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1.
We investigated the features of the inward-rectifier K channel Kir1.1 (ROMK) that underlie the saturation of currents through these channels as a function of permeant ion concentration. We compared values of maximal currents and apparent K(m) for three permeant ions: K(+), Rb(+), and NH(4)(+). Compared with K(+) (i(max) = 4.6 pA and K(m) = 10 mM at -100 mV), Rb(+) had a lower permeability, a lower i(max) (1.8 pA), and a higher K(m) (26 mM). For NH(4)(+), the permeability was reduced more with smaller changes in i(max) (3.7 pA) and K(m) (16 mM). We assessed the role of a site near the outer mouth of channel in the saturation process. This site could be occupied by either permeant ions or low-affinity blocking ions such as Na(+), Li(+), Mg(2+), and Ca(2+) with similar voltage dependence (apparent valence, 0.15-0.20). It prefers Mg(2+) over Ca(2+) and has a monovalent cation selectivity, based on the ability to displace Mg(2+), of K(+) > Li(+) ~ Na(+) > Rb(+) ~ NH(4)(+). Conversely, in the presence of Mg(2+), the K(m) for K(+) conductance was substantially increased. The ability of Mg(2+) to block the channels was reduced when four negatively charged amino acids in the extracellular domain of the channel were mutated to neutral residues. The apparent K(m) for K(+) conduction was unchanged by these mutations under control conditions but became sensitive to the presence of external negative charges when residual divalent cations were chelated with EDTA. The results suggest that a binding site in the outer mouth of the pore controls current saturation. Permeability is more affected by interactions with other sites within the selectivity filter. Most features of permeation (and block) could be simulated by a five-state kinetic model of ion movement through the channel.  相似文献   

2.
Tetrodotoxin-resistant (TTX-R) Na(+) channels are much less susceptible to external TTX but more susceptible to external Cd(2+) block than tetrodotoxin-sensitive (TTX-S) Na(+) channels. Both TTX and Cd(2+) seem to block the channel near the "DEKA" ring, which is probably part of a multi-ion single-file region adjacent to the external pore mouth and is involved in the selectivity filter of the channel. In this study we demonstrate that other multivalent transitional metal ions such as La(3+), Zn(2+), Ni(2+), Co(2+), and Mn(2+) also block the TTX-R channels in dorsal root ganglion neurons. Just like Cd(2+), the blocking effect has little intrinsic voltage dependence, but is profoundly influenced by Na(+) flow. The apparent dissociation constants of the blocking ions are always significantly smaller in inward Na(+) currents than those in outward Na(+) current, signaling exit of the blocker along with the Na(+) flow and a high internal energy barrier for "permeation" of these multivalent blocking ions through the pore. Most interestingly, the activation and especially the inactivation kinetics are slowed by the blocking ions. Moreover, the gating changes induced by the same concentration of a blocking ion are evidently different in different directions of Na(+) current flow, but can always be correlated with the extent of pore block. Further quantitative analyses indicate that the apparent slowing of channel activation is chiefly ascribable to Na(+) flow-dependent unblocking of the bound La(3+) from the open Na(+) channel, whereas channel inactivation cannot happen with any discernible speed in the La(3+)-blocked channel. Thus, the selectivity filter of Na(+) channel is probably contiguous to a single-file multi-ion region at the external pore mouth, a region itself being nonselective in terms of significant binding of different multivalent cations. This region is "open" to the external solution even if the channel is "closed" ("deactivated"), but undergoes imperative conformational changes during the gating (especially the inactivation) process of the channel.  相似文献   

3.
Recent molecular dynamic simulations and electrostatic calculations suggested that the external TEA binding site in K+ channels is outside the membrane electric field. However, it has been known for some time that external TEA block of Shaker K+ channels is voltage dependent. To reconcile these two results, we reexamined the voltage dependence of block of Shaker K+ channels by external TEA. We found that the voltage dependence of TEA block all but disappeared in solutions in which K+ ions were replaced by Rb+. These and other results with various concentrations of internal K+ and Rb+ ions suggest that the external TEA binding site is not within the membrane electric field and that the voltage dependence of TEA block in K+ solutions arises through a coupling with the movement of K+ ions through part of the membrane electric field. Our results suggest that external TEA block is coupled to two opposing voltage-dependent movements of K+ ions in the pore: (a) an inward shift of the average position of ions in the selectivity filter equivalent to a single ion moving approximately 37% into the pore from the external surface; and (b) a movement of internal K+ ions into a vestibule binding site located approximately 13% into the membrane electric field measured from the internal surface. The minimal voltage dependence of external TEA block in Rb+ solutions results from a minimal occupancy of the vestibule site by Rb+ ions and because the energy profile of the selectivity filter favors a more inward distribution of Rb+ occupancy.  相似文献   

