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1.
Summary Patch-clamp studies of cytoplasmic drops from the charophyteChara australis have previously revealed K+ channels combining high conductance (170 pS) with high selectivity for K+, which are voltage activated. The cation-selectivity sequence of the channel is shown here to be: K+>Rb+>NH 4 + Na+ and Cl. Divalent cytosolic ions reduce the K+ conductance of this channel and alter its K+ gating in a voltage-dependent manner. The order of blocking potency is Ba2+>Sr2+>Ca2+>Mg2+. The channel is activated by micromolar cytosolic Ca2+, an activation that is found to be only weakly voltage dependent. However, the concentration dependence of calcium activation is quite pronounced, having a Hill coefficient of three, equivalent to three bound Ca2+ needed to open the channel. The possible role of the Ca2+-activated K+ channel in the tonoplast ofChara is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
We studied the effects of H2O/D2O substitution on the permeation and gating of the large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels inChara gymnophylla droplet membrane using the patchclamp technique. The selectivity sequence of the channel was: K+>Rb+≫Li+, Na+, Cs+ and Cl. The conductance of this channel in symmetric 100mm KCl was found to be 130 pS. The single channel conductance was decreased by 15% in D2O as compared to H2O. The blockade of channel conductance by cytosolic Ca2+ weakened in D2O as a result of a decrease in zero voltage Ca2+ binding affinity by a factor of 1.4. Voltage-dependent channel gating was affected by D2O primarily due to the change in Ca2+ binding to the channel during the activation step. The Hill coefficient for Ca2+ binding was 3 in D2O and around 1 in H2O. The values of the Ca2+ binding constant in the open channel conformation were 0.6 and 6 μm in H2O and D2O, respectively, while the binding in the closed conformation was much less affected by D2O. The H2O/D2O substitution did not produce a significant change in the slope of channel voltage dependence but caused a shift as large as 60 mV with 1mm internal Ca2+.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The action of GRF on GH3 cell membrane was examined by patch electrode techniques. Under current clamp with patch elecrtrode, spontaneous action potentials were partially to totally eliminated by application of GRF. In the case of partial elimination, the duration of remaining spontaneous action potentials was prolonged and the amplitude of afterhyperpolarization was decreased. The evoked actiion potential in the cells which did not show spontaneous action potentials was also eliminated by GRF. In order to examine what channels were affected by GRF, voltage-clamp analysis was performed. It was revealed that voltage-gated Ca2+ channel current and Ca2+-induced K+ channels current were decreased by GRF, while voltage-gated Na+ channel and delayed K+ channel current was considered to be a consequence of he decrease of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels current. Therefore it is likely that the effect of GRF on GH3 cells was due to the block of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. The elimination of action potential under current clamp corresponded to the block of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels and the prolongation of action potential could be explained by the decrease of Ca2+-induced K+ channel current. The amplitude decrease of afterhyperpolarization could also be explained by the reduction of Ca2+-induced K+ channel current. Thus the results under current clamp well coincide with the results under voltage clamp. Hormone secretion from GH3 cells was not stimulated by GRF. However, the finding that GRF solely blocked voltage-gated Ca2+ channel suggested the specific action of GRF on GH3 cell membranes.  相似文献   

