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1.
The contribution of Ca2(+)-activated and delayed rectifying K+ channels to the voltage-dependent outward current involved in spike repolarization in mouse pancreatic beta-cells (Rorsman, P., and G. Trube. 1986. J. Physiol. 374:531-550) was assessed using patch-clamp techniques. A Ca2(+)-dependent component could be identified by its rapid inactivation and sensitivity to the Ca2+ channel blocker Cd2+. This current showed the same voltage dependence as the voltage-activated (Cd2(+)-sensitive) Ca2+ current and contributed 10-20% to the total beta-cell delayed outward current. The single-channel events underlying the Ca2(+)-activated component were investigated in cell-attached patches. Increase of [Ca2+]i invariably induced a dramatic increase in the open state probability of a Ca2(+)-activated K+ channel. This channel had a single-channel conductance of 70 pS [( K+]o = 5.6 mM). The Ca2(+)-independent outward current (constituting greater than 80% of the total) reflected the activation of an 8 pS [( K+]o = 5.6 mM; [K+]i = 155 mM) K+ channel. This channel was the only type observed to be associated with action potentials in cell-attached patches. It is suggested that in mouse beta-cells spike repolarization results mainly from the opening of the 8-pS delayed rectifying K+ channel.  相似文献   

2.
Freshly dissociated cells from the stomach muscularis of the toad Bufo marinus have been employed to carry out a systematic set of electrophysiological studies on the membrane properties of smooth muscle. The existence of Ca2+-activated K+ channels became apparent during the first studies under current clamp. In subsequent studies under voltage clamp, a Ca2+-activated. TEA-sensitive outward current was evident, and it was more than an order of magnitude larger than any other current observed in the cells. The channel responsible, at least in part, for this large outward current has been identified on the basis of single-channel records, and some of its main characteristics have been studied. It is similar in many respects to the large-conductance, Ca2+-activated K+ channel seen in other preparations. This channel has now been found in a considerable diversity of smooth muscle types.  相似文献   

3.
Transient outward currents in rat saphenous arterial myocytes were studied using the perforated configuration of the patch-clamp method. When myocytes were bathed in a Na-gluconate solution containing TEA to block large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) currents, depolarizing pulses positive to +20 mV from a holding potential of -100 mV induced fast transient outward currents. The activation and inactivation time constants of the current were voltage dependent, and at +40 mV were 3.6 +/- 0.8 ms and 23.9 +/- 6.4 ms (n = 4), respectively. The steady-state inactivation of the transient outward current was steeply voltage dependent (z = 1.7), with 50% of the current inactivated at -55 mV. The current was insensitive to the A-type K+ channel blocker 4-AP (1-5 mM), and was modulated by external Ca, decreasing to approximately 0.85 of control values upon raising Ca2+ from 1 to 10 mM, and increasing approximately 3-fold upon lowering it to 0.1 mM. Transient outward currents were also recorded following replacement of internal K+ with either Na+ or Cs+, raising the possibility that the current was carried by monovalent ions passing through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. This hypothesis was supported by the finding that the transient outward current had the same inactivation rate as the inward Ba2+ current, and that both currents were effectively blocked by the L-type Ca2+ channel blocker, nifedipine and enhanced by the agonist BAYK8644.  相似文献   

