首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 93 毫秒
1.
In the present study, we identified a novel splice variant of the human cardiac Na(+) channel Na(v)1.5 (Na(v)1.5d), in which a 40-amino acid sequence of the DII/DIII intracellular linker is missing due to a partial deletion of exon 17. Expression of Na(v)1.5d occurred in embryonic and adult hearts of either sex, indicating that the respective alternative splicing is neither age-dependent nor gender-specific. In contrast, Na(v)1.5d was not detected in the mouse heart, indicating that alternative splicing of Na(v)1.5 is species-dependent. In HEK293 cells, splice variant Na(v)1.5d generated voltage-dependent Na(+) currents that were markedly reduced compared with wild-type Na(v)1.5. Experiments with mexiletine and 8-bromo-cyclic AMP suggested that the trafficking of Na(v)1.5d channels was not impaired. However, single-channel recordings showed that the whole-cell current reduction was largely due to a significantly reduced open probability. Additionally, steady-state activation and inactivation were shifted to depolarized potentials by 15.9 and 5.1 mV, respectively. Systematic mutagenesis analysis of the spliced region provided evidence that a short amphiphilic region in the DII/DIII linker resembling an S4 voltage sensor of voltage-gated ion channels is an important determinant of Na(v)1.5 channel gating. Moreover, the present study identified novel short sequence motifs within this amphiphilic region that specifically affect the voltage dependence of steady-state activation and inactivation and current amplitude of human Na(v)1.5.  相似文献   

2.
Batrachotoxin (BTX) not only keeps the voltage-gated Na(+) channel open persistently but also reduces its single-channel conductance. Although a BTX receptor has been delimited within the inner cavity of Na(+) channels, how Na(+) ions flow through the BTX-bound permeation pathway remains unclear. In this report we tested a hypothesis that Na(+) ions traverse a narrow gap between bound BTX and residue N927 at D2S6 of cardiac hNa(v)1.5 Na(+) channels. We found that BTX at 5 microM indeed elicited a strong block of hNa(v)1.5-N927K currents (approximately 70%) after 1000 repetitive pulses (+50 mV/20 ms at 2 Hz) without any effects on Na(+) channel gating. Once occurred, this unique use-dependent block of hNa(v)1.5-N927K Na(+) channels recovered little at holding potential (-140 mV), demonstrating that BTX block is irreversible under our experimental conditions. Such an irreversible effect likewise developed in fast inactivation-deficient hNa(v)1.5-N927K Na(+) channels albeit with a faster on-rate; approximately 90% of peak Na(+) currents were abolished by BTX after 200 repetitive pulses (+50 mV/20 ms). This use-dependent block of fast inactivation-deficient hNa(v)1.5-N927K Na(+) channels by BTX was duration dependent. The longer the pulse duration the larger the block developed. Among N927K/W/R/H/D/S/Q/G/E substitutions in fast inactivation-deficient hNa(v)1.5 Na(+) channels, only N927K/R Na(+) currents were highly sensitive to BTX block. We conclude that (a) BTX binds within the inner cavity and partly occludes the permeation pathway and (b) residue hNa(v)1.5-N927 is critical for ion permeation between bound BTX and D2S6, probably because the side-chain of N927 helps coordinate permeating Na(+) ions.  相似文献   

