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1.
Huwentoxin-IV (HWTX-IV), a tetrodotoxin-sensitive (TTX-s) sodium channel antagonist, is found in the venom of the Chinese spider Ornithoctonus huwena. A naturally modified HWTX-IV (mHWTX-IV), having a molecular mass 18 Da lower than HWTX-IV, has also been isolated from the venom of the same spider. By a combination of enzymatic fragmentation and MS/MS de novo sequencing, mHWTX-IV has been shown to have the same amino acid sequence as that of HWTX-IV, except that the N-terminal glutamic acid replaced by pyroglutamic acid. mHWTX-IV inhibited tetrodotoxin-sensitive voltage-gated sodium channels of dorsal root ganglion neurons with an IC50 nearly equal to native HWTX-IV. mHWTX-IV showed the same activation and inactivation kinetics seen for native HWTX-IV. In contrast with HWTX-IV, which dissociates at moderate voltage depolarization voltages (+50 mV, 180000 ms), mHWTX-IV inhibition of TTX-sensitive sodium channels is not reversed by strong depolarization voltages (+200 mV, 500 ms). Recovery of Nav1.7current was voltage-dependent and was induced by extreme depolarization in the presence of HWTX-IV, but no obvious current was elicited after application of mHWTX-IV. Our data indicate that the N-terminal modification of HWTX-IV gives the peptide toxin a greater ability to trap the voltage sensor in the sodium channel. Loss of a negative charge, caused by cyclization at the N-terminus, is a possible reason why the modified toxin binds much stronger. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a pyroglutamic acid residue in a spider toxin; this modification seems to increase the trapping ability of the voltage sensor in the sodium channel.  相似文献   

2.
K Permeability of Nitella clavata in the Depolarized State   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Membrane current responses to sudden potential changes were recorded in solutions of various [K]o on 52 internodal cells of Nitella clavata. The membrane current after sudden depolarization had a component sensitive to [K]o which increased with time from 0.3 to 2.0 s and remained steady thereafter. This late current became zero at values of E and [K]o which suggests that the current was nearly all carried by K+. The potassium conductivity represented by this current increased with depolarization, with a half-maximum value at about -70 mV, and saturation at about -30 to -20 mV. The potassium conductance also increased with increasing [K]o, but less rapidly than predicted for constant potassium permeability. This failure of the conductance to increase with [K]o was relatively the same at all membrane potentials and may be explained by a model with a finite number of channels. No attempt was made to model the dependence of gK on time after depolarization or on membrane potential. However, the finding that the membrane potential did not affect the way in which the permeability depended on [K]o suggests that the membrane potential change does not affect the affinity of the sites, and that the increase in gK with time after depolarization is brought about by an increase in the number of channels with such sites.  相似文献   

3.
Voltage-gated sodium channels undergo slow inactivation during repetitive depolarizations, which controls the frequency and duration of bursts of action potentials and prevents excitotoxic cell death. Although homotetrameric bacterial sodium channels lack the intracellular linker-connecting homologous domains III and IV that causes fast inactivation of eukaryotic sodium channels, they retain the molecular mechanism for slow inactivation. Here, we examine the functional properties and slow inactivation of the bacterial sodium channel NavAb expressed in insect cells under conditions used for structural studies. NavAb activates at very negative membrane potentials (V1/2 of approximately −98 mV), and it has both an early phase of slow inactivation that arises during single depolarizations and reverses rapidly, and a late use-dependent phase of slow inactivation that reverses very slowly. Mutation of Asn49 to Lys in the S2 segment in the extracellular negative cluster of the voltage sensor shifts the activation curve ∼75 mV to more positive potentials and abolishes the late phase of slow inactivation. The gating charge R3 interacts with Asn49 in the crystal structure of NavAb, and mutation of this residue to Cys causes a similar positive shift in the voltage dependence of activation and block of the late phase of slow inactivation as mutation N49K. Prolonged depolarizations that induce slow inactivation also cause hysteresis of gating charge movement, which results in a requirement for very negative membrane potentials to return gating charges to their resting state. Unexpectedly, the mutation N49K does not alter hysteresis of gating charge movement, even though it prevents the late phase of slow inactivation. Our results reveal an important molecular interaction between R3 in S4 and Asn49 in S2 that is crucial for voltage-dependent activation and for late slow inactivation of NavAb, and they introduce a NavAb mutant that enables detailed functional studies in parallel with structural analysis.  相似文献   

4.