4.
Over the past few years, it has become clear that an important mechanism by which large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channel (BKCa) activity is regulated is the tissue-specific expression of auxiliary β subunits. The first of these to be identified, β1, is expressed predominately in smooth muscle and causes dramatic effects, increasing the apparent affinity of the channel for Ca2+ 10-fold at 0 mV, and shifting the range of voltages over which the channel activates −80 mV at 9.1 μM Ca2+. With this study, we address the question: which aspects of BKCa gating are altered by β1 to bring about these effects: Ca2+ binding, voltage sensing, or the intrinsic energetics of channel opening? The approach we have taken is to express the β1 subunit together with the BKCa α subunit in Xenopus oocytes, and then to compare β1''s steady state effects over a wide range of Ca2+ concentrations and membrane voltages to those predicted by allosteric models whose parameters have been altered to mimic changes in the aspects of gating listed above. The results of our analysis suggest that much of β1''s steady state effects can be accounted for by a reduction in the intrinsic energy the channel must overcome to open and a decrease in its voltage sensitivity, with little change in the affinity of the channel for Ca2+ when it is either open or closed. Interestingly, however, the small changes in Ca2+ binding affinity suggested by our analysis (Kc 7.4 μM → 9.6 μM; Ko = 0.80 μM → 0.65 μM) do appear to be functionally important. We also show that β1 affects the mSlo conductance–voltage relation in the essential absence of Ca2+, shifting it +20 mV and reducing its apparent gating charge 38%, and we develop methods for distinguishing between alterations in Ca2+ binding and other aspects of BKCa channel gating that may be of general use.  相似文献   

5.
Using the patch-voltage clamp technique and the rescaled range method, activity of single large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels (KCa channels) was studied. For the sequences of alternating open and shut time intervals, the dependence R/S vs. N in the double logarithmic coordinates presented a curve with two slopes, H1 =0.60 ± 0.04, and H2 = 0.88 ± 0.21, where H1 and H2 characterized the Hurst exponents for shot and long time ranges, respectively. Similar results were obtained for reduced data sets consisting of only open or only shut intervals. Randomization of the experimental data resulted in a single slope, H, of 0.52 ± 0.02. Simulations were performed with eight-state Markovian model without memory. The calculated Hurst exponent presented in average 0.54 ± 0.02. The results suggest that the activity of single Ca2+-activated K+ channel exhibits two regimes, with slight positive correlation at short time ranges (H1 =0.6), and strong positive correlation at long time ranges (H2 = 0.88); therefore the channel gating as a whole is not a steady-state Markovian process.  相似文献   

6.
In order to study the conductances of the Sarcoplasmic Reticulum (SR) membrane, microsomal fractions from cardiac SR were isolated by differential and sucrose gradient centrifugations and fused into planar lipid bilayers (PLB) made of phospholipids. Using either KCl or K-gluconate solutions, a large conducting K+ selective channel was characterized by its ohmic conductance (152 pS in 150 mM K+), and the presence of short and long lasting subconducting states. Its open probability Po increased with depolarizing voltages, thus supporting the idea that this channel might allow counter-charge movements of monovalent cations during rapid SR Ca2+ release. An heterogeneity in the kinetic behavior of this channel would suggest that the cardiac SR K+ channels might be regulated by cytoplasmic, luminal, or intra SR membrane biochemical mechanisms. Since the behavior was not modified by variations of [Ca2+] nor by the addition of soluble metabolites such as ATP, GTP, cAMP, cGMP, nor by phosphorylation conditions on both sides of the PLB, a specific interaction with a SR membrane component is postulated. Another cation selective channel was studied in asymmetric Ca2+, Ba2+ or Mg2+-HEPES buffers. This channel displayed large conductance values for the above divalent cations 90, 100, and 40 pS, respectively. This channel was activated by µM Ca2+ while its Ca2+ sensitivity was potentiated by millimolar ATP. However Mg2+ and calmodulin modulated its gating behavior. Ca2+ releasing drugs such as caffeine and ryanodine increased its Po. All these features are characteristics of the SR Ca2+ release channel. The ryanodine receptor which has been purified and reconstituted into PLB, may form a cation selective pathway. This channel displays all the regulatory sites of the native cardiac SR Ca2+ release channel. However, when NA was used as charge carrier, multiple subconducting states were observed. In conclusion, the reconstitution experiments have yield a great deal of informations about the biochemical and biophysical events that may regulated the ionic flux across the SR membrane.  相似文献   

