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1.
Using the patch clamp technique, we have investigated the blockade of maxi-K+ channels present on vas deferens epithelial cells by extracellular Ba2+. With symmetrical 140 mM K+ solutions, Ba2+ produced discrete blocking events consisting of both long closings of seconds duration (slow block) and fast closings of milliseconds duration (flickering block). Kinetic analysis showed that flickering block occurred according to an "open channel blocking" scheme and was eliminated by reducing external K+ to 4.5 mM. Slow block showed a complex voltage-dependence. At potentials between -20 mV and 20 mV, blockade was voltage-dependent; at potentials greater than 20 mV, blockade was voltage-independent, but markedly sensitive to the extracellular K+ concentration. These data reveal that the vas deferens maxi-K+ channel has two Ba2+ binding sites accessible from the extracellular side. Site one is located at the cytoplasmic side of the gating region and binding to this site causes flickering block. Site two is located close to the extracellular mouth of the channel and binding to this site causes slow block.  相似文献   

2.
External barium ions inhibit K+ currents of Xenopus oocytes expressing ShH4 delta 6-46, the non-inactivating deletion of the Shaker K+ channel. At the macroscopic level, Ba2+ block comprises both a fast and a slow component. The fast component is less sensitive to Ba2+ (apparent dissociation constant at 0 mV, K(0), approximately 19.1 mM) than the slow component and is also less voltage dependent (apparent electrical distance, delta, approximately 0.14). The slow component (K(0), approximately 9.4 mM, delta approximately 0.25) is relieved by outward K+ current, which suggests that the corresponding binding site resides within the channel conduction pathway. At the single channel level, the fast component of block is evidenced as an apparent reduction in amplitude, suggesting an extremely rapid blocking and unblocking reaction. In contrast, the slow component appears to be associated with long blocked times that are present from the beginning of a depolarizing command. Installation of the slow component is much slower than a diffusion limited process; for example, the blocking time constant (tau) produced by 2 mM Ba2+ is approximately 159 s (holding potential, HP = -90 mV). However, the blocking rate of this slow component is not a linear function of external Ba2+ and tends to saturate at higher concentrations. This is inconsistent with a simple bi-molecular blocking reaction. These features of external Ba2+ block can be accounted for by a simple model of two sequential Ba2+ binding sites, where the deeper of the two sites produces the slow component of block.  相似文献   