4.
Voltage-dependent K(+) channels can undergo a gating process known as C-type inactivation, which involves entry into a nonconducting state through conformational changes near the channel's selectivity filter. C-type inactivation may involve movements of transmembrane voltage sensor domains, although the mechanisms underlying this form of inactivation may be heterogeneous and are often unclear. Here, we report on a form of voltage-dependent inactivation gating observed in MthK, a prokaryotic K(+) channel that lacks a canonical voltage sensor and may thus provide a reduced system to inform on mechanism. In single-channel recordings, we observe that Po decreases with depolarization, with a half-maximal voltage of 96 ± 3 mV. This gating is kinetically distinct from blockade by internal Ca(2+) or Ba(2+), suggesting that it may arise from an intrinsic inactivation mechanism. Inactivation gating was shifted toward more positive voltages by increasing external [K(+)] (47 mV per 10-fold increase in [K(+)]), suggesting that K(+) binding at the extracellular side of the channel stabilizes the open-conductive state. The open-conductive state was stabilized by other external cations, and selectivity of the stabilizing site followed the sequence: K(+) ≈ Rb(+) > Cs(+) > Na(+) > Li(+) ≈ NMG(+). Selectivity of the stabilizing site is weaker than that of sites that determine permeability of these ions, suggesting that the site may lie toward the external end of the MthK selectivity filter. We could describe MthK gating over a wide range of positive voltages and external [K(+)] using kinetic schemes in which the open-conductive state is stabilized by K(+) binding to a site that is not deep within the electric field, with the voltage dependence of inactivation arising from both voltage-dependent K(+) dissociation and transitions between nonconducting (inactivated) states. These results provide a quantitative working hypothesis for voltage-dependent, K(+)-sensitive inactivation gating, a property that may be common to other K(+) channels.  相似文献   

5.
Membrane voltage controls the passage of ions through voltage-gated K (K(v)) channels, and many studies have demonstrated that this is accomplished by a physical gate located at the cytoplasmic end of the pore. Critical to this determination were the findings that quaternary ammonium ions and certain peptides have access to their internal pore-blocking sites only when the channel gates are open, and that large blocking ions interfere with channel closing. Although an intracellular location for the physical gate of K(v) channels is well established, it is not clear if such a cytoplasmic gate exists in all K(+) channels. Some studies on large-conductance, voltage- and Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (BK) channels suggest a cytoplasmic location for the gate, but other findings question this conclusion and, instead, support the concept that BK channels are gated by the pore selectivity filter. If the BK channel is gated by the selectivity filter, the interactions between the blocking ions and channel gating should be influenced by the permeant ion. Thus, we tested tetrabutyl ammonium (TBA) and the Shaker "ball" peptide (BP) on BK channels with either K(+) or Rb(+) as the permeant ion. When tested in K(+) solutions, both TBA and the BP acted as open-channel blockers of BK channels, and the BP interfered with channel closing. In contrast, when Rb(+) replaced K(+) as the permeant ion, TBA and the BP blocked both closed and open BK channels, and the BP no longer interfered with channel closing. We also tested the cytoplasmically gated Shaker K channels and found the opposite behavior: the interactions of TBA and the BP with these K(v) channels were independent of the permeant ion. Our results add significantly to the evidence against a cytoplasmic gate in BK channels and represent a positive test for selectivity filter gating.  相似文献   

6.
The x-ray structure of the KcsA channel at different [K(+)] and [Rb(+)] provided insight into how K(+) channels might achieve high selectivity and high K(+) transit rates and showed marked differences between the occupancies of the two ions within the ion channel pore. In this study, the binding of kappa-conotoxin PVIIA (kappa-PVIIA) to Shaker K(+) channel in the presence of K(+) and Rb(+) was investigated. It is demonstrated that the complex results obtained were largely rationalized by differences in selectivity filter occupancy of this 6TM channels as predicted from the structural work on KcsA. kappa-PVIIA inhibition of the Shaker K(+) channel differs in the closed and open state. When K(+) is the only permeant ion, increasing extracellular [K(+)] decreases kappa-PVIIA affinity for closed channels by decreasing the "on" binding rate, but has no effect on the block of open channels, which is influenced only by the intracellular [K(+)]. In contrast, extracellular [Rb(+)] affects both closed- and open-channel binding. As extracellular [Rb(+)] increases, (a) binding to the closed channel is slightly destabilized and acquires faster kinetics, and (b) open channel block is also destabilized and the lowest block seems to occur when the pore is likely filled only by Rb(+). These results suggest that the nature of the permeant ions determines both the occupancy and the location of the pore site from which they interact with kappa-PVIIA binding. Thus, our results suggest that the permeant ion(s) within a channel pore can determine its functional and pharmacological properties.  相似文献   