3.
Voltage-gated Na(+) channels display rapid activation gating (opening) as well as fast and slow inactivation gating (closing) during depolarization. We substituted residue S1759 (serine), a putative D4S6 gating hinge of human cardiac hNav1.5 Na(+) channels with A (alanine), D (aspartate), K (lysine), L (leucine), P (proline), and W (tryptophan). Significant shifts in gating parameters for activation and steady-state fast inactivation were observed in A-, D-, K-, and W-substituted mutant Na(+) channels. No gating shifts occurred in the L-substituted mutant, whereas the P-substituted mutant did not yield sufficient Na(+) currents. Wild-type, A-, D-, and L-substituted mutant Na(+) channels showed little or no slow inactivation with a 10-s conditioning pulse ranging from -180 to 0 mV. Unexpectedly, W- and K-substituted mutant Na(+) channels displayed profound maximal slow inactivation around -100 mV ( approximately 85% and approximately 70%, respectively). However, slow inactivation was progressively reversed in magnitude from -70 to 0 mV. This regression was minimized in inactivation-deficient hNav1.5-S1759W/L409C/A410W Na(+) channels, indicating that the intracellular fast-inactivation gate caused such a reversal. Our data suggest that the hNav1.5-S1759 residue plays a critical role in slow inactivation. Possible mechanisms for S1759 involvement in slow inactivation and for antagonism between fast and slow inactivation are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Hydrogen sulfide (H(2)S) is a gaseous signaling molecule that appears to contribute to the regulation of vascular tone and blood pressure. Multiple potential mechanisms of vascular regulation by H(2)S exist. Here, we tested the hypothesis that piglet cerebral arteriole smooth muscle cells generate ATP-sensitive K(+) (K(ATP)) currents and that H(2)S induces vasodilation by activating K(ATP) currents. Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry data demonstrated that after placing Na(2)S, an H(2)S donor, in solution, it rapidly (1 min) converts to H(2)S. Patch-clamp electrophysiology indicated that pinacidil (a K(ATP) channel activator), Na(2)S, and NaHS (another H(2)S donor) activated K(+) currents at physiological steady-state voltage (-50 mV) in isolated cerebral arteriole smooth muscle cells. Glibenclamide, a selective K(ATP) channel inhibitor, fully reversed pinacidil-induced K(+) currents and partially reversed (~58%) H(2)S-induced K(+) currents. Western blot analysis indicated that piglet arterioles expressed inwardly rectifying K(+) 6.1 (K(ir)6.1) channel and sulfonylurea receptor 2B (SUR2B) K(ATP) channel subunits. Pinacidil dilated pressurized (40 mmHg) piglet arterioles, and glibenclamide fully reversed this effect. Na(2)S also induced reversible and repeatable vasodilation with an EC(50) of ~30 μM, and this effect was partially reversed (~55%) by glibenclamide. Vasoregulation by H(2)S was also studied in pressurized resistance-size cerebral arteries of mice with a genetic deletion in the gene encoding SUR2 (SUR2 null). Pinacidil- and H(2)S-induced vasodilations were smaller in arterioles of SUR2 null mice than in wild-type controls. These data indicate that smooth muscle cell K(ATP) currents control newborn cerebral arteriole contractility and that H(2)S dilates cerebral arterioles by activating smooth muscle cell K(ATP) channels containing SUR2 subunits.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetics of a type IIb Na(+)-coupled inorganic phosphate (Pi) cotransporter (NaPi-IIb) cloned from mouse small intestine were studied using the two-electrode voltage clamp applied to Xenopus oocytes. In the steady state, mouse NaPi-IIb showed a curvilinear I-V relationship, with rate-limiting behavior only for depolarizing potentials. The Pi dose dependence was Michaelian, with an apparent affinity constant for Pi (Km(pi)) of 10 +/- 1 microM: at -60 mV. Unlike for rat NaPi-IIa, (Km(pi)) increased with membrane hyperpolarization, as reported for human NaPi-IIa, flounder NaPi-IIb and zebrafish NaPi-IIb2. The apparent affinity constant for Na(+) (Km(na)) was 23 +/- 1 mM: at -60 mV, and the Na(+) activation was cooperative with a Hill coefficient of approximately 2. Pre-steady-state currents were documented in the absence of Pi and showed a strong dependence on external Na(+). The hyperpolarizing shift of the charge distribution midpoint potential was 65 mV/log[Na]. Approximately half the moveable charge was attributable to the empty carrier. A comparison of the voltage dependence of steady-state Pi-induced current and pre-steady-state charge movement indicated that for -120 mV 相似文献   

