Prof. D. Sanders (University of York, UK), Prof. D. Gradmann and Dr. G. Thiel (University of Göttingen, Germany) for stimulating ideas. This work was supported by the Agricultural and Food Research Council.  相似文献   

10.
Summary K+ channels in cultured rat pancreatic islet cells have been studied using patch-clamp single-channel recording techniques in cell-attached and excised inside-out and outside-out membrane patches. Three different K+-selective channels have been found. Two inward rectifier K+ channels with slope conductances of about 4 and 17 pS recorded under quasi-physiological cation gradients (Na+ outside, K+ inside) and maximal conductances recorded in symmetrical K+-rich solutions of about 30 and 75 pS, respectively. A voltage- and calcium-activated K channel was recorded with a slope conductance of about 90 pS under the same conditions and a maximal conductance recorded in symmetrical K+-rich solutions of about 250 pS. Single-channel current recording in the cell-attached conformation revealed a continuous low level of activity in an apparently small number of both the inward rectifier K+ channels. But when membrane patches were excised from the intact cell a much larger number of inward rectifier K+ channels became transiently activated before showing an irreversible decline. In excised patches opening and closing of both the inward rectifier K+ channels were unaffected by voltage, internal Ca2+ or externally applied tetraethyl-ammonium (TEA) but the probability of opening of both inward rectifier K+ channels was reduced by internally applied 1–5mm adenosine-5-triphosphate (ATP). The large K+ channel was not operational in cell-attached membrane patches, but in excised patches it could be activated at negative membrane potentials by 10–7 to 10–6 m internal Ca2+ and blocked by 5–10mm external TEA.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Whole-cell sealed-on pipettes have been used to measure electrical properties of the plasmalemma surrounding protoplasts isolated from Black Mexican sweet corn shoot cells from suspension culture. In these protoplasts the membrane resting potential (V m ) was found to be –59±23 mV (n=23) in 1mm K o . The meanV m became more negative as [K] o decreased, but was more positive than the K+ equilibrium potential. There was no evidence of electrogenic pump activity. We describe four features of the current-voltage characteristic of the plasmalemma of these protoplasts which show voltagegated channel activity. Depolarization of the whole-cell membrane from the resting potential activates time- and voltage-dependent outward current through K+-selective channels. A local minimum in the outward current-voltage curve nearV m =150 mV suggests that these currents are mediated by two populations of K+-selective channels. The absence of this minimum in the presence of verapamil suggests that the activation of one channel population depends on the influx of Ca2+ into the cytoplasm. We identify unitary currents from two K+-selective channel populations (40 and 125 pS) which open when the membrane is depolarized; it is possible that these mediate the outward whole-cell current. Hyperpolarization of the membrane from the resting potential produces time- and voltage-dependent inward whole-cell current. Current activation is fast and follows an exponential time course. The current saturates and in some cases decreases at membrane potentials more negative than –175 mV. This current is conducted by poorly selective K+ channels, whereP Cl/P K=0.43±0.15. We describe a low conductance (20 pS) channel population of unknown selectivity which opens when the membrane is hyperpolarized. It is possible that these channels mediate inward whole-cell current. When the membrane is hyperpolarized to potentials more negative than –250 mV large, irregular inward current is activated. A third type of inward whole-cell current is briefly described. This activates slowly and with a U-shaped current-voltage curve over the range of membrane potentials –90<V m <0 mV.  相似文献   