7.
Ba(2+), a doubly charged analogue of K(+), specifically blocks K(+) channels by virtue of electrostatic stabilization in the permeation pathway. Ba(2+) block is used here as a tool to determine the equilibrium binding affinity for various monovalent cations at specific sites in the selectivity filter of a noninactivating mutant of KcsA. At high concentrations of external K(+), the block-time distribution is double exponential, marking at least two Ba(2+) sites in the selectivity filter, in accord with a Ba(2+)-containing crystal structure of KcsA. By analyzing block as a function of extracellular K(+), we determined the equilibrium dissociation constant of K(+) and of other monovalent cations at an extracellular site, presumably S1, to arrive at a selectivity sequence for binding at this site: Rb(+) (3 μM) > Cs(+) (23 μM) > K(+) (29 μM) > NH(4)(+) (440 μM) > Na(+) and Li(+) (>1 M). This represents an unusually high selectivity for K(+) over Na(+), with |ΔΔG(0)| of at least 7 kcal mol(-1). These results fit well with other kinetic measurements of selectivity as well as with the many crystal structures of KcsA in various ionic conditions.  相似文献   

8.
The thermodynamics of cation permeation through the KcsA K(+) channel selectivity filter is studied from the perspective of a physically transparent semimicroscopic model using Monte Carlo free energy integration. The computational approach chosen permits dissection of the separate contributions to ionic stabilization arising from different parts of the channel (selectivity filter carbonyls, single-file water, cavity water, reaction field of bulk water, inner helices, ionizable residues). All features play important roles; their relative significance varies with the ion's position in the filter. The cavity appears to act as an electrostatic buffer, shielding filter ions from structural changes in the inner pore. The model exhibits K(+) vs. Na(+) selectivity, and roughly isoenergetic profiles for K(+) and Rb(+), and discriminates against Cs(+), all in agreement with experimental data. It also indicates that Ba(2+) and Na(+) compete effectively with permeant ions at a site near the boundary between the filter and the cavity, in the vicinity of the barium blocker site.  相似文献   

9.
Microscopic molecular dynamics free energy perturbation calculations of the K(+)/Na(+) selectivity in the KcsA potassium channel, based on its experimental three-dimensional structure, are reported. The relative binding free energies for K(+) and Na(+) in the most relevant ion occupancy states of the four-site selectivity filter are calculated. The previously proposed mechanism for ion permeation through the KcsA channel is predicted, in agreement with available experimental data, to have a significant selectivity for K(+) over Na(+). The calculations also show that the individual 'binding site' selectivities are generally not additive and the doubly loaded states of the filter thus display cooperative effects. The only site that is not K(+) selective is that which is located at the entrance to the internal water cavity, suggesting the possibility that internal Na(+) could block outward currents.  相似文献   

10.
In the Kv2.1 potassium channel, binding of K(+) to a high-affinity site associated with the selectivity filter modulates channel sensitivity to external TEA. In channels carrying Na(+) current, K(+) interacts with the TEA modulation site at concentrations 相似文献   

11.
X-ray diffraction data were collected from frozen crystals (100 degrees K) of the KcsA K(+) channel equilibrated with solutions containing barium chloride. Difference electron density maps (F(barium) - F(native), 5.0 A resolution) show that Ba(2+) resides at a single location within the selectivity filter. The Ba(2+) blocking site corresponds to the internal aspect (adjacent to the central cavity) of the "inner ion" position where an alkali metal cation is found in the absence of the blocking Ba(2+) ion. The location of Ba(2+) with respect to Rb(+) ions in the pore is in good agreement with the findings on the functional interaction of Ba(2+) with K(+) (and Rb(+)) in Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels (Neyton, J., and C. Miller. 1988. J. Gen. Physiol. 92:549-567). Taken together, these structural and functional data imply that at physiological ion concentrations a third ion may interact with two ions in the selectivity filter, perhaps by entering from one side and displacing an ion on the opposite side.  相似文献   