7.
Two classes of small homologous basic proteins, mamba snake dendrotoxins (DTX) and bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI), block the large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channel (BKCa, KCa1.1) by production of discrete subconductance events when added to the intracellular side of the membrane. This toxin-channel interaction is unlikely to be pharmacologically relevant to the action of mamba venom, but as a fortuitous ligand-protein interaction, it has certain biophysical implications for the mechanism of BKCa channel gating. In this work we examined the subconductance behavior of 9 natural dendrotoxin homologs and 6 charge neutralization mutants of δ-dendrotoxin in the context of current structural information on the intracellular gating ring domain of the BKCa channel. Calculation of an electrostatic surface map of the BKCa gating ring based on the Poisson-Boltzmann equation reveals a predominantly electronegative surface due to an abundance of solvent-accessible side chains of negatively charged amino acids. Available structure-activity information suggests that cationic DTX/BPTI molecules bind by electrostatic attraction to site(s) on the gating ring located in or near the cytoplasmic side portals where the inactivation ball peptide of the β2 subunit enters to block the channel. Such an interaction may decrease the apparent unitary conductance by altering the dynamic balance of open versus closed states of BKCa channel activation gating.  相似文献   

8.
Large-conductance Ca2+-dependent K+ (BKCa) channels are activated by intracellular Ca2+ and membrane depolarization in an allosteric manner. We investigated the pharmacological and biophysical characteristics of a BKCa-type K+ channel in androgen-dependent LNCaP (lymph node carcinoma of the prostate) cells with novel functional properties, here termed BKL. K+ selectivity, high conductance, activation by Mg2+ or NS1619, and inhibition by paxilline and penitrem A largely resembled the properties of recombinant BKCa channels. However, unlike conventional BKCa channels, BKL channels activated in the absence of free cytosolic Ca2+ at physiological membrane potentials; the half-maximal activation voltage was shifted by about −100 mV compared with BKCa channels. Half-maximal Ca2+-dependent activation was observed at 0.4 μM for BKL (at −20 mV) and at 4.1 μM for BKCa channels (at +50 mV). Heterologous expression of hSlo1 in LNCaP cells increased the BKL conductance. Expression of hSlo-β1 in LNCaP cells shifted voltage-dependent activation to values between that of BKL and BKCa channels and reduced the slope of the Popen (open probability)-voltage curve. We propose that LNCaP cells harbor a so far unknown type of BKCa subunit, which is responsible for the BKL phenotype in a dominant manner. BKL-like channels are also expressed in the human breast cancer cell line T47D. In addition, functional expression of BKL in LNCaP cells is regulated by serum-derived factors, however not by androgens.  相似文献   

9.
Two classes of small homologous basic proteins, mamba snake dendrotoxins (DTX) and bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI), block the large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channel (BKCa, KCa1.1) by production of discrete subconductance events when added to the intracellular side of the membrane. This toxin-channel interaction is unlikely to be pharmacologically relevant to the action of mamba venom, but as a fortuitous ligand-protein interaction, it has certain biophysical implications for the mechanism of BKCa channel gating. In this work we examined the subconductance behavior of 9 natural dendrotoxin homologs and 6 charge neutralization mutants of δ-dendrotoxin in the context of current structural information on the intracellular gating ring domain of the BKCa channel. Calculation of an electrostatic surface map of the BKCa gating ring based on the Poisson-Boltzmann equation reveals a predominantly electronegative surface due to an abundance of solvent-accessible side chains of negatively charged amino acids. Available structure-activity information suggests that cationic DTX/BPTI molecules bind by electrostatic attraction to site(s) on the gating ring located in or near the cytoplasmic side portals where the inactivation ball peptide of the β2 subunit enters to block the channel. Such an interaction may decrease the apparent unitary conductance by altering the dynamic balance of open versus closed states of BKCa channel activation gating.  相似文献   