6.
To examine conformational changes during slow inactivation involving domain 2-segment 6 (D2-S6) of human cardiac Na(+) channel (hNav1.5), we applied the substituted-cysteine accessibility method (SCAM) using methanethiosulfonate ethylammonium (MTSEA). We substituted cysteine (C) for native valine (V) at position 930 of D2-S6 in the MTSEA-resistant hNav1.5 mutant C373Y to produce the double mutant C373Y-V930C. Whole-cell Na(+) currents were recorded using patch-clamp techniques in transiently transfected HEK cells. In C373Y-V930C, we find that MTSEA (1.5 mM) applied in the closed state (-160 mV) has no significant effect on whole-cell Na(+) current, while MTSEA applied in the slow-inactivated state (prolonged depolarization at 0 mV) decreases current. We propose that D2-S6 in hNav1.5 undergoes molecular rearrangement during slow inactivation exposing the side chain of residue 930 such that it becomes accessible to modification by MTSEA.  相似文献   

7.
Extracellular acidification is known to decrease the conductance of many voltage-gated potassium channels. In the present study, we investigated the mechanism of H(+)(o)-induced current inhibition by taking advantage of Na(+) permeation through inactivated channels. In hKv1.5, H(+)(o) inhibited open-state Na(+) current with a similar potency to K(+) current, but had little effect on the amplitude of inactivated-state Na(+) current. In support of inactivation as the mechanism for the current reduction, Na(+) current through noninactivating hKv1.5-R487V channels was not affected by [H(+)(o)]. At pH 6.4, channels were maximally inactivated as soon as sufficient time was given to allow activation, which suggested two possibilities for the mechanism of action of H(+)(o). These were that inactivation of channels in early closed states occurred while hyperpolarized during exposure to acid pH (closed-state inactivation) and/or inactivation from the open state was greatly accelerated at low pH. The absence of outward Na(+) currents but the maintained presence of slow Na(+) tail currents, combined with changes in the Na(+) tail current time course at pH 6.4, led us to favor the hypothesis that a reduction in the activation energy for the inactivation transition from the open state underlies the inhibition of hKv1.5 Na(+) current at low pH.  相似文献   

8.
Zhang R  Sun Y  Tsai H  Tang C  Jin H  Du J 《PloS one》2012,7(5):e37073
Hydrogen sulfide (H(2)S) is a novel gasotransmitter that inhibits L-type calcium currents (I (Ca, L)). However, the underlying molecular mechanisms are unclear. In particular, the targeting site in the L-type calcium channel where H(2)S functions remains unknown. The study was designed to investigate if the sulfhydryl group could be the possible targeting site in the L-type calcium channel in rat cardiomyocytes. Cardiac function was measured in isolated perfused rat hearts. The L-type calcium currents were recorded by using a whole cell voltage clamp technique on the isolated cardiomyocytes. The L-type calcium channel containing free sulfhydryl groups in H9C2 cells were measured by using Western blot. The results showed that sodium hydrosulfide (NaHS, an H(2)S donor) produced a negative inotropic effect on cardiac function, which could be partly inhibited by the oxidant sulfhydryl modifier diamide (DM). H(2)S donor inhibited the peak amplitude of I( Ca, L) in a concentration-dependent manner. However, dithiothreitol (DTT), a reducing sulfhydryl modifier markedly reversed the H(2)S donor-induced inhibition of I (Ca, L) in cardiomyocytes. In contrast, in the presence of DM, H(2)S donor could not alter cardiac function and L type calcium currents. After the isolated rat heart or the cardiomyocytes were treated with DTT, NaHS could markedly alter cardiac function and L-type calcium currents in cardiomyocytes. Furthermore, NaHS could decrease the functional free sulfhydryl group in the L-type Ca(2+) channel, which could be reversed by thiol reductant, either DTT or reduced glutathione. Therefore, our results suggest that H(2)S might inhibit L-type calcium currents depending on the sulfhydryl group in rat cardiomyocytes.  相似文献   