12.
Tetrodotoxin-resistant (TTX-R) Na(+) channels are 1,000-fold less sensitive to TTX than TTX-sensitive (TTX-S) Na(+) channels. On the other hand, TTX-R channels are much more susceptible to external Cd(2+) block than TTX-S channels. A cysteine (or serine) residue situated just next to the aspartate residue of the presumable selectivity filter "DEKA" ring of the TTX-R channel has been identified as the key ligand determining the binding affinity of both TTX and Cd(2+). In this study we demonstrate that the binding affinity of Cd(2+) to the TTX-R channels in neurons from dorsal root ganglia has little intrinsic voltage dependence, but is significantly influenced by the direction of Na(+) current flow. In the presence of inward Na(+) current, the apparent dissociation constant of Cd(2+) ( approximately 200 microM) is approximately 9 times smaller than that in the presence of outward Na(+) current. The Na(+) flow-dependent binding affinity change of Cd(2+) block is true no matter whether the direction of Na(+) current is secured by asymmetrical chemical gradient (e.g., 150 mM Na(+) vs. 150 mM Cs(+) on different sides of the membrane, 0 mV) or by asymmetrical electrical gradient (e.g., 150 mM Na(+) on both sides of the membrane, -20 mV vs. 20 mV). These findings suggest that Cd(2+) is a pore blocker of TTX-R channels with its binding site located in a multiion, single-file region near the external pore mouth. Quantitative analysis of the flow dependence with the flux-coupling equation reveals that at least two Na(+) ions coexist with the blocking Cd(2+) ion in this pore region in the presence of 150 mM ambient Na(+). Thus, the selectivity filter of the TTX-R Na(+) channels in dorsal root ganglion neurons might be located in or close to a multiion single-file pore segment connected externally to a wide vestibule, a molecular feature probably shared by other voltage-gated cationic channels, such as some Ca(2+) and K(+) channels.  相似文献   

13.
The Shaker B K(+) conductance (G(K)) collapses when the channels are closed (deactivated) in Na(+) solutions that lack K(+) ions. Also, it is known that external TEA (TEA(o)) impedes the collapse of G(K), and that channel block by TEA(o) and scorpion toxins are two mutually exclusive events. Therefore, we tested the ability of scorpion toxins to inhibit the collapse of G(K) in 0 K(+). We have found that these toxins are not uniform regarding the capacity to protect G(K). Those toxins, whose binding to the channels is destabilized by external K(+), are also effective inhibitors of the collapse of G(K). In addition to K(+), other externally added cations also destabilize toxin block, with an effectiveness that does not match the selectivity sequence of K(+) channels. The inhibition of the drop of G(K) follows a saturation relationship with [toxin], which is fitted well by the Michaelis-Menten equation, with an apparent Kd bigger than that of block of the K(+) current. However, another plausible model is also presented and compared with the Michaelis-Menten model. The observations suggest that those toxins that protect G(K) in 0 K(+) do so by interacting either with the most external K(+) binding site of the selectivity filter (suggesting that the K(+) occupancy of only that site of the pore may be enough to preserve G(K)) or with sites capable of binding K(+) located in the outer vestibule of the pore, above the selectivity filter.  相似文献   

14.
ROMK channels are regulated by internal pH (pH(i)) and extracellular K(+) (K(+)(o)). The mechanisms underlying this regulation were studied in these channels after expression in Xenopus oocytes. Replacement of the COOH-terminal portion of ROMK2 (Kir1.1b) with the corresponding region of the pH-insensitive channel IRK1 (Kir 2.1) produced a chimeric channel (termed C13) with enhanced sensitivity to inhibition by intracellular H(+), increasing the apparent pKa for inhibition by approximately 0.9 pH units. Three amino acid substitutions at the COOH-terminal end of the second transmembrane helix (I159V, L160M, and I163M) accounted for these effects. These substitutions also made the channels more sensitive to reduction in K(+)(o), consistent with coupling between the responses to pH(i) and K(+)(o). The ion selectivity sequence of the activation of the channel by cations was K(+) congruent with Rb(+) > NH(4)(+) > Na(+), similar to that for ion permeability, suggesting an interaction with the selectivity filter. We tested a model of coupling in which a pH-sensitive gate can close the pore from the inside, preventing access of K(+) from the cytoplasm and increasing sensitivity of the selectivity filter to removal of K(+)(o). We mimicked closure of this gate using positive membrane potentials to elicit block by intracellular cations. With K(+)(o) between 10 and 110 mM, this resulted in a slow, reversible decrease in conductance. However, additional channel constructs, in which inward rectification was maintained but the pH sensor was abolished, failed to respond to voltage under the same conditions. This indicates that blocking access of intracellular K(+) to the selectivity filter cannot account for coupling. The C13 chimera was 10 times more sensitive to extracellular Ba(2+) block than was ROMK2, indicating that changes in the COOH terminus affect ion binding to the outer part of the pore. This effect correlated with the sensitivity to inactivation by H(+). We conclude that decreasing pH(I) increases the sensitivity of ROMK2 channels to K(+)(o) by altering the properties of the selectivity filter.  相似文献   

