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 31 毫秒
1.
Voltage-dependent K+ channels control repolarization of action potentials and help establish firing patterns in nerve cells. To determine the nature and role of molecular components that modulate K+ channel function in vivo, we coinjected Xenopus oocytes with cRNA encoding a cloned subthreshold A-type K+ channel (mShal1, also referred to as mKv4.1) and a low molecular weight (LMW) fraction (2-4 kb) of poly(A)+ mRNA (both from rodent brain). Coinjected oocytes exhibited a significant (fourfold) increase in the surface expression of mShal1 K+ channels with no change in the open-channel conductance. Coexpression also modified the gating kinetics of mShal1 current in several respects. Macroscopic inactivation of whole oocyte currents was fitted with the sum of two exponential components. Both fast and slow time constants of inactivation were accelerated at all membrane potentials in coinjected oocytes (tau f = 47.2 ms vs 56.5 ms at 0 mV and tau s = 157 ms vs 225 ms at 0 mV), and the corresponding ratios of amplitude terms were shifted toward domination by the fast component (Af/As = 2.71 vs 1.17 at 0 mV). Macroscopic activation was characterized in terms of the time-to-peak current, and it was found to be more rapid at all membrane potentials in coinjected oocytes (9.9 ms vs 13.5 ms at 0 mV). Coexpression also leads to more rapid recovery from inactivation (approximately 2.4-fold faster at -100 mV). The coexpressed K+ currents in oocytes resemble currents expressed in mouse fibroblasts (NIH3T3) transfected only with mShal1 cDNA. These results indicate that mammalian regulatory subunits or enzymes encoded by LMW mRNA species, which are apparently missing or expressed at low levels in Xenopus oocytes, may modulate gating in some native subthreshold A-type K+ channels.  相似文献   

2.
The channel underlying the slow component of the voltage-dependent delayed outward rectifier K+ current, I(Ks), in heart is composed of the minK and KvLQT1 proteins. Expression of the minK protein in Xenopus oocytes results in I(Ks)-like currents, I(sK), due to coassembly with the endogenous XKvLQT1. The kinetics and voltage-dependent characteristics of I(sK) suggest a distinct mechanism for voltage-dependent gating. Currents recorded at 40 mV from holding potentials between -60 and -120 mV showed an unusual "cross-over," with the currents obtained from more depolarized holding potentials activating more slowly and deviating from the Cole-Moore prediction. Analysis of the current traces revealed two components with fast and slow kinetics that were not affected by the holding potential. Rather, the relative contribution of the fast component decreased with depolarized holding potentials. Deactivation and reactivation, after a short period of repolarization (100 ms), was markedly faster than the fast component of activation. These gating properties suggest a physiological mechanism by which cardiac I(Ks) may suppress premature action potentials.  相似文献   

3.
Gating currents were measured by subtracting the linear component of the capacitative current recorded at very positive or very negative potentials. When the membrane is depolarized for a few minutes, repolarized to the usual holding potential (HP) of --70 mV for 1 ms, and then pulsed to 0 mV, the charge transferred in 2--4 ms is approximately 50% of that which was transferred during the same pulse holding at --70 mV. This charge decrease, called slow inactivation of the gating current, was found to be consistent with a shift of the charge vs. potential (Q-V) curve to more hyperpolarized potentials. When the HP is 0 mV, the total charge available to move is the same as the total charge available when the HP is --70 mV. The time constants of the fast component of the ON gating current are smaller at depolarized holding potentials than at --70 mV. When the HP is --70 mV and a prepulse of 50 ms duration is given to 0 mV, the Q-V curve is also shifted to more hyperpolarized potentials (charge immobilization), but the effect is not as pronounced as the one obtained by holding at 0 mV. When the HP is 0 mV, a prepulse to --70 mV for 50 ms partially shifts back the Q-V curve, indicating that fast inactivation of the gating charge may be recovered in the presence of slow inactivation. A physical model consisting of a gating particle that interacts with a fast inactivating particle, and a slow inactivating particle, reproduces most of the experimental results.  相似文献   