9.
The Na(+) channel alpha-subunit contains an IFM motif that is critical for the fast inactivation process. In this study, we sought to determine whether an IFM-containing peptide, acetyl-KIFMK-amide, blocks open cardiac Na(+) channels via the inner cavity. Intracellular acetyl-KIFMK-amide at 2mM elicited a rapid time-dependent block (tau=0.24 ms) of inactivation-deficient human heart Na(+) channels (hNav1.5-L409C/A410W) at +50 mV. In addition, a peptide-induced tail current appeared conspicuously upon repolarization, suggesting that the activation gate cannot close until acetyl-KIFMK-amide is cleared from the open pore. Repetitive pulses (+50 mV for 20 ms at 1Hz) produced a substantial use-dependent block of both peak and tail currents by approximately 65%. A F1760K mutation (hNav1.5-L409C/A410W/F1760K) abolished the use-dependent block by acetyl-KIFMK-amide and hindered the time-dependent block. Competition experiments showed that acetyl-KIFMK-amide antagonized bupivacaine binding. These results are consistent with a model that two acetyl-KIFMK-amide receptors exist in proximity within the Na(+) channel inner cavity.  相似文献   

10.
We have previously shown that the transmembrane segment plus either the extracellular or intracellular domain of the beta1 subunit are required to modify cardiac Na(v)1.5 channels. In this study, we coexpressed the intracellular domain of the beta2 subunit in a beta1/beta2 chimera with Na(v)1.5 channels in Xenopus oocytes and obtained an atypical recovery behavior of Na(v)1.5 channels not reported before for other Na(+) channels: Recovery times of up to 20 ms at -120 mV produced a similar fast recovery as observed for Na(v)1.5/beta1 channels, but the current amplitude decreased again at longer recovery times and reached a steady-state level after 1-2 s with current amplitudes of only 43 +/- 2% of the value at 20 ms. Current reduction was accompanied by slowed inactivation and by a shift of steady-state activation toward depolarized potentials by 9 mV. All effects were reversible and they were not seen when deleting the beta2 intracellular domain. These results describe the first functional effects of a beta2 subunit region on Na(v)1.5 channels and suggest a novel closed state in cardiac Na(+) channels accessible at hyperpolarized potentials.  相似文献   

11.
Wang Z  Fedida D 《Biophysical journal》2001,81(5):2614-2627
Sustained Na(+) or Li(+) conductance is a feature of the inactivated state in wild-type (WT) and nonconducting Shaker and Kv1.5 channels, and has been used here to investigate the cause of off-gating charge immobilization in WT and Kv1.5-W472F nonconducting mutant channels. Off-gating immobilization in response to brief pulses in cells perfused with NMG/NMG is the result of a more negative voltage dependence of charge recovery (V(1/2) is -96 mV) compared with on-gating charge movement (V(1/2) is -6.3 mV). This shift is known to be associated with slow inactivation in Shaker channels and the disparity is reduced by 40 mV, or approximately 50% in the presence of 135 mM Cs. Off-gating charge immobilization is voltage-dependent with a V(1/2) of -12 mV, and correlates well with the development of Na(+) conductance on repolarization through C-type inactivated channels (V(1/2) is -11 mV). As well, the time-dependent development of the inward Na(+) tail current and gating charge immobilization after depolarizing pulses of different durations has the same time constant (tau = 2.7 ms). These results indicate that in Kv1.5 channels the transition to a stable C-type inactivated state takes only 2-3 ms and results in strong charge immobilization in the absence of Group IA metal cations, or even in the presence of Na. Inclusion of low concentrations of Cs delays the appearance of Na(+) tail currents in WT channels, prevents transition to inactivated states in Kv1.5-W472F nonconducting mutant channels, and removes charge immobilization. Higher concentrations of Cs are able to modulate the deactivating transition in Kv1.5 channels and prevent the residual slowing of charge return.  相似文献   