10.
The TREK-2 (KCNK10) K2P potassium channel can be regulated by variety of polymodal stimuli including pressure. In a recent study, we demonstrated that this mechanosensitive K+ channel responds to changes in membrane tension by undergoing a major structural change from its ‘down’ state to the more expanded ‘up’ state conformation. These changes are mostly restricted to the lower part of the protein within the bilayer, but are allosterically coupled to the primary gating mechanism located within the selectivity filter. However, any such structural changes within the filter also have the potential to alter ionic selectivity and there are reports that some K2Ps, including TREK channels, exhibit a dynamic ionic selectivity. In this addendum to our previous study we have therefore examined whether the selectivity of TREK-2 is altered by stretch activation. Our results reveal that the filter remains stable and highly selective for K+ over Na+ during stretch activation, and that permeability to a range of other cations (Rb+, Cs+ and NH4+) also does not change. The asymmetric structural changes that occur during stretch activation therefore allow the channel to respond to changes in membrane tension without a loss of K+ selectivity.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Potassium channels in membranes of isolatedNecturus enterocytes were studied using the patch-clamp technique. The most frequent channel observed had a conductance of 170 pS and reversal potential of 0 mV in symmetrical potassium-rich solutions. Channels were highly K+ selective. Channel activity was modulated by membrane potential and cytosolic Ca2+ concentration. Channel openings occurred in characteristic bursts separated by long closures. During bursts openings were interrupted by brief closures. Two gating modes controlled channel opening. The primary gate's sensitivity to intracellular Ca2+ concentration and membrane potential crucially determined long duration closures and bursting. In comparison, the second gate determining brief closures was largely insensitive to voltage and intracellular Ca2+ concentration. The channel was reversibly blocked by cytosolic barium exposure in a voltage-sensitive manner. Blockade reduced open-state probability without altering single-channel conductance and could be described, at relatively high Ca2+ concentration, by a three-state model where Ba2+ interacted with the open channel with a dissociation constant of about 10–4 m at 0 mV.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Using Ca2+- and K+-selective microelectrodes, the cytosolic free Ca2+ and K+ concentrations were measured in mouse fibroblastic L cells. When the extracellular Ca2+ concentration exceeded several micromoles, spontaneous oscillations of the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration were observed in the submicromolar ranges. During the Ca2+ oscillations, the membrane potential was found to oscillate concomitantly. The peak of cyclic increases in the free Ca2+ level coincided in time with the peak of periodic hyperpolarizations. Both oscillations were abolished by reducing the extracellular Ca2+ concentration down to 10–7 m or by applying a Ca2+ channel blocker, nifedipine (50 m). In the presence of 0.5mm quinine, an inhibitor of Ca2+-activated K+ channel, sizable Ca2+ oscillations still persisted, while the potential oscillations were markedly suppressed. Oscillations of the intracellular K+ concentration between about 145 and 140mm were often associated with the potential oscillations. The minimum phase of the K+ concentration was always 5 to 6 sec behind the peak hyperpolarization. Thus, it is concluded that the oscillation of membrane potential results from oscillatory increases in the intracellular Ca2+ level, which, in turn, periodically stimulate Ca2+-activated K+ channels.  相似文献   