4.
We previously demonstrated that a balance of K+ and Ca2+-activated Cl- channel activity maintained the basal tone of circular smooth muscle of opossum lower esophageal sphincter (LES). In the current studies, the contribution of major K+ channels to the LES basal tone was investigated in circular smooth muscle of opossum LES in vitro. K+ channel activity was recorded in dispersed single cells at room temperature using patch-clamp recordings. Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings displayed an outward current beginning to activate at -60 mV by step test pulses lasting 400 ms (-120 mV to +100 mV) with increments of 20 mV from holding potential of -80 mV ([K+]I = 150 mM, [K+]o = 2.5 mM). However, no inward rectification was observed. The outward current peaked within 50 ms and showed little or no inactivation. It was significantly decreased by bath application of nifedipine, tetraethylammonium (TEA), 4-aminopyridine (4-AP), and iberiotoxin (IBTN). Further combination of TEA with 4-AP, nifedipine with 4-AP, and IBTN with TEA, or vice versa, blocked more than 90% of the outward current. Ca2+-sensitive single channels were recorded at asymetrical K+ gradients in cell-attached patch-clamp configurations (100.8+/-3.2 pS, n = 8). Open probability of the single channels recorded in inside-out patch-clamp configurations were greatly decreased by bath application of IBTN (100 nM) (Vh = -14.4+/-4.8 mV in control vs. 27.3+/-0.1 mV, n = 3, P < 0.05). These data suggest that large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ and delayed rectifier K+ channels contribute to the membrane potential, and thereby regulate the basal tone of opossum LES circular smooth muscle.  相似文献   

5.
Voltage-dependent membrane currents were studied in dissociated hepatocytes from chick, using the patch-clamp technique. All cells had voltage-dependent outward K+ currents; in 10% of the cells, a fast, transient, tetrodotoxin-sensitive Na+ current was identified. None of the cells had voltage-dependent inward Ca2+ currents. The K+ current activated at a membrane potential of about -10 mV, had a sigmoidal time course, and did not inactivate in 500 ms. The maximum outward conductance was 6.6 +/- 2.4 nS in 18 cells. The reversal potential, estimated from tail current measurements, shifted by 50 mV per 10-fold increase in the external K+ concentration. The current traces were fitted by n2 kinetics with voltage-dependent time constants. Omitting Ca2+ from the external bath or buffering the internal Ca2+ with EGTA did not alter the outward current, which shows that Ca2+-activated K+ currents were not present. 1-5 mM 4-aminopyridine, 0.5-2 mM BaCl2, and 0.1-1 mM CdCl2 reversibly inhibited the current. The block caused by Ba was voltage dependent. Single-channel currents were recorded in cell-attached and outside-out patches. The mean unitary conductance was 7 pS, and the channels displayed bursting kinetics. Thus, avian hepatocytes have a single type of K+ channel belonging to the delayed rectifier class of K+ channels.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of tetraethylammonium (TEA) on the delayed K+ current and on the Ca2+-activated K+ current of the Aplysia pacemaker neurons R-15 and L-6 were studied. The delayed outward K+ current was measured in Ca2+-free ASW containing tetrodotoxin (TTX), using brief depolarizing clamp pulses. External TEA blocks the delayed K+ current reversibly in a dose-dependent manner. The experimental results are well fitted with a Michaelis-Menten expression, assuming a one-to-one reaction between TEA and a receptor site, with an apparent dissociation constant of 6.0 mM. The block depends on membrane voltage and is reduced at positive membrane potentials. The Ca2+-activated K+ current was measured in Ca2+-free artificial seawater (ASW) containing TTX, using internal Ca2+ ion injection to directly activate the K+ conductance. External TEA and a number of other quaternary ammonium ions block the Ca2+-activated K+ current reversibly in a dose-dependent manner. TEA is the most effective blocker, with an apparent dissociation constant, for a one-to-one reaction with a receptor site, of 0.4 mM. The block decreases with depolarization. The Ca2+-activated K+ current was also measured after intracellular iontophoretic TEA injection. Internal TEA blocks the Ca2+-activated K+ current (but the block is only apparent at positive membrane potentials), is increased by depolarization, and is irreversible. The effects of external and internal TEA can be seen in measurements of the total outward K+ current at different membrane potentials in normal ASW.  相似文献   