Background

Small neurons of the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) express five of the nine known voltage-gated sodium channels. Each channel has unique biophysical characteristics which determine how it contributes to the generation of action potentials (AP). To better understand how AP amplitude is maintained in nociceptive DRG neurons and their centrally projecting axons, which are subjected to depolarization within the dorsal horn, we investigated the dependence of AP amplitude on membrane potential, and how that dependence is altered by the presence or absence of sodium channel Nav1.8.

Results

In small neurons cultured from wild type (WT) adult mouse DRG, AP amplitude decreases as the membrane potential is depolarized from -90 mV to -30 mV. The decrease in amplitude is best fit by two Boltzmann equations, having V1/2 values of -73 and -37 mV. These values are similar to the V1/2 values for steady-state fast inactivation of tetrodotoxin-sensitive (TTX-s) sodium channels, and the tetrodotoxin-resistant (TTX-r) Nav1.8 sodium channel, respectively. Addition of TTX eliminates the more hyperpolarized V1/2 component and leads to increasing AP amplitude for holding potentials of -90 to -60 mV. This increase is substantially reduced by the addition of potassium channel blockers. In neurons from Nav1.8(-/-) mice, the voltage-dependent decrease in AP amplitude is characterized by a single Boltzmann equation with a V1/2 value of -55 mV, suggesting a shift in the steady-state fast inactivation properties of TTX-s sodium channels. Transfection of Nav1.8(-/-) DRG neurons with DNA encoding Nav1.8 results in a membrane potential-dependent decrease in AP amplitude that recapitulates WT properties.

Conclusion

We conclude that the presence of Nav1.8 allows AP amplitude to be maintained in DRG neurons and their centrally projecting axons even when depolarized within the dorsal horn.  相似文献   

5.
We examined the kinetics of voltage-dependent sodium currents in cerebellar Purkinje neurons using whole-cell recording from dissociated neurons. Unlike sodium currents in other cells, recovery from inactivation in Purkinje neurons is accompanied by a sizeable ionic current. Additionally, the extent and speed of recovery depend markedly on the voltage and duration of the prepulse that produces inactivation. Recovery is faster after brief, large depolarizations (e.g., 5 ms at +30 mV) than after long, smaller depolarizations (e.g., 100 ms at -30 mV). On repolarization to -40 mV following brief, large depolarizations, a resurgent sodium current rises and decays in parallel with partial, nonmonotonic recovery from inactivation. These phenomena can be explained by a model that incorporates two mechanisms of inactivation: a conventional mechanism, from which channels recover without conducting current, and a second mechanism, favored by brief, large depolarizations, from which channels recover by passing transiently through the open state. The second mechanism is consistent with voltage-dependent block of channels by a particle that can enter and exit only when channels are open. The sodium current flowing during recovery from this blocked state may depolarize cells immediately after an action potential, promoting the high-frequency firing typical of Purkinje neurons.  相似文献   