4.
Gating of Shaker K+ channels: I. Ionic and gating currents.   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Ionic and gating currents from noninactivating Shaker B K+ channels were studied with the cut-open oocyte voltage clamp technique and compared with the macropatch clamp technique. The performance of the cut-open oocyte voltage clamp technique was evaluated from the electrical properties of the clamped upper domus membrane, K+ tail current measurements, and the time course of K+ currents after partial blockade. It was concluded that membrane currents less than 20 microA were spatially clamped with a time resolution of at least 50 microseconds. Subtracted, unsubtracted gating currents with the cut-open oocyte voltage clamp technique and gating currents recorded in cell attached macropatches had similar properties and time course, and the charge movement properties directly obtained from capacity measurements agreed with measurements of charge movement from subtracted records. An accurate estimate of the normalized open probability Po(V) was obtained from tail current measurements as a function of the prepulse V in high external K+. The Po(V) was zero at potentials more negative than -40 mV and increased sharply at this potential, then increased continuously until -20 mV, and finally slowly increased with voltages more positive than 0 mV. Deactivation tail currents decayed with two time constants and external potassium slowed down the faster component without affecting the slower component that is probably associated with the return between two of the closed states near the open state. In correlating gating currents and channel opening, Cole-Moore type experiments showed that charge moving in the negative region of voltage (-100 to -40 mV) is involved in the delay of the conductance activation but not in channel opening. The charge moving in the more positive voltage range (-40 to -10 mV) has a similar voltage dependence to the open probability of the channel, but it does not show the gradual increase with voltage seen in the Po(V).  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
The decline of calcium inward currents evoked by a long-lasting membrane depolarization was studied on isolated snail neurons internally perfused with a K+-free solution. Two exponential components superimposed on a steady inward current could be distinguished, a slow decline with a time constant of several hundreds of milliseconds, observed at all the testing potentials used, and a fast one with a time constant of several dozens of milliseconds, which appeared at depolarizations to about -10 mV and above. When the calcium current was blocked by extracellular Cd2+ or verapamil, an outward current could be recorded at the same depolarizations. Subtraction of the latter current from the total current, recorded prior to the blockage, largely reduced the fast component of the decline of the total current. An increase in pHi from 7.3 to 8.1 led to the elimination of both the outward current and the fast component of the calcium current decline. The slow component remained practically unchanged, with its rate depending upon the current amplitude. It was slowed following intracellular administration of EDTA, and after equimolar substitution of Ba2+ for Ca2+. It is concluded that the fast component of the calcium inward current decline is mainly due to the superposition of the outward current produced by low selective channels. Only the slow component represents an actual decline of the inward current through calcium channels; it is due to ion accumulation at the inner surface of the cell membrane.  相似文献   

7.
Internal Mg2+ blocks many potassium channels including Kv1.5. Here, we show that internal Mg2+ block of Kv1.5 induces voltage-dependent current decay at strongly depolarised potentials that contains a component due to acceleration of C-type inactivation after pore block. The voltage-dependent current decay was fitted to a bi-exponential function (tau(fast) and tau(slow)). Without Mg2+, tau(fast) and tau(slow) were voltage-independent, but with 10 mM Mg2+, tau(fast) decreased from 156 ms at +40 mV to 5 ms at +140 mV and tau(slow) decreased from 2.3 s to 206 ms. With Mg2+, tail currents after short pulses that allowed only the fast phase of decay showed a rising phase that reflected voltage-dependent unbinding. This suggested that the fast phase of voltage-dependent current decay was due to Mg2+ pore block. In contrast, tail currents after longer pulses that allowed the slow phase of decay were reduced to almost zero suggesting that the slow phase was due to channel inactivation. Consistent with this, the mutation R487V (equivalent to T449V in Shaker) or increasing external K+, both of which reduce C-type inactivation, prevented the slow phase of decay. These results are consistent with voltage-dependent open-channel block of Kv1.5 by internal Mg2+ that subsequently induces C-type inactivation by restricting K+ filling of the selectivity filter from the internal solution.  相似文献   