3.
Using Ba2+ as a probe, we performed a detailed characterization of an external K+ binding site located in the pore of a large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BKCa) channel from skeletal muscle incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. Internal Ba2+ blocks BKCa channels and decreasing external K+ using a K+ chelator, (+)-18-Crown-6-tetracarboxylic acid, dramatically reduces the duration of the Ba2+-blocked events. Average Ba2+ dwell time changes from 10 s at 10 mM external K+ to 100 ms in the limit of very low [K+]. Using a model where external K+ binds to a site hindering the exit of Ba2+ toward the external side (Neyton, J., and C. Miller. 1988. J. Gen. Physiol. 92:549-568), we calculated a dissociation constant of 2.7 mircoM for K) at this lock-in site. We also found that BK(Ca) channels enter into a long-lasting nonconductive state when the external [K+] is reduced below 4 microM using the crown ether. Channel activity can be recovered by adding K+, Rb+, Cs+, or NH4+ to the external solution. These results suggest that the BK(Ca) channel stability in solutions of very low [K+] is due to K+ binding to a site having a very high affinity. Occupancy of this site by K+ avoids the channel conductance collapse and the exit of Ba2+ toward the external side. External tetraethylammonium also reduced the Ba2+ off rate and impeded the channel from entering into the long-lasting nonconductive state. This effect requires the presence of external K+. It is explained in terms of a model in which the conduction pore contains Ba2+, K+, and tetraethylammonium simultaneously, with the K+ binding site located internal to the tetraethylammonium site. Altogether, these results and the known potassium channel structure (Doyle, D.A., J.M. Cabral, R.A. Pfuetzner, A. Kuo, J.M. Gulbis, S.L. Cohen, B.T. Chait, and R. MacKinnon. 1998. Science. 280:69-77) imply that the lock-in site and the Ba2+ sites are the external and internal ion sites of the selectivity filter, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
The patch-clamp technique is used to investigate divalent ion block of the large-conductance K+ channel from Chara australis. Block by Ba2+, Ca2+, Mg2+, and Pt(NH3)4(2+) from the vacuolar and cytoplasmic sides is used to probe the structure of, and ion interactions within, the pore. Five divalent ion binding sites are detected. Vacuolar Ca2+ reduces channel conductance by binding to a site located 7% along the membrane potential difference (site 1, delta = 0.07; from the vacuolar side); it also causes channel closures with mean a duration of approximately 0.1-1 ms by binding at a deeper site (site 2, delta = 0.3). Ca2+ can exit from site 2 into both the vacuolar and cytoplasmic solutions. Cytoplasmic Ca2+ reduces conductance by binding at two sites (site 3, delta = -0.21; site 4, delta = -0.6; from the cytoplasmic side) and causes closures with a mean duration of 10-100 ms by binding to site 5 (delta = -0.7). The deep sites exhibit stronger ion specificity than the superficial sites. Cytoplasmic Ca2+ binds sequentially to sites 3-5 and Ca2+ at site 5 can be locked into the pore by a second Ca2+ at site 3 or 4. Ca2+ block is alleviated by increasing [K+] on the same side of the channel. Further, Ca2+ occupancy of the deep sites (2, 4, and 5) is reduced by K+, Rb+, NH4+, and Na+ on the opposite side of the pore. Their relative efficacy correlates with their relative permeability in the channel. While some Ca2+ and K+ sites compete for ions, Ca2+ and K+ can simultaneously occupy the channel. Ca2+ binding at site 1 only partially blocks channel conduction. The results suggest the presence of four K+ binding sites on the channel protein. One cytoplasmic facing site has an equilibrium affinity of 10 mM (site 6, delta = -0.3) and one vacuolar site (site 7, delta less than 0.2) has low affinity (greater than 500 mM). Divalent ion block of the Chara channel shows many similarities to that of the maxi-K channel from rat skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

5.
We report the first X-ray diffraction on gramicidin in its membrane-active form by using uniformly aligned multilayer samples of membranes containing gramicidin and ions (T1+, K+, Ba2+, Mg2+ or without ions). From the difference electron density profiles, we found a pair of symmetrically located ion-binding sites for T1- at 9.6 (+/- 0.3) A and for Ba2+ at 13.0 (+/- 0.2) A from the midpoint of the gramicidin channel. The location of Ba(2+)-binding sites is near the ends of the channel, consistent with the experimental observation that divalent cations do not permeate but block the channel. The location of T1(+)-binding sites is somewhat of a surprise. It was generally thought that monovalent cations bind to the first turn of the helix from the mouth of the channel. (It is now generally accepted that the gramicidin channel is a cylindrical pore formed by two monomers, each a single-stranded beta 6.3 helix and hydrogen-bonded head-to-head at their N termini.) But our experiment shows that the T1(+)-binding site is either near the bottom of or below the first helix turn.  相似文献   

6.
L-type Ca channels from porcine cardiac sarcolemma were incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. We characterized interactions of permeant and blocking ions with the channel's pore by (a) studying the current-voltage relationships for Ca2+ and Na+ when equal concentrations of the ions were present in both internal and external solutions, (b) testing the dose-dependent block of Ba2+ currents through the channels by internally applied cadmium, and (c) examining the dose and voltage dependence of the block of Na+ currents through the channels by internally and externally applied Ca2+. We found that the I-V relationship for Na+ appears symmetrical through the origin when equal concentrations of Na+ are present on both sides of the channel (gamma = 90 pS in 200 mM NaCl). The conductance for outward Ca2+ currents with 100 mM Ca2+ on both sides of the channel is approximately 8 pS, a value identical to that observed for inward currents when 100 mM Ca2+ was present outside only. This provides evidence that ions pass through the channel equally well regardless of the direction of net flux. In addition, we find that internal Cd2+ is as effective as external Cd2+ in blocking Ba2+ currents through the channels, again suggesting identical interactions of ions with each end of the pore. Finally, we find that micromolar Ca2+, either in the internal or in the external solution, blocks Na+ currents through the channels. The affinity for internally applied Ca2+ appears the same as that for externally applied Ca2+. The voltage dependence of the Ca(2+)-block suggests that the sites to which Ca2+ binds are located approximately 15% and approximately 85% of the electric field into the pore. Taken together, these data provide direct experimental evidence for the existence of at least two ion binding sites with high affinity for Ca2+, and support the idea that the sites are symmetrically located within the electric field across L-type Ca channels.  相似文献   