15.
Single Na+ channels activated by veratridine and batrachotoxin   总被引:14,自引:7,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
Voltage-sensitive Na+ channels from rat skeletal muscle plasma membrane vesicles were inserted into planar lipid bilayers in the presence of either of the alkaloid toxins veratridine (VT) or batrachotoxin (BTX). Both of these toxins are known to cause persistent activation of Na+ channels. With BTX as the channel activator, single channels remain open nearly all the time. Channels activated with VT open and close on a time scale of 1-10 s. Increasing the VT concentration enhances the probability of channel opening, primarily by increasing the rate constant of opening. The kinetics and voltage dependence of channel block by 21-sulfo-11-alpha-hydroxysaxitoxin are identical for VT and BTX, as is the ionic selectivity sequence determined by bi-ionic reversal potential (Na+ approximately Li+ greater than K+ greater than Rb+ greater than Cs+). However, there are striking quantitative differences in open channel conduction for channels in the presence of the two activators. Under symmetrical solution conditions, the single channel conductance for Na+ is about twice as high with BTX as with VT. Furthermore, the symmetrical solution single channel conductances show a different selectivity for BTX (Na+ greater than Li+ greater than K+) than for VT (Na+ greater than K+ greater than Li+). Open channel current-voltage curves in symmetrical Na+ and Li+ are roughly linear, while those in symmetrical K+ are inwardly rectifying. Na+ currents are blocked asymmetrically by K+ with both BTX and VT, but the voltage dependence of K+ block is stronger with BTX than with VT. The results show that the alkaloid neurotoxins not only alter the gating process of the Na+ channel, but also affect the structure of the open channel. We further conclude that the rate-determining step for conduction by Na+ does not occur at the channel's "selectivity filter," where poorly permeating ions like K+ are excluded.  相似文献   

16.
Steep rectification in IRK1 (Kir2.1) inward-rectifier K(+) channels reflects strong voltage dependence (valence of approximately 5) of channel block by intracellular cationic blockers such as the polyamine spermine. The observed voltage dependence primarily results from displacement, by spermine, of up to five K(+) ions across the narrow K(+) selectivity filter, along which the transmembrane voltage drops steeply. Spermine first binds, with modest voltage dependence, at a shallow site where it encounters the innermost K(+) ion and impedes conduction. From there, spermine can proceed to a deeper site, displacing several more K(+) ions and thereby producing most of the observed voltage dependence. Since in the deeper blocked state the leading amine group of spermine reaches into the cavity region (internal to the selectivity filter) and interacts with residue D172, its trailing end is expected to be near M183. Here, we found that mutation M183A indeed affected the deeper blocked state, which supports the idea that spermine is located in the region lined by the M2 and not deep in the narrow K(+) selectivity filter. As to the shallower site whose location has been unknown, we note that in the crystal structure of homologous GIRK1 (Kir3.1), four aromatic side chains of F255, one from each of the four subunits, constrict the intracellular end of the pore to approximately 10 A. For technical simplicity, we used tetraethylammonium (TEA) as an initial probe to test whether the corresponding residue in IRK1, F254, forms the shallower site. We found that replacing the aromatic side chain with an aliphatic one not only lowered TEA affinity of the shallower site approximately 100-fold but also eliminated the associated voltage dependence and, furthermore, confirmed that similar effects occurred also for spermine. These results establish the evidence for physically separate, sequential ion-binding loci along the long inner pore of IRK1, and strongly suggest that the aromatic side chains of F254 underlie the likely innermost binding locus for both blocker and K(+) ions in the cytoplasmic pore.  相似文献   