6.
Ionic Blockage of Sodium Channels in Nerve   总被引:140,自引:73,他引:67       下载免费PDF全文
Increasing the hydrogen ion concentration of the bathing medium reversibly depresses the sodium permeability of voltage-clamped frog nerves. The depression depends on membrane voltage: changing from pH 7 to pH 5 causes a 60% reduction in sodium permeability at +20 mV, but only a 20% reduction at +180 mV. This voltage-dependent block of sodium channels by hydrogen ions is explained by assuming that hydrogen ions enter the open sodium channel and bind there, preventing sodium ion passage. The voltage dependence arises because the binding site is assumed to lie far enough across the membrane for bound ions to be affected by part of the potential difference across the membrane. Equations are derived for the general case where the blocking ion enters the channel from either side of the membrane. For H+ ion blockage, a simpler model, in which H+ enters the channel only from the bathing medium, is found to be sufficient. The dissociation constant of H+ ions from the channel site, 3.9 x 10-6 M (pKa 5.4), is like that of a carboxylic acid. From the voltage dependence of the block, this acid site is about one-quarter of the way across the membrane potential from the outside. In addition to blocking as described by the model, hydrogen ions also shift the responses of sodium channel "gates" to voltage, probably by altering the surface potential of the nerve. Evidence for voltage-dependent blockage by calcium ions is also presented.  相似文献   

7.
Charybdotoxin(ChTX) is a specific blocker ofCa2+-activatedK+ channels. The voltage- andtime-dependent dynamics of ChTX block were investigated using caninecolonic myocytes and the whole cell patch-clamp technique with step andramp depolarization protocols. During prolonged step depolarizations,K+ current slowly increased in thecontinued presence of ChTX (100 nM). The rate of increase depended onmembrane potential with an e-foldchange for every 60 mV. During ramp depolarizations, the effectivenessof ChTX block depended significantly on the rate of the ramp (50% at0.01 V/s to 80% at 0.5 V/s). Results are consistent with a mechanismin which ChTX slowly "unbinds" in a voltage-dependent manner. Asimple kinetic model was developed in which ChTX binds to both open andclosed states. Slow unbinding is consistent with ChTX having littleeffect on electrical slow waves recorded from circular muscle whilecausing depolarization and contraction of longitudinal muscle, whichdisplays more rapid "spikes." Resting membrane potential andmembrane potential dynamics are important determinants of ChTX action.

  相似文献   

8.
Numerous biological assays and pharmacological studies on various higher plant tissues have led to the suggestion that voltage-dependent plasma membrane Ca2+ channels play prominent roles in initiating signal transduction processes during plant growth and development. However, to date no direct evidence has been obtained for the existence of such depolarization-activated Ca2+ channels in the plasma membrane of higher plant cells. Carrot suspension cells (Daucus carota L.) provide a well-suited system to determine whether voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels are present in the plasma membrane of higher plants and to characterize the properties of putative Ca2+ channels. It is known that both depolarization, caused by raising extracellular K+, and exposure to fungal toxins or oligogalacturonides induce Ca2+ influx into carrot cells. By direct application of patch-clamp techniques to isolated carrot protoplasts, we show here that depolarization of the plasma membrane positive to -135 mV activates Ca(2+)-permeable channels. These voltage-dependent ion channels were more permeable to Ca2+ than K+, while displaying large permeabilities to Ba2+ and Mg2+ ions. Ca(2+)-permeable channels showed slow and reversible inactivation. The single-channel conductance was 13 pS in 40 mM CaCl2. These data provide direct evidence for the existence of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels in the plasma membrane of a higher plant cell and point to physiological mechanisms for plant Ca2+ channel regulation. The depolarization-activated Ca(2+)-permeable channels identified here could constitute a regulated pathway for Ca2+ influx in response to physiologically occurring stimulus-induced depolarizations in higher plant cells.  相似文献   

9.
An electrical potential having a value of ?35 mV (SD = 7.4) is recorded upon penetration of the ventral surface of adult male Schistosoma mansoni with a microelectrode. Histological studies using horseradish peroxidase as a marker injected iontophoretically through the recording electrode indicate that this potential originates in the tegumental epithelium. Recordings from animals with contractile activity showed spontaneous nonovershooting depolarizations with durations of 20 to 100 msec and amplitudes between 5 and 15 mV. Slow-wave depolarizations are also observed and are most frequent in animals showing only slight movement. The tegumental membrane potential appears to be dependent primarily on the K+ gradient across the surface since a 10-fold increase in external K+ causes a 30-mV change in the potential. Altering the external concentration of Cl? has little effect on the tegumental potential, but lowering the external Na+ concentration to 37 mM causes a 10-mV depolarization. Praziquantel (PZ) has little initial effect on the tegumental membrane potential. A slow depolarization does occur, however, which reaches a significant level about 10 min after PZ (1 μM). Carbachol and dopamine are without significant effects on the tegumental membrane potential.  相似文献   