12.
Modifications of human cardiac sodium channel gating by UVA light   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Voltage-gated Na(+) channels are membrane proteins responsible for the generation of action potentials. In this report we demonstrate that UVA light elicits gating changes of human cardiac Na+ channels. First, UVA irradiation hampers the fast inactivation of cardiac Nav1.5 Na(+) channels expressed in HEK293t cells. A maintained current becomes conspicuous during depolarization and reaches its maximal quasi steady-state level within 5-7 min. Second, the activation time course is slowed by UVA light; modification of the activation gating by UVA irradiation continues for 20 min without reaching steady state. Third, along with the slowed activation time course, the peak current is reduced progressively. Most Na(+) currents are eliminated during 20 min of UVA irradiation. Fourth, UVA light increases the holding current nonlinearly; this phenomenon is slow at first but abruptly fast after 20 min. Other skeletal muscle Nav1.4 isoforms and native neuronal Na(+) channels in rat GH(3) cells are likewise sensitive to UVA irradiation. Interestingly, a reactive oxygen metabolite (hydrogen peroxide at 1.5%) and an oxidant (chloramine-T at 0.5 mM) affect Na(+) channel gating similarly, but not identically, to UVA. These results together suggest that UVA modification of Na(+) channel gating is likely mediated via multiple reactive oxygen metabolites. The potential link between oxidative stress and the impaired Na(+) channel gating may provide valuable clues for ischemia/reperfusion injury in heart and in CNS.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Resurgent tail Na(+) currents were first discovered in cerebellar Purkinje neurons. A recent study showed that a 14-mer fragment of a mouse beta4 subunit, beta4(154-167), acts as an intracellular open-channel blocker and elicits resurgent currents in Purkinje neurons (Grieco, T.M., J.D. Malhotra, C. Chen, L.L. Isom, and I.M. Raman. 2005. Neuron. 45:233-244). To explore these phenotypes in vitro, we characterized beta4(154-167) actions in inactivation-deficient cardiac hNav1.5 Na(+) channels expressed in human embryonic kidney 293t cells. Intracellular beta4(154-167) from 25-250 microM elicited a conspicuous time-dependent block of inactivation-deficient Na(+) currents at 50 mV in a concentration-dependent manner. On and off rates for beta4(154-167) binding were estimated at 10.1 microM(-1)s(-1) and 49.1 s(-1), respectively. Upon repolarization, large tail currents emerged with a slight delay at -140 mV, probably as a result of the rapid unblocking of beta4(154-167). Near the activation threshold (approximately -70 mV), resurgent tail currents were robust and long lasting. Likewise, beta4(154-167) induces resurgent currents in wild-type hNav1.5 Na(+) channels, although to a lesser extent. The inactivation peptide acetyl-KIFMK-amide not only restored the fast inactivation phenotype in hNav1.5 inactivation-deficient Na(+) channels but also elicited robust resurgent currents. When modified by batrachotoxin (BTX), wild-type hNav1.5 Na(+) channels opened persistently but became resistant to beta4(154-167) and acetyl-KIFMK-amide block. Finally, a lysine substitution of a phenylalanine residue at D4S6, F1760, which forms a part of receptors for local anesthetics and BTX, rendered cardiac Na(+) channels resistant to beta4(154-167). Together, our in vitro studies identify a putative S6-binding site for beta4(154-167) within the inner cavity of hNav1.5 Na(+) channels. Such an S6 receptor readily explains (1) why beta4(154-167) gains access to its receptor as an open-channel blocker, (2), why bound beta4(154-167) briefly prevents the activation gate from closing by a "foot-in-the-door" mechanism during deactivation, (3) why BTX inhibits beta4(154-167) binding by physical exclusion, and (4) why a lysine substitution of residue F1760 eliminates beta4(154-167) binding.  相似文献   