7.
The Na+ channel is the primary target of anticonvulsants carbamazepine, phenytoin, and lamotrigine. These drugs modify Na+ channel gating as they have much higher binding affinity to the inactivated state than to the resting state of the channel. It has been proposed that these drugs bind to the Na+ channel pore with a common diphenyl structural motif. Diclofenac is a widely prescribed anti-inflammatory agent that has a similar diphenyl motif in its structure. In this study, we found that diclofenac modifies Na+ channel gating in a way similar to the foregoing anticonvulsants. The dissociation constants of diclofenac binding to the resting, activated, and inactivated Na+ channels are approximately 880 microM, approximately 88 microM, and approximately 7 microM, respectively. The changing affinity well depicts the gradual shaping of a use-dependent receptor along the gating process. Most interestingly, diclofenac does not show the pore-blocking effect of carbamazepine on the Na+ channel when the external solution contains 150 mM Na+, but is turned into an effective Na+ channel pore blocker if the extracellular solution contains no Na+. In contrast, internal Na+ has only negligible effect on the functional consequences of diclofenac binding. Diclofenac thus acts as an "opportunistic" pore blocker modulated by external but not internal Na+, indicating that the diclofenac binding site is located at the junction of a widened part and an acutely narrowed part of the ion conduction pathway, and faces the extracellular rather than the intracellular solution. The diclofenac binding site thus is most likely located at the external pore mouth, and undergoes delicate conformational changes modulated by external Na+ along the gating process of the Na+ channel.  相似文献   

8.
The pore properties and the reciprocal interactions between permeant ions and the gating of KCNQ channels are poorly understood. Here we used external barium to investigate the permeation characteristics of homomeric KCNQ1 channels. We assessed the Ba(2+) binding kinetics and the concentration and voltage dependence of Ba(2+) steady-state block. Our results indicate that extracellular Ba(2+) exerts a series of complex effects, including a voltage-dependent pore blockade as well as unique gating alterations. External barium interacts with the permeation pathway of KCNQ1 at two discrete and nonsequential sites. (a) A slow deep Ba(2+) site that occludes the channel pore and could be simulated by a model of voltage-dependent block. (b) A fast superficial Ba(2+) site that barely contributes to channel block and mostly affects channel gating by shifting rightward the voltage dependence of activation, slowing activation, speeding up deactivation kinetics, and inhibiting channel inactivation. A model of voltage-dependent block cannot predict the complex impact of Ba(2+) on channel gating in low external K(+) solutions. Ba(2+) binding to this superficial site likely modifies the gating transitions states of KCNQ1. Both sites appear to reside in the permeation pathway as high external K(+) attenuates Ba(2+) inhibition of channel conductance and abolishes its impact on channel gating. Our data suggest that despite the high degree of homology of the pore region among the various K(+) channels, KCNQ1 channels display significant structural and functional uniqueness.  相似文献   

9.
We have examined the interaction between TEA and K+ ions in the pore of Shaker potassium channels. We found that the ability of external TEA to antagonize block of Shaker channels by internal TEA depended on internal K+ ions. In contrast, this antagonism was independent of external K+ concentrations between 0.2 and 40 mM. The external TEA antagonism of internal TEA block increased linearly with the concentration of internal K+ ions. In addition, block by external TEA was significantly enhanced by increases in the internal K+ concentration. These results suggested that external TEA ions do not directly antagonize internal TEA, but rather promote increased occupancy of an internal K+ site by inhibiting the emptying of that site to the external side of the pore. We found this mechanism to be quantitatively consistent with the results and revealed an intrinsic affinity of the site for K+ ions near 65 mM located approximately 7% into the membrane electric field from the internal end of the pore. We also found that the voltage dependence of block by internal TEA was influenced by internal K+ ions. The TEA site (at 0 internal K+) appeared to sense approximately 5% of the field from the internal end of the pore (essentially colocalized with the internal K+ site). These results lead to a refined picture of the number and location of ion binding sites at the inner end of the pore in Shaker K channels.  相似文献   