10.
The Nav1.6 voltage-gated sodium channel α subunit isoform is abundantly expressed in the adult rat brain. To assess the functional modulation of Nav1.6 channels by the auxiliary β1 subunit we expressed the rat Nav1.6 sodium channel α subunit by stable transformation in HEK293 cells either alone or in combination with the rat β1 subunit and assessed the properties of the reconstituted channels by recording sodium currents using the whole-cell patch clamp technique. Coexpression with the β1 subunit accelerated the inactivation of sodium currents and shifted the voltage dependence of channel activation and steady-state fast inactivation by approximately 5–7 mV in the direction of depolarization. By contrast the β1 subunit had no effect on the stability of sodium currents following repeated depolarizations at high frequencies. Our results define modulatory effects of the β1 subunit on the properties of rat Nav1.6-mediated sodium currents reconstituted in HEK293 cells that differ from effects measured previously in the Xenopus oocyte expression system. We also identify differences in the kinetic and gating properties of the rat Nav1.6 channel expressed in the absence of the β1 subunit compared to the properties of the orthologous mouse and human channels expressed in this system.  相似文献   

11.
Membrane potential and ionic currents were studied in cultured rabbit retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells using whole-cell patch clamp and perforated-patch recording techniques. RPE cells exhibited both outward and inward voltage-dependent currents and had a mean membrane capacitance of 26±12 pF (sd, n=92). The resting membrane potential averaged ?31±15 mV (n=37), but it was as high as ?60 mV in some cells. When K+ was the principal cation in the recording electrode, depolarization-activated outward currents were apparent in 91% of cells studied. Tail current analysis revealed that the outward currents were primarily K+ selective. The most frequently observed outward K+ current was a voltage- and time-dependent outward current (I K) which resembled the delayed rectifier K+ current described in other cells. I K was blocked by tetraethylammonium ions (TEA) and barium (Ba2+) and reduced by 4-aminopyridine (4-AP). In a few cells (3–4%), depolarization to ?50 mV or more negative potentials evoked an outwardly rectifying K+ current (I Kt) which showed more rapid inactivation at depolarized potentials. Inwardly rectifying K+ current (I KI) was also present in 41% of cells. I KI was blocked by extracellular Ba2+ or Cs+ and exhibited time-dependent decay, due to Na+ blockade, at negative potentials. We conclude that cultured rabbit RPE cells exhibit at least three voltage-dependent K+ currents. The K+ conductances reported here may provide conductive pathways important in maintaining ion and fluid homeostasis in the subretinal space.  相似文献   

12.
We studied the mechanism of inhibition of P-type calcium channels in rat cerebellar Purkinje neurons by the peptide toxin omega-Aga-IVA. Saturating concentrations of omega-Aga-IVA (> 50 nM) inhibited inward current carried by 2-5 mM Ba almost completely. However, outward current at depolarizations of > +60 mV, carried by internal Cs, was inhibited much less, as was the tail current after such depolarizations. omega-Aga-IVA shifted the midpoint of the tail current activation curve by about +50 mV and made the curve less steep. The inactivation curve was also shifted in the depolarized direction and was made less steep. With omega-Aga-IVA, channels activated more slowly and deactivated more quickly than in control. Trains of repeated large depolarizations relieved the inhibition of current (as tested with moderate depolarizations), probably reflecting the unbinding of toxin. The relief of inhibition was faster with increasing depolarization, but did not require internal permeant ions. We conclude that omega-Aga-IVA alters voltage-dependent gating by stabilizing closed states of the channel and that omega-Aga-IVA dissociates much more rapidly from open channels than from closed.  相似文献   