12.
M2-cholinergic receptor activation by acetylcholine (ACh) is known to cause a negative inotropic and chronotropic action in atrial tissues. This effect is still controversial in ventricular tissues. The ACh-sensitive muscarinic K+ channel (I K(ACh)) activity was characterized in isolated feline atrial and ventricular myocytes using the patch-clamp technique. Bath application of ACh (1 m) caused shortening of action potential duration without prior stimulation with catecholamines in atrial and ventricular myocytes. Resting membrane potential was slightly hyperpolarized in both tissues. These effects of ACh were greater in atrium than in ventricle. ACh increased whole-cell membrane current in atrial and ventricular myocytes. The current-voltage (I-V) relationship of the ACh-induced current in ventricle exhibited inward-rectification whose slope conductance was smaller than that in atrium. In single channel recording from cell-attached patches, I K(ACh) activity was observed when ACh was induced in the pipette solution in both tissues. The channel exhibited a slope conductance of 47 ±1 pS (mean ± sd, n=14) in atrium and 47 ±2 pS (n= 10) in ventricle (not different statistically; ns). The open times were distributed according to a single exponential function with mean open lifetime of 2.0±0.3 msec (n= 14) in atrium and 1.9±0.3 msec (n=10) in ventricle (ns); these conductance and kinetic properties were similar between the two tissues. However, the relationship between the concentration of ACh and single channel activity showed a higher sensitivity to ACh in atrium (IC 50 =0.03 m) than in ventricle (IC 50 =0.15 m). In excised inside-out patches, ventricular I K(ACh) required higher concentrations of GTP to activate the channel compared to atrial channels. These results suggest a reduced I K(ACh) channel sensitivity to M2-cholinergic receptor-linked G protein (Gi) in ventricle compared to atrium in feline heart.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The plasma membrane of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been investigated by patch-clamp techniques, focusing upon the most conspicuous ion channel in that membrane, a K+-selective channel. In simple observations on inside-out patches, the channel is predominantly closed at negative membrane voltages, but opens upon polarization towards positive voltages, typically displaying long flickery openings of several hundred milliseconds, separated by long gaps (G). Elevating cytoplasmic calcium shortens the gaps but also introduces brief blocks (B, closures of 2–3 msec duration). On the assumption that the flickery open intervals constitute bursts of very brief openings and closings, below the time resolution of the recording system, analysis via the beta distribution revealed typical closed durations (interrupts, I) near 0.3 msec, and similar open durations. Overall behavior of the channel is most simply described by a kinetic model with a single open state (O), and three parallel closed states with significantly different lifetimes: long (G), short (B) and very short (I). Detailed kinetic analysis of the three open/closed transitions, particularly with varied membrane voltage and cytoplasmic calcium concentration, yielded the following stability constants for channel closure: K I =3.3 · e –zu in which u=eV m /kT is the reduced membrane voltage, and z is the charge number; K G = 1.9 · 10–4([Ca2+] · e zu )–1; and K B =2.7 · 103([Ca2+] · e zu )2. Because of the antagonistic effects of both membrane voltage (V m ) and cytoplasmic calcium concentration ([Ca2+]cyt) on channel opening from the B state, compared with openings from the G state, plots of net open probability (P 0 ) vs. either V m or [Ca2+] are bell-shaped, approaching unity at low calcium ( m) and high voltage (+150 mV), and approaching 0.25 at high calcium (10 mm) and zero voltage. Current-voltage curves of the open channel are sigmoid vs. membrane voltage, saturating at large positive or large negative voltages; but time-averaged currents, along the rising limb of P 0 (in the range 0 to +150 mV, for 10 m [Ca2+]) make this channel a strong outward rectifier. The overall properties of the channel suggest that it functions in balancing charge movements during secondary active transport in Saccharomyces.The authors are indebted to Dr. Michael Snyder and Dr. Constance Copeland (Yale Department of Biology) for providing the tetraploid yeast strain and for initial assistance in handling the cells and preparing protoplasts; and to Dr. Esther Bashi for technical assistance throughout the experiments. The work was supported by Research Grant 85ER13359 from the United States Department of Energy (to C.L.S.), by Forschungs-Stipendium Be 1181/2-1 from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (to A.B.), and by Akademie-Stipendium II/66647 from the Volkswagenstiftung (to D.G.).  相似文献   