10.
Ni(2+) inhibits current through calcium channels, in part by blocking the pore, but Ni(2+) may also allosterically affect channel activity via sites outside the permeation pathway. As a test for pore blockade, we examined whether the effect of Ni(2+) on Ca(V)3.1 is affected by permeant ions. We find two components to block by Ni(2+), a rapid block with little voltage dependence, and a slow block most visible as accelerated tail currents. Rapid block is weaker for outward vs. inward currents (apparent K(d) = 3 vs. 1 mM Ni(2+), with 2 mM Ca(2+) or Ba(2+)) and is reduced at high permeant ion concentration (110 vs. 2 mM Ca(2+) or Ba(2+)). Slow block depends both on the concentration and on the identity of the permeant ion (Ca(2+) vs. Ba(2+) vs. Na(+)). Slow block is 2-3x faster in Ba(2+) than in Ca(2+) (2 or 110 mM), and is approximately 10x faster with 2 vs. 110 mM Ca(2+) or Ba(2+). Slow block is orders of magnitude slower than the diffusion limit, except in the nominal absence of divalent cations ( approximately 3 muM Ca(2+)). We conclude that both fast and slow block of Ca(V)3.1 by Ni(2+) are most consistent with occlusion of the pore. The exit rate of Ni(2+) for slow block is reduced at high Ni(2+) concentrations, suggesting that the site responsible for fast block can "lock in" slow block by Ni(2+), at a site located deeper within the pore. In contrast to the complex pore block observed for Ca(V)3.1, inhibition of Ca(V)3.2 by Ni(2+) was essentially independent of voltage, and was similar in 2 mM Ca(2+) vs. Ba(2+), consistent with inhibition by a different mechanism, at a site outside the pore.  相似文献   

11.
Using the patch-clamp whole-cell recording technique, we investigated the influence of external Ca2+, Ba2+, K+, Rb+, and internal Ca2+ on the rate of K+ channel inactivation in the human T lymphocyte-derived cell line, Jurkat E6-1. Raising external Ca2+ or Ba2+, or reducing external K+, accelerated the rate of the K+ current decay during a depolarizing voltage pulse. External Ba2+ also produced a use-dependent block of the K+ channels by entering the open channel and becoming trapped inside. Raising internal Ca2+ accelerated inactivation at lower concentrations than external Ca2+, but increasing the Ca2+ buffering with BAPTA did not affect inactivation. Raising [K+]o or adding Rb+ slowed inactivation by competing with divalent ions. External Rb+ also produced a use-dependent removal of block of K+ channels loaded with Ba2+ or Ca2+. From the removal of this block we found that under normal conditions approximately 25% of the channels were loaded with Ca2+, whereas under conditions with 10 microM internal Ca2+ the proportion of channels loaded with Ca2+ increased to approximately 50%. Removing all the divalent cations from the external and internal solution resulted in the induction of a non-selective, voltage-independent conductance. We conclude that Ca2+ ions from the outside or the inside can bind to a site at the K+ channel and thereby block the channel or accelerate inactivation.  相似文献   