13.
Prolonged depolarization induces a slow inactivation process in some K+ channels. We have studied ionic and gating currents during long depolarizations in the mutant Shaker H4-Δ(6–46) K+ channel and in the nonconducting mutant (Shaker H4-Δ(6–46)-W434F). These channels lack the amino terminus that confers the fast (N-type) inactivation (Hoshi, T., W.N. Zagotta, and R.W. Aldrich. 1991. Neuron. 7:547–556). Channels were expressed in oocytes and currents were measured with the cut-open-oocyte and patch-clamp techniques. In both clones, the curves describing the voltage dependence of the charge movement were shifted toward more negative potentials when the holding potential was maintained at depolarized potentials. The evidences that this new voltage dependence of the charge movement in the depolarized condition is associated with the process of slow inactivation are the following: (a) the installation of both the slow inactivation of the ionic current and the inactivation of the charge in response to a sustained 1-min depolarization to 0 mV followed the same time course; and (b) the recovery from inactivation of both ionic and gating currents (induced by repolarizations to −90 mV after a 1-min inactivating pulse at 0 mV) also followed a similar time course. Although prolonged depolarizations induce inactivation of the majority of the channels, a small fraction remains non–slow inactivated. The voltage dependence of this fraction of channels remained unaltered, suggesting that their activation pathway was unmodified by prolonged depolarization. The data could be fitted to a sequential model for Shaker K+ channels (Bezanilla, F., E. Perozo, and E. Stefani. 1994. Biophys. J. 66:1011–1021), with the addition of a series of parallel nonconducting (inactivated) states that become populated during prolonged depolarization. The data suggest that prolonged depolarization modifies the conformation of the voltage sensor and that this change can be associated with the process of slow inactivation.  相似文献   

14.
High-affinity nitrate transport was examined in intact root hair cells of Arabidopsis thaliana using electrophysiological recordings to characterise the response of the plasma membrane to NO 3 ? challenge and to quantify transport activity. The NO 3 ? -associated membrane current was determined using a three-electrode voltage clamp to bring membrane voltage under experimental control and to compensate for current dissipation along the longitudinal cell axis. Nitrate transport was evident in the roots of seedlings grown in the absence of a nitrogen source, but only 4–6 days postgermination. In 6-day-old seedlings, additions of 5–100 μm NO 3 ? to the bathing medium resulted in membrane depolarizations of 8–43 mV, and membrane voltage (V m) recovered on washing NO 3 ? from the bath. Voltage clamp measurements carried out immediately before and following NO 3 ? additions showed that the NO 3 ? -evoked depolarizations were the consequence of an inward-directed current that appeared across the entire range of accessible voltages (?300 to +50 mV). Both membrane depolarizations and NO 3 ? -evoked currents recorded at the free-running voltage displayed quasi-Michaelian kinetics, with apparent values for Km of 23 ± 6 and 44 ± 11 μm, respectively and, for the current, a maximum of 5.1 ± 0.9 μA cm?2. The NO 3 ? current showed a pronounced voltage sensitivity within the normal physiological range between ?250 and ?100 mV, as could be demonstrated under voltage clamp, and increasing the bathing pH from 6.1 to 7.4–8.0 reduced the current and the associated membrane depolarizations 3- to 8-fold. Analyses showed a well-defined interaction between the kinetic variables of membrane voltage, pHo and [NO 3 ? ]o. At a constant pHo of 6.1, depolarization from ?250 to ?150 mV resulted in an approximate 3-fold reduction in the maximum current but a 10% rise in the apparent affinity for NO 3 ? . By contrast, the same depolarization effected an approximate 20% fall in the Km for transport as a function in [H+]o. These, and additional characteristics of the transport current implicate a carrier cycle in which NO 3 ? binding is kinetically isolated from the rate-limiting step of membrane charge transit, and they indicate a charge-coupling stoichiometry of 2(H+) per NO 3 ? anion transported across the membrane. The results concur with previous studies showing a high-affinity NO 3 ? transport system in Arabidopsis that is inducible following a period of nitrogen-limiting growth, but they underline the importance of voltage as a kinetic factor controlling NO 3 ? transport at the plant plasma membrane.  相似文献   