7.
Effects of 4-aminopyridine on potassium currents in a molluscan neuron   总被引:13,自引:3,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
The effects of 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) on the delayed K+ current and on the Ca2+-activated K+ current of the Aplysia pacemaker neurons R-15 and L-6 were studied. The delayed outward K+ current was measured in Ca2+- free artificial seawater (ASW) containing tetrodotoxin (TTX), using brief depolarizing clamp pulses. External (and internal) 4-AP blocks the delayed K+ current in a dose-dependent manner but does not block the leakage current. Our results show that one 4-AP molecule combines with a single receptor site and that the block is voltage dependent with an apparent dissociation constant (K4-AP) of approximately 0.8 mM at 0 mV. K4-AP increases e-fold for a 32-mV change in potential, which is consistent with the block occurring approximately 0.8 of the distance through the membrane electrical field. The 4-AP block appears to depend upon stimulus frequency as well as upon voltage. The greater speed of onset of the block produced by internal 4-AP relative to when it is used externally suggests that 4-AP acts from inside the cell. The Ca2+-activated K+ current was measured in Ca2+-free ASW containing TTX, using internal Ca2+-ion injection to directly activate the K+ conductance. Low external 4-AP concentrations (less than 2 mM) have no effect on the Ca2+-activated K+ current, but concentrations of 5 mM or greater increase the K+ current. Internal 4-AP has the same effect. The opposing effects of 4-AP on the two components of the K+ current can be seen in measurements of the total outward K+ current at different membrane potentials in normal ASW and during the repolarizing phase of the action potential.  相似文献   

8.
There have been periodic reports of nonclassic (4-aminopyridine insensitive) transient outward K+ current in guinea pig ventricular myocytes, with the most recent one describing a novel voltage-gated inwardly rectifying type. In the present study, we have investigated a transient outward current that overlaps inward Ca2+ current (I(Ca,L)) in myocytes dialyzed with 10 mM K+ solution and superfused with Tyrode's solution. Although depolarizations from holding potential (Vhp) -40 to 0 mV elicited relatively small inward I(Ca,L) in these myocytes, removal of external K+ or addition of 0.2 mM Ba2+ more than doubled the amplitude of the current. The basis of the enhancement of I(Ca,L) was the suppression of a large transient outward K+ current. Similar enhancement was observed when Vhp was moved to -80 mV and test depolarizations were preceded by short prepulses to -40 mV. Investigation of the time and voltage properties of the outward K+ transient indicated that it was inwardly rectifying and unlikely to be carried by voltage-gated channels. The outward transient was attenuated in myocytes dialyzed with high-Mg2+ solution, accelerated in myocytes dialyzed with 100 microM spermine solution, and abolished with time in myocytes dialyzed with ATP-free solution. These and other findings suggest that the outward transient is a component of classic "time-independent" inwardly rectifying K+ current.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of quinidine on the fast, the delayed, and the Ca2+- activated K+ outward currents, as well as on Na+ and Ca2+ inward currents, were studied at the soma membrane from neurons of the marine mollusk Aplysia californica. External quinidine blocks these current components but to different degrees. Its main effect is on the voltage- dependent, delayed K+ current, and it resembles the block produced by quaternary ammonium ions (Armstrong, C. M., 1975, Membranes, Lipid Bilayers and Biological Membranes: Dynamic Properties, 3:325-358). The apparent dissociation constant is 28 microM at V = +20 mV. The blocking action is voltage and time dependent and increases during maintained depolarization. The data are consistent with the block occurring approximately 70-80% through the membrane electric field. Internal injection of quinidine has an effect similar to that obtained after external application, but its time course of action is faster. External quinidine may therefore have to pass into or through the membrane to reach a blocking site. The Ca2+-activated K+ current is blocked by external quinidine at concentrations 20-50-fold higher compared with the delayed outward K+ current. In addition, it prolongs the time course of decay of the Ca2+-activated K+ current. Na+ and Ca2+ inward currents are also blocked by external quinidine, but again at higher concentrations. The effects of quinidine on membrane currents can be seen from its effect on action potentials and the conversion of repetitive "beating" discharge activity to "bursting" pacemaker activity.  相似文献   