12.
Mammalian heart Na+ channels exhibit approximately 100-fold higher affinity for block by external Zn2+ than other Na+ channel subtypes. With batrachotoxin-modified Na+ channels from dog or calf heart, micromolar concentrations of external Zn2+ result in a flickering block to a substate level with a conductance of approximately 12% of the open channel at -50 mV. We examined the hypothesis that, in this blocking mode, Zn2+ binds to a subsite of the saxitoxin (STX) binding site of heart Na+ channels by single-channel analysis of the interaction between Zn2+ and STX and also by chemical modification experiments on single heart Na+ channels incorporated into planar lipid bilayers in the presence of batrachotoxin. We found that external Zn2+ relieved block by STX in a strictly competitive fashion. Kinetic analysis of this phenomenon was consistent with a scheme involving direct binding competition between Zn2+ and STX at a single site with intrinsic equilibrium dissociation constants of 30 nM for STX and 30 microM for Zn2+. Because high-affinity Zn2(+)-binding sites often include sulfhydryl groups as coordinating ligands of this metal ion, we tested the effect of a sulfhydryl-specific alkylating reagent, iodoacetamide (IAA), on Zn2+ and STX block. For six calf heart Na+ channels, we observed that exposure to 5 mM IAA completely abolished Zn2+ block and concomitantly modified STX binding with at least 20-fold reduction in affinity. These results lead us to propose a model in which Zn2+ binds to a subsite within or near the STX binding site of heart Na+ channels. This site is also presumed to contain one or more cysteine sulfhydryl groups.  相似文献   

13.
In this study, high-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels from rat skeletal muscle were incorporated into planar phospholipid bilayers, and discrete blockade of single channels by Ba2+ was studied. With 150 mM K+ held constant in the internal solution, increasing external K+ over the range 100-1,000 mM raises the rate of Ba2+ dissociation. This "enhancement effect," which operates at K+ concentrations 3-4 orders of magnitude higher than those required for the "lockin" effect described previously, depends on applied voltage, saturates with K+ concentration, and is not observed with Na+. The voltage dependence of the Ba2+ off-rate varies with external K+ in a way suggesting that K+, entering the channel from the external side, forces Ba2+ dissociation to the internal solution. With K+ held fixed in the external solution, the Ba2+ off-rate decreases as internal K+ is raised over the range 0-50 mM. This "lock-in" effect is similar to that seen on the external side (Neyton and Miller, 1988), except that the internal lock-in site is of lower affinity and shows only a fivefold preference for K+ over Na+. All the results taken together argue strongly that this channel's conduction pathway contains four sites of very high affinity for K+, all of which may be simultaneously occupied under normal conducting conditions. According to this view, the mutual destabilization resulting from this high ionic occupancy leads to the unusually high conductance of this K+-specific channel.  相似文献   

14.
Blocking of potassium channels by internally and externally applied barium ions has been studied in squid giant axons. Internal Ba (3-5 mM) causes rapid decay or "inactivation" of potassium current (IK). The kinetics and degree of block are strongly voltage-dependent. Large positive voltages speed blocking and make it more profound. Raising the external potassium concentration (Ko) from 0 to 250 mM has the opposite effect: block is made slower and less severe. In contrast, for positive voltages block by the tetraethylammonium derivative 3-phenylpropyltriethylammonium ion is almost independent of Ko and voltage. Recovery from block by internal Ba has a rapid phase lasting a few milliseconds and a slow phase lasting approximately 5 min. Internal Ba causes a "hook" in the IK tails recorded on repolarizing the fiber in high potassium external medium. External Ba, on the other hand, blocks without much altering IK time-course. KD (the dissociation constant) for block by external Ba is a few millimolar, and depends on the internal potassium concentration, the holding potential, and other factors. A reaction scheme for Ba and K channels is presented, postulating that internal and external Ba reach the same point in the channel. Once there, Ba blocks and also stabilizes the closed conformation of the channel. The extreme stability of the Ba channel complex implies the existence of negative charge within the channel.  相似文献   