17.
Relief of Na+ block of Ca2+-activated K+ channels by external cations   总被引:10,自引:6,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
The flickery block of single Ca2+-activated K+ channels that is produced by internally applied Na+ can be relieved by millimolar concentrations of external K+. This effect of K+ on the kinetics of Na+ block was studied by the method of amplitude distribution analysis described in the companion paper (Yellen, G., 1984b, J. Gen. Physiol., 84:157-186). It appears that K+ relieves block by increasing the exit rate of the blocking ion from the channel, not by competitively slowing its entrance rate. This suggests that a K ion that enters the channel from the outside can expel the blocking Na ion, which entered the channel from the inside. Cs+, which cannot carry current through the channel, and Rb+, which carries a reduced current through the channel, are just as effective as K+ in relieving the block by internal Na+. The kinetics of block by internal nonyltriethylammonium (C9) are unaffected by the presence of these ions in the external bathing solution.  相似文献   

18.
In epithelial Kir7.1 channels a non-conserved methionine in the outer pore region adjacent to the G-Y-G selectivity filter (position +2) was found to determine unique properties for permeant and blocking ions characteristic of a K(+) channel in a single-occupancy state. The monovalent cation permeability sequence of Kir7.1 channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes was Tl(+)>K(+)>Rb(+)NH(4)(+)>Cs(+)>Na(+)>Li(+), but the macroscopic conductance for Rb(+) was approximately 8-fold larger than for the smaller K(+) ions, and decreased approximately 40-fold with the conserved arginine at the +2 position (Kir7.1M125R). Moreover, in Kir7.1 Rb(+) restored the typical permeation properties of other multi-ion channels indicating that a stable coordination of permeant ions at the +2 position defines the initial step in the conduction pathway of Kir channels.  相似文献   

19.
The Kv2.1 potassium channel contains a lysine in the outer vestibule (position 356) that markedly reduces open channel sensitivity to changes in external [K(+)]. To investigate the mechanism underlying this effect, we examined the influence of this outer vestibule lysine on three measures of K(+) and Na(+) permeation. Permeability ratio measurements, measurements of the lowest [K(+)] required for interaction with the selectivity filter, and measurements of macroscopic K(+) and Na(+) conductance, were all consistent with the same conclusion: that the outer vestibule lysine in Kv2.1 interferes with the ability of K(+) to enter or exit the extracellular side of the selectivity filter. In contrast to its influence on K(+) permeation properties, Lys 356 appeared to be without effect on Na(+) permeation. This suggests that Lys 356 limited K(+) flux by interfering with a selective K(+) binding site. Combined with permeation studies, results from additional mutagenesis near the external entrance to the selectivity filter indicated that this site was located external to, and independent from, the selectivity filter. Protonation of a naturally occurring histidine in the same outer vestibule location in the Kv1.5 potassium channel produced similar effects on K(+) permeation properties. Together, these results indicate that a selective, functional K(+) binding site (e.g., local energy minimum) exists in the outer vestibule of voltage-gated K(+) channels. We suggest that this site is the location of K(+) hydration/dehydration postulated to exist based on the structural studies of KcsA. Finally, neutralization of position 356 enhanced outward K(+) current magnitude, but did not influence the ability of internal K(+) to enter the pore. These data indicate that in Kv2.1, exit of K(+) from the selectivity filter, rather than entry of internal K(+) into the channel, limits outward current magnitude. We discuss the implications of these findings in relation to the structural basis of channel conductance in different K(+) channels.  相似文献   

20.
Single channel currents through Ca2+-activated K+ channels of bovine chromaffin cells were measured to determine the effects of small ions on permeation through the channel. The channel selects strongly for K+ over Na+ and Cs+, and Rb+ carries a smaller current through the channel than K+. Tetraethylammonium ion (TEA+) blocks channel currents when applied to either side of the membrane; it is effective at lower concentrations when applied externally. Millimolar concentrations of internal Na+ reduce the average current through the channel and produce large fluctuations (flicker) in the open channel currents. This flickery block is analyzed by a new method, amplitude distribution analysis, which can measure block and unblock rates in the microsecond time range even though individual blocking events are not time-resolved by the recording system. The analysis shows that the rate of block by Na+ is very voltage dependent, but the unblock rate is voltage independent. These results can be explained easily by supposing that current flow through the channel is diffusion limited, a hypothesis consistent with the large magnitude of the single channel current.  相似文献   

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