14.
Summary Cell-attached patch-clamp recordings from Ehrlich ascites tumor cells reveal nonselective cation channels which are activated by mechanical deformation of the membrane. These channels are seen when suction is applied to the patch pipette or after osmotic cell swelling. The channel activation does not occur instantaneously but within a time delay of 1/2 to 1 min. The channel is permeable to Ba2+ and hence presumably to Ca2+. It seems likely that the function of the nonselective, stretch-activated channels is correlated with their inferred Ca2+ permeability, as part of the volume-activated signal system. In isolated insideout patches a Ca2+-dependent, inwardly rectifying K+ channel is demonstrated. The single-channel conductance recorded with symmetrical 150 mm K+ solutions is for inward current estimated at 40 pS and for outward current at 15 pS. Activation of the K+ channel takes place after an increase in Ca2+ from 10–7 to 10–6 m which is in the physiological range. Patch-clamp studies in cellattached mode show K+ channels with spontaneous activity and with characteristics similar to those of the K+ channel seen in excised patches. The single-channel conductance for outward current at 5 mm external K+ is estimated at about 7 pS. A K+ channel with similar properties can be activated in the cellattached mode by addition of Ca2+ plus ionophore A23187. The channel is also activated by cell swelling, within 1 min following hypotonic exposure. No evidence was found of channel activation by membrane stretch (suction). The time-averaged number of open K+ channels during regulatory volume decrease (RVD) can be estimated at 40 per cell. The number of open K+ channels following addition of Ca2+ plus ionophore A23187 was estimated at 250 per cell. Concurrent activation in cell-attached patches of stretch-activated, nonselective cation channels and K+ channels in the presence of 3 mm Ca2+ in the pipette suggests a close spatial relationship between the two channels. In excised inside-out patches (with NMDG chloride on both sides) a small 5-pS chloride channel with low spontaneous activity is observed. The channel activity was not dependent on Ca2+ and could not be activated by membrane stretch (suction). In cell-attached mode singlechannel currents with characteristics similar to the channels seen in isolated patches are seen. In contrast to the channels seen in isolated patches, the channels in the cell-attached mode could be activated by addition of Ca2+ plus ionophore A23187. The channel is also activated by hypotonic exposure with a single-channel conductance at 7 pS (or less) and with a time delay at about 1 min. The number of open channels during RVD is estimated at 80 per cell. Two other types of Cl channels were regularly recorded in excised inside-out patches: a voltage-activated 400-pS channel and a 34-pS Cl channel which show properties similar to the Cl channel in the apical membrane in human airway epithelial cells. There is no evidence for a role in RVD for either of these two channels.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Confluent monolayers of the established opossum kidney cell line were exposed to NH4Cl pulses (20 mmol/liter) during continuous intracellular measurements of pH, membrane potential (PD m ) and membrane resistance (R m) in bicarbonate-free Ringer. The removal of extracellular NH4Cl leads to an intracellular acidification from a control value of 7.33±0.08 to 6.47±0.03 (n=7). This inhibits the absolute K conductance (g K+), reflected by a decrease of K+ transference number from 71±3% (n=28) to 26±6% (n=5), a 2.6±0.2-fold rise ofR m, and a depolarization by 24.2±1.5 mV (n=52). In contrast, intracellular acidification during a block ofg K+ by 3 mmol/liter BaCl2 enhances the total membrane conductance, being shown byR m decrease to 68±7% of control and cell membrane depolarization by 9.8±2.8 mV (n=17). Conversely, intracellular alkalinization under barium elevatesR m and hyperpolarizes PD m . The replacement of extracellular sodium by choline in the presence of BaCl2 significantly hyperpolarizes PD m and increasesR m, indicating the presence of a sodium conductance. This conductance is not inhibited by 10–4 mol/liter amiloride (n=7). Patch-clamp studies at the apical membrane (excised inside-out configuration) revealed two Na+-conductive channels with 18.8±1.4 pS (n=10) and 146 pS single-channel conductance. Both channels are inwardly rectifying and highly selective towards Cl. The low-conductive channel is 4.8 times more permeable for Na+ than for K+. Its open probability rises at depolarizing potentials and is dependent on the pH of the membrane inside (higher at pH 6.5 than at pH 7.8).  相似文献   