15.
The voltage-gated K+ channel, Kv2.1, conducts Na+ in the absence of K+. External tetraethylammonium (TEAo) blocks K+ currents through Kv2.1 with an IC50 of 5 mM, but is completely without effect in the absence of K+. TEAo block can be titrated back upon addition of low [K+]. This suggested that the Kv2.1 pore undergoes a cation-dependent conformational rearrangement in the external vestibule. Individual mutation of lysine (Lys) 356 and 382 in the outer vestibule, to a glycine and a valine, respectively, increased TEAo potency for block of K+ currents by a half log unit. Mutation of Lys 356, which is located at the outer edge of the external vestibule, significantly restored TEAo block in the absence of K+ (IC50 = 21 mM). In contrast, mutation of Lys 382, which is located in the outer vestibule near the TEA binding site, resulted in very weak (extrapolated IC50 = approximately 265 mM) TEAo block in the absence of K+. These data suggest that the cation-dependent alteration in pore conformation that resulted in loss of TEA potency extended to the outer edge of the external vestibule, and primarily involved a repositioning of Lys 356 or a nearby amino acid in the conduction pathway. Block by internal TEA also completely disappeared in the absence of K+, and could be titrated back with low [K+]. Both internal and external TEA potencies were increased by the same low [K+] (30-100 microM) that blocked Na+ currents through the channel. In addition, experiments that combined block by internal and external TEA indicated that the site of K+ action was between the internal and external TEA binding sites. These data indicate that a K+-dependent conformational change also occurs internal to the selectivity filter, and that both internal and external conformational rearrangements resulted from differences in K+ occupancy of the selectivity filter. Kv2.1 inactivation rate was K+ dependent and correlated with TEAo potency; as [K+] was raised, TEAo became more potent and inactivation became faster. Both TEAo potency and inactivation rate saturated at the same [K+]. These results suggest that the rate of slow inactivation in Kv2.1 was influenced by the conformational rearrangements, either internal to the selectivity filter or near the outer edge of the external vestibule, that were associated with differences in TEA potency.  相似文献   

16.
Kv4 channels are thought to lack a C-type inactivation mechanism (collapse of the external pore) and to inactivate as a result of a concerted action of cytoplasmic regions of the channel. To investigate whether Kv4 channels have outer pore conformational changes during the inactivation process, the inactivation properties of Kv4.3 were characterized in 0 mM and in 2 mM external K+ in whole-cell voltage-clamp experiments. Removal of external K+ increased the inactivation rates and favored cumulative inactivation by repetitive stimulation. The reduction in current amplitude during repetitive stimulation and the faster inactivation rates in 0 mM external K+ were not due to changes in the voltage dependence of channel opening or to internal K+ depletion. The extent of the collapse of the K+ conductance upon removal of external K+ was more pronounced in NMG+-than in Na+-containing solutions. The reduction in the current amplitude during cumulative inactivation by repetitive stimulation is not associated with kinetic changes, suggesting that it is due to a diminished number of functional channels with unchanged gating properties. These observations meet the criteria for a typical C-type inactivation, as removal of external K+ destabilizes the conducting state, leading to the collapse of the pore. A tentative model is presented, in which K+ bound to high-affinity K+-binding sites in the selectivity filter destabilizes an outer neighboring K+ modulatory site that is saturated at approximately 2 mM external K+. We conclude that Kv4 channels have a C-type inactivation mechanism and that previously reported alterations in the inactivation rates after N- and C- termini mutagenesis may arise from secondary changes in the electrostatic interactions between K+-binding sites in the selectivity filter and the neighboring K+-modulatory site, that would result in changes in its K+ occupancy.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of a variety of K+ channel blockers on current flow through single serotonin-sensitive K+ channels (the S channels) of Aplysia sensory neurons were studied using the patch-clamp technique. Tetraethylammonium (TEA), 4-aminopyridine (4-AP), and Co2+ and Ba2+ were first applied to the external membrane surface using cell-free outside-out patches. At concentrations up to 10 mM, these agents had little or no effect on single S-channel currents. At higher concentrations, external TEA acted as a fast open-channel blocker, reducing the single-channel current amplitude according to a simple one-to-one binding scheme with an apparent Kd of 90 mM. Blockage by external TEA is voltage independent. Internal TEA also acts as an open-channel blocker, with an apparent Kd of approximately 40 mM and a relatively weak voltage dependence, corresponding to an apparent electrical distance to the internal TEA-binding site of 0.1. Both internal and external TEA block the open channel selectively, with an affinity that is 10-100-fold greater than the affinity for the closed channel. Internal Ba2+ acts as a slow channel blocker, producing long closures of the channel, and binding with an apparent Kd of approximately 25-30 microM. These results show that single S-channel currents share a similar pharmacological profile with the macroscopic S current previously characterized with voltage clamp. On the basis of these results, a structural model for S-channel opening is proposed.  相似文献   