13.
Myogenic, or pressure-induced, vasoconstriction is critical for local blood flow autoregulation. Underlying this vascular smooth muscle (VSM) response are events including membrane depolarization, Ca2+ entry and mobilization, and activation of contractile proteins. Large conductance, Ca2+-activated K+ channel (BKCa) has been implicated in several of these steps including, (1) channel closure causing membrane depolarization, and (2) channel opening causing hyperpolarization to oppose excessive pressure-induced vasoconstriction. As multiple mechanisms regulate BKCa activity (subunit composition, membrane potential (Em) and Ca2+ levels, post-translational modification) tissue level diversity is predicted. Importantly, heterogeneity in BKCa channel activity may contribute to tissue-specific differences in regulation of myogenic vasoconstriction, allowing local hemodynamics to be matched to metabolic requirements. Knowledge of such variability will be important to exploiting the BKCa channel as a therapeutic target and understanding systemic effects of its pharmacological manipulation.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of cytosolic pH (pHi) in controlling K+-channel activity and its interaction with cytosolic-free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) was examined in stomatal guard cells ofVicia faba L. Intact guard cells were impaled with multibarrelled microelectrodes and K+-channel currents were recorded under voltage clamp while pHi or [Ca2+]i was monitored concurrently by fluorescence ratio photometry using the fluorescent dyes 2,7-bis (2-carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF) and Fura-2. In 10 mM external K+ concentration, current through inward-rectifying K+ channels (IK,in) was evoked on stepping the membrane from a holding potential of –100 mV to voltages from –120 to –250 mV. Challenge with 0.3-30 mM Na+-butyrate and Na+-acetate outside imposed acid loads, lowering pHi from a mean resting value of 7.64 ± 0.03 (n = 25) to values from 7.5 to 6.7. The effect on pHi was independent of the weak acid used, and indicated a H+-buffering capacity which rose from 90 mM H+/pH unit near 7.5 to 160 mM H+/pH unit near pHi 7.0. With acid-going pHi, (IK,in) was promoted in scalar fashion, the current increasing in magnitude with the acid load, but without significant effect on the current relaxation kinetics at voltages negative of –150 mV or the voltage-dependence for channel gating. Washout of the weak acid was followed by transient rise in pHi lasting 3–5 min and was accompanied by a reduction in (IK,in) before recovery of the initial resting pHi and current amplitude. The pHi-sensitivity of the current was consistent with a single, titratable site for H+ binding with a pKa near 6.3. Acid pHi loads also affected current through the outward-rectifying K+ channels (IK,out) in a manner antiparallel to (IK,in) The effect on IK, out was also scalar, but showed an apparent pKa of 7.4 and was best accommodated by a cooperative binding of two H+. Parallel measurements showed that Na+-butyrate loads were generally without significant effect on [Ca2+]i, except when pHi was reduced to 7.0 and below. Extreme acid loads evoked reversible increases in [Ca2+]i in roughly half the cells measured, although the effect was generally delayed with respect to the time course of pHi changes and K+-channel responses. The action on [Ca2+]i coincided with a greater variability in (IK,in) stimulation evident at pHi values around 7.0 and below, and with negative displacements in the voltage-dependence of (IK,in) gating. These results distinguish the actions of pHi and [Ca2+]i in modulating (IK,in) they delimit the effect of pHi to changes in current amplitude without influence on the voltage-dependence of channel gating; and they support a role for pHi as a second messenger capable of acting in parallel with, but independent of [Ca2+]i in controlling the K+ channels.Abbreviations BCECF 2,7-bis (2-carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxy fluorescein - [Ca2+]i cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration - gK ensemble (steady-state) K+-channel conductance - IK,out, IK,in outward-, inward-rectifying K+ channel (current) - IN current-voltage (relation) - Mes 2-(N-morpholinolethanesulfonic acid - pHi cytosolic pH - V membrane potential  相似文献   

15.
Summary The patch-clamp technique is used here to investigate the kinetics of Ca2+ block in single high-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels. These channels are detected in the membrane surounding cytoplasmic drops fromChara australis, a membrane which originates from the tonoplast of the parent cell. The amplitudes and durations of single channel events are measured over a wide range of membrane potential (–300 to 200 mV). Ca2+ on either side of the channel reduces its K+ conductance and alters its ion-gating characteristics in a voltage-dependent manner. This Ca2+-induced attenuation of conductance is analyzed using the theory of diffusion-limited ion flow through pores. Interaction of external Ca2+ with the channel's ion-gating mechanism is examined in terms of a kinetic model for ion-gating that includes two voltage-dependent gating mechanisms. The kinetics of channel block by external Ca2+ indicates that (i) external Ca2+ binds at two sites, a superficial site and a deep site, located at 8 and 40% along the trans-pore potential difference, (ii) the external vestibule cannot be occupied by more than one Ca2+ or K+, and (iii) the kinetics of Ca2+ binding at the deep site is coupled with that of a voltage-dependent gate on the external side of the channel. Kinetics of channel block by internal Ca2+ indicates that more than one Ca2+ is involved.  相似文献   