16.
Nitrogen is available to the plant in the form of NH+ 4 in the soil solution. Here it is shown that a voltage-independent K+ channel in the plasma membrane of rye (Secale cereale L.) roots is permeable to NH+ 4. The channel was studied following its incorporation into planar 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl phosphatidyl ethanolamine bilayers. The unitary conductance of the channel was greater when assayed in the presence of 100 mm NH4Cl than 100 mm KCl. However, the probability of finding the channel open (P o ) was lower in the presence of 100 mm NH4Cl (P o = 0.63) than in 100 mm KCl (P o = 0.8), suggesting that P o can be regulated by the (permeant) ions present in solution. When assayed in equimolar concentrations of NH4Cl (cis) and KCl (trans), the zero-current (reversal) potential for the channel (E rev) exhibited a complex concentration dependence. At low cation concentrations, the apparent permeability of NH+ 4 relative to K+ (PNH4/PK) was greater than 1.0. However, as the cation concentration was increased, PNH4/PK initially decreased to a minimum of 0.95 at 3 mm before increasing again to a maximum of 1.89 at 300 mm. At cation concentrations above 300 mm, PNH4/PK decreased slightly. This implies that the pore of the channel can be occupied by more than one cation simultaneously. Ammonium permeation through the pore was simulated using a model which is composed of three energy barriers and two energy wells (the ion-binding sites). The model (3B2S) allowed for single-file permeation, double cation occupancy, ion-ion repulsion within the pore and surface potential effects. Results indicated that energy peaks and energy wells were situated asymmetrically within the electrical distance of the pore, that cations repel each other within the pore and that the vestibules to the pore contain negligible surface charge. The energy profile obtained for NH+ 4 is compared with ones obtained for K+ and Na+. This information allows the fluxes through the K+ channel of the three major monovalent cations present in the soil solution to be predicted. Received: 16 October 1995/Revised 12 March 1996  相似文献   

17.
A K+ channel with a main conductance of 29 pS was recorded after the incorporation of coronary artery membrane vesicles into lipid bilayers. This channel was identified as an ATP-sensitive K+ channel (KATP) because its activity was diminished by the internal application of 50–250 μm ATP-Na2. Moreover, it was opened when 10–50 μm pinacidil was externally applied. Single-channel records revealed the existence of several (sub)conductance states. At 0 mV and with a 5/250 KCl gradient, the main conductance of the KATP channel was 29 pS. The other (sub)conductance states were less frequent and had discrete values of 12, 17 and 22 pS. Pinacidil stabilized the channel open state primarily in the 29 pS conductance level; whereas ATP inhibited all the conductance levels. In general, KATP channels were characterized by brief openings followed by long closings (open probability, P o ≈ 0.02); only occasionally (3 out of 12 experiments) did the KATP channels have a high open probability (P o ≥ 0.7). Channel activity could be increased or rescued by adding 2.5–10 mm UDP-TRIS and 0.5–2 mm MgCl2 to the internal side of the channel. Received: 7 November 1995/Revised: 10 June 1996  相似文献   