10.
Voltage-dependent membrane currents of cells dissociated from tongues of larval tiger salamanders (Ambystoma tigrinum) were studied using whole-cell and single-channel patch-clamp techniques. Nongustatory epithelial cells displayed only passive membrane properties. Cells dissociated from taste buds, presumed to be gustatory receptor cells, generated both inward and outward currents in response to depolarizing voltage steps from a holding potential of -60 or -80 mV. Almost all taste cells displayed a transient inward current that activated at -30 mV, reached a peak between 0 and +10 mV and rapidly inactivated. This inward current was blocked by tetrodotoxin (TTX) or by substitution of choline for Na+ in the bath solution, indicating that it was a Na+ current. Approximately 60% of the taste cells also displayed a sustained inward current which activated slowly at about -30 mV and reached a peak at 0 to +10 mV. The amplitude of the slow inward current was larger when Ca2+ was replaced by Ba2+ and it was blocked by bath applied CO2+, indicating it was a Ca2+ current. Delayed outward K+ currents were observed in all taste cells although in about 10% of the cells, they were small and activated only at voltages more depolarized than +10 mV. Normally, K+ currents activated at -40 mV and usually showed some inactivation during a 25-ms voltage step. The inactivating component of outward current was not observed at holding potentials more depolarized -40 mV. The outward currents were blocked by tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA) and BaCl2 in the bath or by substitution of Cs+ for K+ in the pipette solution. Both transient and noninactivating components of outward current were partially suppressed by CO2+, suggesting the presence of a Ca2(+)-activated K+ current component. Single-channel currents were recorded in cell-attached and outside-out patches of taste cell membranes. Two types of K+ channels were partially characterized, one having a mean unitary conductance of 21 pS, and the other, a conductance of 148 pS. These experiments demonstrate that tiger salamander taste cells have a variety of voltage- and ion-dependent currents including Na+ currents, Ca2+ currents and three types of K+ currents. One or more of these conductances may be modulated either directly by taste stimuli or indirectly by stimulus-regulated second messenger systems to give rise to stimulus-activated receptor potentials. Others may play a role in modulation of neurotransmitter release at synapses with taste nerve fibers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The membrane ionic conductances of dispersed parathyroid cells kept in primary culture were studied using the "whole-cell" and "inside-out excised patch" variants of the patch-clamp technique. The major component of the total current was a voltage-dependent outward K+ current without an appreciable inward current. The amplitude of the K+ current was markedly reduced when free internal Ca2+ was buffered by addition of 10 mM EGTA. Recordings of single-channel current in excised membrane patches revealed the presence of K+ channels with large unitary conductance (200 pS in symmetrical 130 mM K+ solutions) which were also activated by depolarization when internal Ca2+ concentration was about 10(-5)-10(-6) M. At any membrane voltage these channels were closed most of the time at internal Ca2+ concentrations lower than 10(-10) M. These results demonstrate the existence of a Ca2+- and voltage-dependent K+ permeability in parathyroid cells which may participate in the unusual membrane potential changes induced by alterations of external Ca2+ and, possibly, in the regulation of parathormone secretion.  相似文献   

12.
In smooth muscle cells, localized intracellular Ca2+ transients, termed "Ca2+ sparks," activate several large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (KCa) channels, resulting in a transient KCa current. In some smooth muscle cell types, a significant proportion of Ca2+ sparks do not activate KCa channels. The goal of this study was to explore mechanisms that underlie fractional Ca2+ spark-KCa channel coupling. We investigated whether membrane depolarization or ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ release (RyR) channel activation modulates coupling in newborn (1- to 3-day-old) porcine cerebral artery myocytes. At steady membrane potentials of -40, 0, and +40 mV, mean transient KCa current frequency was approximately 0.18, 0.43, and 0.26 Hz and KCa channel activity [number of KCa channels activated by Ca2+ sparksxopen probability of KCa channels at peak of Ca2+ sparks (NPo)] at the transient KCa current peak was approximately 4, 12, and 24, respectively. Depolarization between -40 and +40 mV increased KCa channel sensitivity to Ca2+ sparks and elevated the percentage of Ca2+ sparks that activated a transient KCa current from 59 to 86%. In a Ca2+-free bath solution or in diltiazem, a voltage-dependent Ca2+ channel blocker, steady membrane depolarization between -40 and +40 mV increased transient KCa current frequency up to approximately 1.6-fold. In contrast, caffeine (10 microM), an RyR channel activator, increased mean transient KCa current frequency but did not alter Ca2+ spark-KCa channel coupling. These data indicate that coupling is increased by mechanisms that elevate KCa channel sensitivity to Ca2+ sparks, but not by RyR channel activation. Overall, KCa channel insensitivity to Ca2+ sparks is a prominent factor underlying fractional Ca2+ spark uncoupling in newborn cerebral artery myocytes.  相似文献   