16.
The acquisition of cell motility plays a critical role in the spread of prostate cancer (PC), therefore, identifying a sensitive step that regulates PC cell migration should provide a promising target to block PC metastasis. Here, we report that a mechanosensitive Ca2+-permeable cation channel (MscCa) is expressed in the highly migratory/invasive human PC cell line, PC-3 and that inhibition of MscCa by Gd3+ or GsMTx-4 blocks PC-3 cell migration and associated elevations in [Ca2+]i. Genetic suppression or overexpression of specific members of the canonical transient receptor potential Ca2+ channel family (TRPC1 and TRPC3) also inhibit PC-3 cell migration, but they do so by mechanisms other that altering MscCa activity. Although LNCaP cells are nonmigratory, they also express relatively large MscCa currents, indicating that MscCa expression alone cannot confer motility on PC cells. MscCa in both cell lines show similar conductance and ion selectivity and both are functionally coupled via Ca2+ influx to a small Ca2+-activated K+ channel. However, MscCa in PC-3 and LNCaP cell patches show markedly different gating dynamics—while PC-3 cells typically express a sustained, non-inactivating MscCa current, LNCaP cells express a mechanically-fragile, rapidly inactivating MscCa current. Moreover, mechanical forces applied to the patch, can induce an irreversible transition from the transient to the sustained MscCa gating mode. Given that cancer cells experience increasing compressive and shear forces within a growing tumor, a similar shift in channel gating in situ would have significant effects on Ca2+ signaling that may play a role in tumor progression.  相似文献   

17.
The acquisition of cell motility plays a critical role in the spread of prostate cancer (PC), therefore, identifying a sensitive step that regulates PC cell migration should provide a promising target to block PC metastasis. Here, we report that a mechanosensitive Ca2+-permeable cation channel (MscCa) is expressed in the highly migratory/invasive human PC cell line, PC-3 and that inhibition of MscCa by Gd3+ or GsMTx-4 blocks PC-3 cell migration and associated elevations in [Ca2+]i. Genetic suppression or overexpression of specific members of the canonical transient receptor potential Ca2+ channel family (TRPC1 and TRPC3) also inhibit PC-3 cell migration, but they do so by mechanisms other that altering MscCa activity. Although LNCaP cells are nonmigratory, they also express relatively large MscCa currents, indicating that MscCa expression alone cannot confer motility on PC cells. MscCa in both cell lines show similar conductance and ion selectivity and both are functionally coupled via Ca2+ influx to a small Ca2+-activated K+ channel. However, MscCa in PC-3 and LNCaP cell patches show markedly different gating dynamics—while PC-3 cells typically express a sustained, non-inactivating MscCa current, LNCaP cells express a mechanically-fragile, rapidly inactivating MscCa current. Moreover, mechanical forces applied to the patch, can induce an irreversible transition from the transient to the sustained MscCa gating mode. Given that cancer cells experience increasing compressive and shear forces within a growing tumor, a similar shift in channel gating in situ would have significant effects on Ca2+ signaling that may play a role in tumor progression.  相似文献   