15.
The steady-state voltage and [Na(+)](o) dependence of the electrogenic sodium pump was investigated in voltage-clamped internally dialyzed giant axons of the squid, Loligo pealei, under conditions that promote the backward-running mode (K(+)-free seawater; ATP- and Na(+)-free internal solution containing ADP and orthophosphate). The ratio of pump-mediated (42)K(+) efflux to reverse pump current, I(pump) (both defined by sensitivity to dihydrodigitoxigenin, H(2)DTG), scaled by Faraday's constant, was -1.5 +/- 0.4 (n = 5; expected ratio for 2 K(+)/3 Na(+) stoichiometry is -2.0). Steady-state reverse pump current-voltage (I(pump)-V) relationships were obtained either from the shifts in holding current after repeated exposures of an axon clamped at various V(m) to H(2)DTG or from the difference between membrane I-V relationships obtained by imposing V(m) staircases in the presence or absence of H(2)DTG. With the second method, we also investigated the influence of [Na(+)](o) (up to 800 mM, for which hypertonic solutions were used) on the steady-state reverse I(pump)-V relationship. The reverse I(pump)-V relationship is sigmoid, I(pump) saturating at large negative V(m), and each doubling of [Na(+)](o) causes a fixed (29 mV) rightward parallel shift along the voltage axis of this Boltzmann partition function (apparent valence z = 0.80). These characteristics mirror those of steady-state (22)Na(+) efflux during electroneutral Na(+)/Na(+) exchange, and follow without additional postulates from the same simple high field access channel model (Gadsby, D.C., R.F. Rakowski, and P. De Weer, 1993. Science. 260:100-103). This model predicts valence z = nlambda, where n (1.33 +/- 0.05) is the Hill coefficient of Na binding, and lambda (0.61 +/- 0.03) is the fraction of the membrane electric field traversed by Na ions reaching their binding site. More elaborate alternative models can accommodate all the steady-state features of the reverse pumping and electroneutral Na(+)/Na(+) exchange modes only with additional assumptions that render them less likely.  相似文献   

16.
Inhibition of epithelial Na(+) channel (ENaC) activity by high concentrations of extracellular Na(+) is referred to as Na(+) self-inhibition. We investigated the effects of external Zn(2+) on whole cell Na(+) currents and on the Na(+) self-inhibition response in Xenopus oocytes expressing mouse alphabetagamma ENaC. Na(+) self-inhibition was examined by analyzing inward current decay from a peak current to a steady-state current following a fast switching of a low Na(+) (1 mm) bath solution to a high Na(+) (110 mm) solution. Our results indicate that external Zn(2+) rapidly and reversibly activates ENaC in a dose-dependent manner with an estimated EC(50) of 2 microm. External Zn(2+) in the high Na(+) bath also prevents or reverses Na(+) self-inhibition with similar affinity. Zn(2+) activation is dependent on extracellular Na(+) concentration and is absent in ENaCs containing gammaH239 mutations that eliminate Na(+) self-inhibition and in alphaS580Cbetagamma following covalent modification by a sulfhydryl-reactive reagent that locks the channels in a fully open state. In contrast, external Ni(2+) inhibition of ENaC currents appears to be additive to Na(+) self-inhibition when Ni(2+) is present in the high Na(+) bath. Pretreatment of oocytes with Ni(2+) in a low Na(+) bath also prevents the current decay following a switch to a high Na(+) bath but rendered the currents below the control steady-state level measured in the absence of Ni(2+) pretreatment. Our results suggest that external Zn(2+) activates ENaC by relieving the channel from Na(+) self-inhibition, and that external Ni(2+) mimics or masks Na(+) self-inhibition.  相似文献   

17.
According to the classic modulated receptor hypothesis, local anesthetics (LAs) such as benzocaine and lidocaine bind preferentially to fast-inactivated Na(+) channels with higher affinities. However, an alternative view suggests that activation of Na(+) channels plays a crucial role in promoting high-affinity LA binding and that fast inactivation per se is not a prerequisite for LA preferential binding. We investigated the role of activation in LA action in inactivation-deficient rat muscle Na(+) channels (rNav1.4-L435W/L437C/A438W) expressed in stably transfected Hek293 cells. The 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC(50)) for the open-channel block at +30 mV by lidocaine and benzocaine were 20.9 +/- 3.3 microM (n = 5) and 81.7 +/- 10.6 microM (n = 5), respectively; both were comparable to inactivated-channel affinities. In comparison, IC(50) values for resting-channel block at -140 mV were >12-fold higher than those for open-channel block. With 300 microM benzocaine, rapid time-dependent block (tau approximately 0.8 ms) of inactivation-deficient Na(+) currents occurred at +30 mV, but such a rapid time-dependent block was not evident at -30 mV. The peak current at -30 mV, however, was reduced more severely than that at +30 mV. This phenomenon suggested that the LA block of intermediate closed states took place notably when channel activation was slow. Such closed-channel block also readily accounted for the LA-induced hyperpolarizing shift in the conventional steady-state inactivation measurement. Our data together illustrate that the Na(+) channel activation pathway, including most, if not all, transient intermediate closed states and the final open state, promotes high-affinity LA binding.  相似文献   