13.
In a previous work, we have reported that the ionic nature of the outward current recorded in MCF-7 cells was that of a K+ current. In this study, we have identified a Ca2+-activated K+ channel not yet described in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells. In cells arrested in the early G1 (depolarized cells), increasing [Ca2+]i induced both a shift in the I-V curve toward more negative potentials and an increase in current amplitude at negative and more at positive potential. Currents were inhibited by r-iberiotoxin (r-IbTX, 50 nM) and charybdotoxin (ChTX, 50 nM). These data indicate that human breast cancer cells express large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channels. BK current-density increased in cells synchronized at the end of G1, as compared with those in the early G1 phase. This increased current-density paralleled the enhancement in BK mRNA levels. Blocking BK channels with r-IbTX, ChTX or both induced a slight depolarization in cells arrested in the early G1, late G1, and S phases and accumulated cells in the S phase, but failed to induce cell proliferation. Thus, the expression of the BK channels was cell-cycle-dependent and seems to contribute more to the S phase than to the G1 phase. However, these K+ channels did not regulate the cell proliferation because of their minor role in the membrane potential.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of quinine and tetraethylammonium (TEA) on single-channel K+ currents recorded from excised membrane patches of the insulin-secreting cell line RINm5F were investigated. When 100 microM quinine was applied to the external membrane surface K+ current flow through inward rectifier channels was abolished, while a separate voltage-activated high-conductance K+ channel was not significantly affected. On the other hand, 2 mM TEA abolished current flow through voltage-activated high-conductance K+ channels without influencing the inward rectifier K+ channel. Quinine is therefore not a specific inhibitor of Ca2+-activated K+ channels, but instead a good blocker of the Ca2+-independent K+ inward rectifier channel whereas TEA specifically inhibits the high-conductance voltage-activated K+ channel which is also Ca2+-activated.  相似文献   

15.
Patch-clamp whole-cell and single-channel current recordings were made from pig pancreatic acinar cells to test the effects of quinine, quinidine, Ba2+ and Ca2+. Voltage-clamp current recordings from single isolated cells showed that high external concentrations of Ba2+ or Ca2+ (88 mM) abolished the outward K+ currents normally associated with depolarizing voltage steps. Lower concentrations of Ca2+ only had small inhibitory effects whereas 11 mM Ba2+ almost blocked the K+ current. 5.5 mM Ba2+ reduced the outward K+ current to less than 30% of the control value. Both external quinine and quinidine (200-500 microM) markedly reduced whole-cell outward K+ currents. In single-channel current studies it was shown that external Ba2+ (1-5 mM) markedly reduced the probability of opening of high-conductance Ca2+ and voltage-activated K+ channels whereas internal Ba2+ (6 X 10(-6) to 3 X 10(-5) M) caused activation at negative membrane potentials and inhibition at positive potentials. Quinidine (200-400 microM) evoked rapid chopping of single K+ channel openings acting both from the outside and inside of the membrane and in this way markedly reduced the total current passing through the channels.  相似文献   