18.
Plant roots accumulate K+ over a range of external concentrations. Root cells have evolved at least two parallel plasma-membrane K+ transporters which operate at millimolar and micromolar external [K+]: high-affinity K+ uptake is energised by symport with H+, while low-affinity uptake is assumed to occur via ion channels. To determine the role of ion channels in low-affinity K+ uptake, a characterisation of the principal K+-selective ion channels in the plasma membrane of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. cv. Columbia roots was undertaken. Two classes of K+-selective channels were frequently observed: one inward (IRC) and one outward (ORC) rectifying with unitary conductances of 5 pS, 20 pS (IRCs) and 15 pS (ORC), measured in symmetrical 10 mM KCl. The dominant IRC (5 pS) and ORC (15 pS) were highly cation-selective (PCl PK < 0.025) but less selective amongst monovalent cations (PNaPK0.17–0.3). Both the IRC and the ORC were blocked by Ba2+, Cs+ and tetra-ethyl-ammonium, whereas 4-aminopyridine and quinidine selectively inhibited the ORC. The ORC open probability was steeply voltage-dependent and ORC activation potentials were close to the potassium equilibrium potential (EK+), enabling ORCs to conduct mainly outward, but occasionally inward, K+ current. By contrast, gating of the 5-pS IRC was weakly voltageependent and IRC gating was invariably restricted to membrane potentials more negative than EK+, ensuring K+ transport was always inwardly directed. Studies on channel activity were conducted for a large number of root cells grown at two levels of external [K+], one where K+ uptake is likely to be principally through channels (6 mM K+) and one where it must be energised (100 M K+). Shifting growth conditions from high to low K+ did not affect single-channel properties such as conductance and selectivity, nor the manifestation of the ORC and 20-pS IRC, but led to enhanced activity of the 5-pS IRC. The enhanced activity of the 5-pS IRC was mirrored by a parallel increase in unidirectional 86Rb+ influx after low-K+ growth, clearly indicating a dominant role of this particular channel in K+ uptake at supra millimolar external [K+].Abbreviations EK+ potassium equilibrium potential - Em membrane potential - HK high [K+] - IRC inward rectifying channel - LK low [K+] - ORC outward rectifying channel - TEA tetra-ethyl-ammonium Financial support was provided by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (Grant PG87/529) and by the European Union (Framework III, Biotechnology Programme).  相似文献   

19.
H. Lühring 《Protoplasma》1986,133(1):19-28
Summary The cytoplasmic drop formed of effused cytoplasm fromChara internodes is enclosed by a membrane. Patch clamp experiments have been carried out on this membrane, revealing a K+ channel as the most frequently detected ion translocator. The K+ channel is saturated at a level of about 20 pA inward and 10 pA outward current. The channel conductance is dependent on the accessability of K+ ions, its maximum value amounts to about 165 pS. The discrimination of Na+ and Cl is significant, permeability ratios PNa/PK and PCl/PK were estimated to be 0.01 either. Binding experiments with the fluorescent probe concanavalin A/FITC suggest that the membrane is derived from the tonoplast.Abbreviations EK K+ equilibrium potential - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanat - Vm membrane voltage - Vpip pipette clamp voltage - Vr reversal voltage  相似文献   

20.
Single-channel properties of a delayed rectifier voltage-gated K+ channel (I-type) were investigated in peripheral myelinated axons from Xenopus laevis. Channels activated between −60 and −40 mV with a potential of half-maximal activation, E50, at −47.5 mV. Averaged single-channel currents activated with a time delay at all membrane potentials tested. Time to half-maximal activation decreased from 80 to 1.6 msec between −60 and +40 mV. The channel inactivated monoexponentially with a time constant of 10.9 sec at −40 mV. The time constant of deactivation was 126 msec at −80 mV and 16.9 msec at −110 mV. In symmetrical 105 mm K+, the single-channel conductance (γ) was 22 and 13 pS at negative and positive membrane potentials, respectively, at 13–15°C. In Na+-rich solution with 2.5 mm extracellular K+γ was 7 pS and the reversal potential was negative to −80 mV, indicating a high selectivity for K+ over Na+. γ depended on extracellular K+ concentration (K D = 19.6 mm) and temperature (Q 10= 1.45). External tetraethylammonium (TEA) reduced the apparent single-channel current amplitude at all potentials tested with a half-maximal inhibiting concentration (IC50) of 0.6 mm. Open probability of the channel, but not single-channel current amplitude was decreased by extracellular dendrotoxin (DTX, IC50= 6.8 nm) and mast cell degranulating peptide (MCDP, IC50= 41.9 nm). In Ringer solution the membrane potential of macroscopic I-channel patches was about −65 mV and depolarized under TEA and DTX. It is concluded that besides their activation during action potentials, I-channels may also stabilize the resting membrane potential. Received: 2 June 1995/Revised: 13 October 1995  相似文献   

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