15.
Immature oocytes from the African toad Xenopus laevis are not known to be excitable cells, which means that they do not generate an action potential in response to small depolarizations. However, a regenerative response is produced if successive depolarizing currents of large magnitude are applied to the oocyte membrane. This response is characterized by the occurrence of a positive transmembrane potential that can last for several minutes. The opening of voltage-dependent channels, highly selective for sodium ions, underlies the depolarization thus obtained. These channels exhibit unconventional electrophysiological and pharmacological properties, which set them apart from other types of voltage-dependent sodium channels found in excitable tissues. The opening of the oocyte sodium channels is a complex process, which includes an induction phase. During this phase, the channels change from an electrical state of inexcitability into an excitable voltage-dependent state. The induction mechanism is modulated by the temperature of the bathing medium, by the activation of enzymes (namely a phospholipase C and a protein kinase C) and by the release of calcium ions from intracellular phosphatidyl-inositol trisphosphate stores. The results summarized in this review point out the possible role that these sodium channels may play in the physiology of the oocyte.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of membrane dipole potential (? d ) on the properties of ion channels formed in bilayer lipid membranes by syringomycin E (SRE), a toxin produced by Pseudomonas syringae, has been studied. It has been shown that ? d affects the conductance and lifetime of elementary SRE channels as well as their cluster organization, in particular, the number of elementary channels synchronously opened in the cluster and the lifetime of these clusters. The channel-forming activity of SRE was found to be ? d -dependent. The analysis of experimental data has revealed that (i) the mechanisms of the observed effects involve the dipole-dipole and charge-dipole interactions responsible for the cooperative functioning of the elementary SRE channels; (ii) about 95% of membrane dipole potential is shielded in the SRE pore; and (iii) the channel-forming activity of SRE is mainly determined by the gating charge of the SRE channels. At the same time, the partition coefficient for the toxin distribution between the membrane and aqueous phase as well as the chemical component of the channel formation work are also responsible for the ? d -dependence of the SRE channel forming activity.  相似文献   

17.
The opening of voltage-gated sodium, potassium, and calcium ion channels has a steep relationship with voltage. In response to changes in the transmembrane voltage, structural movements of an ion channel that precede channel opening generate a capacitative gating current. The net gating charge displacement due to membrane depolarization is an index of the voltage sensitivity of the ion channel activation process. Understanding the molecular basis of voltage-dependent gating of ion channels requires the measurement and computation of the gating charge, Q. We derive a simple and accurate semianalytic approach to computing the voltage dependence of transient gating charge movement (Q–V relationship) of discrete Markov state models of ion channels using matrix methods. This approach allows rapid computation of Q–V curves for finite and infinite length step depolarizations and is consistent with experimentally measured transient gating charge. This computational approach was applied to Shaker potassium channel gating, including the impact of inactivating particles on potassium channel gating currents.  相似文献   