18.
The proportions of calcium (Ca2+) channel subtypes in chick or rat P2 fraction and NG 108-15 cells were investigated using selective L-, N-, P- and P/Q- type Ca2+ channel blockers. KCl-stimulated 45Ca2+ uptake by chick P2 fraction was blocked by 40~50% using N-type Ca2+ channel blockers [-conotoxin GVIA, aminoglycoside antibiotics and dynorphin A(1–13)], but was not inhibited by P- or P/Q-type blockers (-agatoxin IVA or -conotoxin MVIIC). On the other hand, KCl-stimulated 45Ca2+ uptake by rat P2 fraction was blocked by 30~40% using P- or P/Q-type Ca2+ channel blockers, but was not inhibited by N-type Ca2+ channel blockers. The L-type Ca2+ channel blockers 1,4-dihydropyridines, diltiazem and verapamil, but not calciseptine (CaS), inhibited both KCl-stimulated 45Ca2+ uptake and veratridine-induced 22Na+ uptake by chick or rat P2 fraction with similar IC50 values. CaS did not have any effect on 45Ca2+ uptake by either chick or rat P2 fraction. In NG108-15 cells, CaS, -agatoxin IVA and -conotoxin MVIIC, but not -conotoxin GVIA, inhibited KCl-stimulated 45Ca2+ uptake by 30–40%. Various combinations of these Ca2+ channel blockers had no significant additional effects in chick or rat P2 fraction or NG 108-15 cells. These findings suggest that KCl-stimulated 45Ca2+ uptake by chick or rat P2 fraction and NG 108-15 cells is a convenient and useful model for screening whether or not natural or synthetic substances have selective effects as L-, N-, P-, or P/Q- type Ca2+ channel antagonists or agonists.  相似文献   

19.
Xylem parenchyma cells are situated around the (apoplastic) xylem vessels and are involved in the control of the composition of the xylem sap by exporting and resorbing solutes. We investigated properties of the K+ inward rectifier in the plasma membrane of these cells by performing patch clamp experiments on protoplasts in the whole-cell configuration. Inward currents were sensitive to the K+ channel blocker TEA+ at a high concentration (20 mm). Barium, another classical K+ channel blocker, inhibited K+ currents with a K i of about 1.3 mm. In contrast to guard cells, the cytosolic Ca2+ level proved to be ineffective in regulating the K+ conductance at hyperpolarization. External Ca2+ blocked currents weakly in a voltage-dependent manner. From instantaneous current-voltage curves, we identified a binding site in the channel pore with an electrical distance of about 0.2 to 0.5. Lanthanum ions reduced the inward current in a voltage-dependent manner and simultaneously displaced the voltage at which half of the channels are in the open state to more positive values. This finding was interpreted as resulting from a sum of two molecular effects, an interaction with the mouth of the channel that causes a reduction of current, and a binding to the voltage sensor, leading to a shielding of surface charges and, subsequently, a modulation of channel gating.A comparison between the K+ inward rectifier in xylem parenchyma cells, guard cells and KAT1 from Arabidopsis leads to the conclusion that these rectifiers form subtypes within one class of ion channels. The ineffectiveness of Ca2+ to control K+ influx in xylem parenchyma cells is interpreted in physiological terms.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Calcium-activated potassium channels were the channels most frequently observed in primary cultured normal mammary cell and in the established mammary tumor cell, MMT060562. In both cells, single-channel and whole-cell clamp recordings sometimes showed slow oscillations of the Ca2+-gated K+ current. The characteristics of the Ca2+-activated K+ channels in normal and cancerous mammary cells were quite similar. The slope conductances changed from 8 to 70 pS depending on the mode of recording and the ionic composition in the patch electrode. The open probability of this channel increased between 0.1 to 1 m of the intracellular Ca2+, but it was independent of the membrane potential.Charybdotoxin reduced the activity of the Ca2+-activated K+ channel and the oscillation of the membrane current, but apamin had no apparent effect. The application of tetraethylammonium (TEA) from outside and BaCl2 from inside of the cell diminished the activity of the channel. The properties of this channel were different from those of both the large conductance (BK or MAXI K) and small conductance (SK) type Ca2+-activated K+ channels.  相似文献   

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