16.
Membrane currents through potassium channels activated by nicorandil, which has a potent coronary vasodilating action, have been studied in ventricular cells of guinea pigs by using the single pipette whole-cell clamp technique. In the presence of 0.1 mM nicorandil, the duration of the action potential was shortened from 196 to 145 ms. Nicorandil markedly increased outward currents at potentials positive to the resting potential. When the difference in the currents before and after the application of nicorandil were plotted against the membrane potential, the current-voltage relation reversed close to the potassium equilibrium potential. The difference current during depolarizing pulses showed no time-dependent relaxation. These results indicate that the current evoked by nicorandil is carried by K+ ions and has voltage-independent kinetics. Power-density spectra obtained in the presence of nicorandil were fitted well by a single Lorentzian curve with a corner frequency of 4.4 Hz. The amplitude of the single-channel unit current was estimated from the relation between the variance and the mean current, and was 0.27 +/- 0.1 pA (n = 7) at -35 mV. The estimated slope conductance was 4.6 +/- 1.7 pS. Nicorandil did not affect Ca2+ currents. It is concluded that nicorandil activates a small-conductance K+ channel without affecting the Ca2+ channel.  相似文献   

17.
Little is known of the excitatory mechanisms that contribute to the tonic contraction of the corpus cavernosum smooth muscle in the flaccid state. We used patch-clamp electrophysiology to investigate a previously unidentified inward current in freshly isolated rat and human corporal myocytes. Phenylephrine (PE) contracted cells and activated whole cell currents. Outward current was identified as large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) current. The inward current elicited by PE was dependent on the Cl(-) gradient and was inhibited by niflumic acid, indicative of a Ca(2+)-activated Cl(-) (Cl(Ca)) current. Furthermore, spontaneous transient outward and inward currents (STOCs and STICs, respectively) were identified in both rat and human corporal myocytes and derived from large-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) and Cl(Ca) channel activity. STICs and STOCs were inhibited by PE and A-23187, and combined 8-bromoadenosine cAMP and 8-bromoadenosine cGMP decreased their frequency. When studied in vivo, chloride channel blockers transiently increased intracavernosal pressure and prolonged nerve-evoked erections. This report reveals for the first time Cl(Ca) current in rat and human corpus cavernosum smooth muscle cells and demonstrates its key functional role in the regulation of penile erection.  相似文献   

18.
J D Lechleiter  D A Dartt  P Brehm 《Neuron》1988,1(3):227-235
The action of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) on Ca2(+)-dependent K+ currents, in dissociated mouse lacrimal cells, was investigated using patch clamp techniques. In whole cell recordings, VIP (10-100 pM) increased the magnitude of the Ca2(+)-dependent K+ current. In single channel recordings, VIP increased the fraction of time the large charybdotoxin-sensitive Ca2(+)-activated K+ channel spent in the open state. The activity of this channel was also increased by adding forskolin or 8-bromo cAMP to the bath. Additionally, application of either cAMP or catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase directly to the cytoplasmic surface of excised inside out patches reversibly lengthened the time Ca2(+)-activated K+ channels spent in the open state. These data suggest that VIP stimulates Ca2(+)-activated K+ channels by a cAMP-dependent pathway in mouse lacrimal acinar cells.  相似文献   

19.
M K Ticku  A Delgado 《Life sciences》1989,44(18):1271-1276
86Rb-efflux assay from preloaded synaptosomes of rat cerebral cortex was developed to study the effect of GABAB receptor agonist baclofen on Ca2+-activated K+-channels. Depolarization (100 mM K) of 86Rb-loaded synaptosomes in physiological buffer increased Ca2+-activated 86Rb-efflux by 400%. The 86Rb-efflux was blocked by quinine sulphate, tetraethylammonium and La3+ indicating the involvement of Ca2+-activated K+-channels. (-)Baclofen inhibited Ca2+-activated 86Rb-efflux in a stereospecific manner. The inhibitory effect of (-)baclofen was mediated by GABAB receptor activation, since it was blocked by GABAB antagonist phaclofen, but not by bicuculline. Further, pertussis toxin also blocked the ability of baclofen or depolarizing action to affect Ca2+-activated K+-channels. These results suggest that baclofen inhibits Ca2+-activated K+-channels in synaptosomes and these channels are regulated by G-proteins. This assay may provide an ideal in vitro model to study GABAB receptor pharmacology.  相似文献   

20.
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