18.
Inactivation of the sodium channel. I. Sodium current experiments   总被引:75,自引:39,他引:36       下载免费PDF全文
Inactivation of sodium conductance has been studied in squid axons with voltage clamp techniques and with the enzyme pronase which selectively destroys inactivation. Comparison of the sodium current before and after pronase treatment shows a lag of several hundred microseconds in the onset of inactivation after depolarization. This lag can of several hundred microseconds in the onset of inactivation after polarization. This lag can also be demonstrated with double-pulse experiments. When the membrane potential is hyperpolarized to -140 mV before depolarization, both activation and inactivation are delayed. These findings suggest that inactivation occurs only after activation are delayed. These findings suggest that inactivation occurs only after activation; i.e. that the channels must open before they can inactivate. The time constant of inactivation measured with two pulses (τ(c)) is the same as the one measured from the decay of the sodium current during a single pulse (τ(h)). For large depolarizations, steady-state inactivation becomes more incomplete as voltage increases; but it is relatively complete and appears independent of voltage when determined with a two- pulse method. This result confirms the existence of a second open state for Na channels, as proposed by Chandler and Meves (1970. J. Physiol. [Lond.]. 211:653-678). The time constant of recovery from inactivation is voltage dependent and decreases as the membrane potential is made more negative. A model for Na channels is presented which has voltage-dependent transitions between the closed and open states, and a voltage-independent transition between the open and the inactivated state. In this model the voltage dependence of inactivation is a consequence of coupling to the activation process.  相似文献   

19.
Numerous biological assays and pharmacological studies have led to the suggestion that depolarization-activated plasma membrane Ca2+ channels play prominent roles in signal perception and transduction processes during growth and development of higher plants. The recent application of patch-clamp techniques to isolated carrot protoplasts has led to direct voltage-clamp evidence for the existence of Ca2+ channels activated by physiological depolarizations in the plasma membrane of higher plant cells. However, these voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels were not stable and their activities decreased following the establishment of whole-cell recordings. We show here that large pre-depolarizing pulses positive to 0 mV induced not only the recovery of Ca2+ channel activities, but also the activation of initially quiescent voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels in the plasma membrane (recruitment). This recruitment was dependent on the intensity and duration of membrane depolarizations, i.e. the higher and longer the pre-depolarization, the greater the recruitment. Pre-depolarizing pulses to +118 mV during 30 s increased the initial calcium currents 5- to 10-fold. The recruited channels were permeable to Ba2+ and Sr2+ ions. The data suggested that voltage-dependent Ca(2+)-permeable channels are regulated by biological mechanisms which might be induced by large pre-depolarizations of the plasma membrane. In addition, this study provides evidence for the existence in the plasma membrane of higher plant cells of a large number of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels of which a major part are inactive and quiescent. It is suggested that quiescent Ca2+ channels can be rapidly recruited for Ca(2+)-dependent signal transduction.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of dipole modifiers, thyroid hormones (thyroxine and triiodothyronine) and xanthene dyes (Rose Bengal, phloxineB, erythrosin, eosinY and fluorescein) on the pore-forming activity of the lipopeptide syringomycin E (SRE) produced by Pseudomonas syringae were studied in a model bilayer. Thyroxine does not noticeably influence the steady-state number of open SRE channels (Nop), whereas triiodothyronine decreases it 10-fold at − 50 mV. Rose Bengal, phloxine B and erythrosin significantly increase Nop by 350, 100 and 70 times, respectively. Eosin Y and fluorescein do not practically affect the pore-forming activity of SRE. Recently, we showed that hormones decrease the dipole potential of lipid bilayers by approximately 60 mV at 50 μM, while Rose Bengal, phloxine B and erythrosin at 2.5 μM reduce the membrane dipole potential by 120, 80 and 50 mV, respectively. In the present study using differential scanning microcalorimetry, confocal fluorescence microscopy, the calcein release technique and measurements of membrane curvature elasticity, we show that triiodothyronine strongly affects the fluidity of model membranes: its addition leads to a significant decrease in the temperature and cooperativity of the main phase transition of DPPC, calcein leakage from DOPC vesicles, fluidization of solid domains in DOPC/DPPC liposomes, and promotion of lipid curvature stress. Thyroxine exerts a weaker effect. Xanthene dyes do not influence the phase transition of DPPC. Despite the decrease in the dipole potential, thyroid hormones modulate SRE channels predominantly via the elastic properties of the membrane, whereas the xanthene dyes Rose Bengal, phloxine B and erythrosine affect SRE channels via bilayer electrostatics.  相似文献   

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