18.
The single-channel kinetics of extracellular Mg(2+) block was used to probe K(+) binding sites in the permeation pathway of rat recombinant NR1/NR2B NMDA receptor channels. K(+) binds to three sites: two that are external and one that is internal to the site of Mg(2+) block. The internal site is approximately 0.84 through the electric field from the extracellular surface. The equilibrium dissociation constant for this site for K(+) is 304 mM at 0 mV and with Mg(2+) in the pore. The occupancy of any one of the three sites by K(+) effectively prevents the association of extracellular Mg(2+). Occupancy of the internal site also prevents Mg(2+) permeation and increases (by approximately sevenfold) the rate constant for Mg(2+) dissociation back to the extracellular solution. Under physiological intracellular ionic conditions and at -60 mV, there is approximately 1,400-fold apparent decrease in the affinity of the channel for extracellular Mg(2+) and approximately 2-fold enhancement of the apparent voltage dependence of Mg(2+) block caused by the voltage dependence of K(+) occupancy of the external and internal sites.  相似文献   

19.
Single high-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels from rat skeletal muscle were inserted into planar lipid bilayers, and discrete blocking by the Ba2+ ion was studied. Specifically, the ability of external K+ to reduce the Ba2+ dissociation rate was investigated. In the presence of 150 mM internal K+, 1-5 microM internal Ba2+, and 150 mM external Na+, Ba2+ dissociation is rapid (5 s-1) in external solutions that are kept rigorously K+ free. The addition of external K+ in the low millimolar range reduces the Ba2+ off-rate 20-fold. Other permeant ions, such as Tl+, Rb+, and NH4+ show a similar effect. The half-inhibition constants rise in the order: Tl+ (0.08 mM) less than Rb+ (0.1 mM) less than K+ (0.3 mM) less than Cs+ (0.5 mM) less than NH4+ (3 mM). When external Na+ is replaced by 150 mM N-methyl glucamine, the Ba2+ off-rate is even higher, 20 s-1. External K+ and other permeant ions reduce this rate by approximately 100-fold in the micromolar range of concentrations. Na+ also reduces the Ba2+ off-rate, but at much higher concentrations. The half-inhibition concentrations rise in the order: Rb+ (4 microM) less than K+ (19 microM) much less than Na+ (27 mM) less than Li+ (greater than 50 mM). The results require that the conduction pore of this channel contains at least three sites that may all be occupied simultaneously by conducting ions.  相似文献   

20.
Block by calcium of ATP-activated channels in pheochromocytoma cells   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
We have investigated the effects of Ca2+ on Na+ influx through ATP- activated channels in pheochromocytoma PC12 cells using single channel current recordings. Under cell-attached patch-clamp conditions with 150 mM Na+ and 2 mM Ca2+ in the pipette, the unitary current activity showed an open level of about -4.3 pA at -150 mV. The channel opening was interrupted by flickery noise as well as occasional transition to a subconducting state of about -1.7 pA at -150 mV. The open level was decreased with increased external Ca2+, suggesting that external Ca2+ blocks Na+ permeation. We assessed the block by Ca2+ as the mean amplitude obtained with heavy filtration according to Pietrobon et al. (Pietrobon, D., B. Prod'hom, and P. Hess, 1989. J. Gen. Physiol. 94:1- 21). The block was concentration dependent with a Hill coefficient of 1 and a half-maximal concentration of approximately 6 mM. A similar block was observed with other divalent cations, and the order of potency was Cd2+ > Mn2+ > Mg2+ not equal to Ca2+ > Ba2+. High Ca2+, Mg2+ and Ba2+ did not block completely, probably because they can carry current in the channel. The block by external Ca2+ did not exhibit voltage dependence between -100 and -210 mV. In the inside-out patch-clamp configuration, the amplitude of inward channel current obtained with 150 mM external Na+ was reduced by increased internal Ca2+. The reduction was observed at lower concentrations than that by external Ca2+. Internal Ba2+ and Cd2+ induced similar reduction in current amplitude. This inhibitory effect of internal Ca2+ was voltage dependent; the inhibition was relieved with hyperpolarization. The results suggest that both external and internal Ca2+ can block Na+ influx through the ATP-activated channel. A simple one-binding site model with symmetric energy barriers is not sufficient to explain the Ca2+ block from both sides.  相似文献   

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