18.
Smooth muscle cells from rat aorta were cultured in defined, serum-free medium and studied using whole-cell patch-clamp techniques. Under conditions designed to isolate currents through Ca channels, step depolarizations produced inward currents which were fast in onset and inactivated rapidly, with little sustained inward current being observed. Both Ni and Cd blocked these currents, with Ni being effective at 50 microM. Removal of external Na or addition of 1 microM tetrodotoxin had no effect. Peak inward currents were attained at about -15 mV, with half-maximal activation at -41 mV using -80 mV holding potentials. The transient inward currents were reduced by depolarized holding potentials, with half-maximal steady-state inactivation at -48 mV. In three of the 98 cells studied, small maintained inward currents were observed with a -40 mV holding potential. The Ca channel antagonist nicardipine (5 microM) blocked the transient inward current while neither of the dihydropyridine Ca channel agonists S(+)202 791 and (-)BAY K 8644 produced a significant augmentation of sustained inward current. At 10 microM, both noradrenaline and adrenaline but not phenylephrine decreased the peak inward current. This inhibition was unaffected by a variety of adrenoceptor antagonists and was also observed when internal solutions having high Ca buffering capacity were used, but was absent when GDP-beta-S instead of GTP was included in the pipette solution. The main conclusions from this study are that under our cell culture conditions, rat aortic smooth muscle cells possess predominantly a transient, low-threshold-activated inward Ca current and that this Ca current is inhibited by certain adrenoceptor agonists but with a quite atypical adrenoceptor antagonist pharmacology.  相似文献   

19.
硫酸镁对大鼠海马CA1区神经元钠电流的抑制作用   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3  
Sang N  Meng ZQ 《生理学报》2002,54(6):539-543
利用全细胞膜片钳技术研究了硫酸镁 (MgSO4 )对大鼠海马CA1区神经元钠电流的影响。结果表明 ,MgSO4 可浓度依赖和电压依赖地抑制钠电流 ,半数抑制浓度为 4 0 5mmol/L。这一抑制作用与刺激频率无关。结果还表明 ,4mmol/LMgSO4 不影响钠电流的失活过程 ,却使半数激活电压由 - 5 5 8± 6 8mV变为 - 3 4 2± 6 2mV (n =8,P <0 0 1) ,而激活曲线的斜率因子不变。结果提示 ,MgSO4 抑制大鼠海马CA1区神经元的钠电流可能是其抗缺血缺氧造成的中枢神经系统损伤的机制之一  相似文献   

20.
K+ currents activated by depolarization in cardiac fibroblasts   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
K(+) currents expressed in freshly dispersed rat ventricular fibroblasts have been studied using whole-cell patch-clamp recordings. Depolarizing voltage steps from a holding potential of -90 mV activated time- and voltage-dependent outward currents at membrane potentials positive to approximately -30 mV. The relatively slow activation kinetics exhibited strong dependence on the membrane potential. Selected changes in extracellular K(+) concentration ([K(+)](o)) revealed that the reversal potentials of the tail currents changed as expected for a K(+) equilibrium potential. The activation and inactivation kinetics of this K(+) current, as well as its recovery from inactivation, were well-fitted by single exponential functions. The steady-state inactivation was well described by a Boltzmann function with a half-maximal inactivation potential (V(0.5)) of -24 mV. Increasing [K(+)](o) (from 5 to 100 mM) shifted this V(0.5) in the hyperpolarizing direction by -11 mV. Inactivation was slowed by increasing [K(+)](o) to 100 mM, and the rate of recovery from inactivation was decreased after increasing [K(+)](o). Block of this K(+) current by extracellular tetraethylammonium also slowed inactivation. These [K(+)](o)-induced changes and tetraethylammonium effects suggest an important role for a C-type inactivation mechanism. This K(+) current was sensitive to dendrotoxin-I (100 nM) and rTityustoxin Kalpha (50 nM).  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号