8.
A single channel current was studied in the membrane of the immature oocyte of the european frog (Rana esculenta) by using the "patch clamp" technique in the "cell attached" configuration. Single channel activity appeared as short outward currents when membrane potential was made positive inside; full activation required seconds to be complete, no inactivation being appreciable. Deactivation (or current block) upon membrane repolarization was so fast that no inward current could be detected in any case. The reversal potential, estimated by interpolating the I/V diagrams, was -30 mV using standard Ringer as electrode filling solution, and the elementary conductance was 95 pS. Neither reversal potential nor elementary conductance were affected by removal of external Ca2+ (Mg2+ or Ba2+ substitution) or external Cl- (methanesulphonate substitution). The reversal potential moved towards positive potentials by substituting external Na+ with K+, the magnitude of the shifts being consistent with a ratio PK/PNa = 6.4. A distinctive property of the current/voltage relation for this K-current is its anomalous bell-shape, the outward current displaying a maximum at membrane potentials around 75 mV with standard Ringer as electrode filling solution and tending to zero with more positive potentials.  相似文献   

9.
Voltage- and time-dependent currents having slow kinetics have been studied in plasma membranes of immature oocytes of the european frog, Rana esculenta. IK, corresponding to an outward flow of K+, is activated at potentials more positive than about -40 mV, and subserves outward rectification; Iir, corresponding to an outward flow of Cl-, is activated at potentials more negative than about -80 mV and subserves inward rectification. Such currents can act as negative feedback mechanisms in the control of membrane potential in the immature oocyte and limit to a somewhat restricted range its possible deviations from resting values. Besides IK, membrane depolarizations to potentials more positive than about +30 mV are capable of activating INa, corresponding to outflow of Na+. By contrast, the frog mature egg-cell has a single voltage- and time-dependent current, IM, activated at potentials more positive than +30 mV, with properties similar to INa. The disappearance of IK and Iir along with remarkable reduction in leakage lowers impedance in the egg membrane. It seems reasonable to suggest that the observed changes in membrane permeability reflect changes which have taken place along the maturation process and are of importance for successful fertilization.  相似文献   

10.
We examined the electrophysiological effect of pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide (PACAP) in isolated Xenopus laevis oocytes in vitro. In conventional two-electrode voltage clamp experiments, PACAP (1–10 μM) activated an inward rectifier current at membrane potentials more negative than −60 mV without causing any significant change in currents at potentials more positive than −60 mV both in the follicle-enclosed oocyte and in the defolliculated oocyte. This current reversed at −22.5 mV, close to the theoretical value of Cl equilibrium potential and the reversal potential of this current was shifted positively by reducing [Cl]o. This current was blocked by Cl channel blocker SITS and Ba2+. Furthermore, VIP and adenylate cyclase activator forskolin did not elicit the currents. In conclusion, PACAP elicited the hyperpolarization-activated Cl current in Xenopus laevis oocytes. This current may modulate the membrane potential of the oocyte, thereby affecting the oocyte physiology.  相似文献   

11.
Slow currents through single sodium channels of the adult rat heart   总被引:18,自引:6,他引:12       下载免费PDF全文
The currents through single Na+ channels from the sarcolemma of ventricular cells dissociated from adult rat hearts were studied using the patch-clamp technique. All patches had several Na+ channels; most had 5-10, while some had up to 50 channels. At 10 degrees C, the conductance of the channel was 9.8 pS. The mean current for sets of many identical pulses inactivated exponentially with a time constant of 1.7 +/- 0.6 ms at -40 mV. Careful examination of the mean currents revealed a small, slow component of inactivation at pulse potentials ranging from -60 to -30 mV. The time constant of the slow component was between 8 and 14 ms. The channels that caused the slow component had the same conductance and reversal potential as the fast Na+ currents and were blocked by tetrodotoxin. The slow currents appear to have been caused by repeated openings of one or more channels. The holding potential influenced the frequency with which such channel reopening occurred. The slow component was prominent during pulses from a holding potential of -100 mV, while it was very small during pulses from -140 mV. Ultraslow currents through the Na+ channel were observed occasionally in patches that had large numbers of channels. They consisted of bursts of 10 or more sequential openings of a single channel and lasted for up to 150 ms. We conclude that the single channel data cannot be explained by standard models, even those that have two inactivated states or two open states of the channel. Our results suggest that Na+ channels can function in several different "modes," each with a different inactivation rate.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The electrical properties of Aplysia brasiliana myogenic heart were evaluated. Two distinct types of action potentials (APs) were recorded from intact hearts, an AP with a slow rising phase followed by a slow repolarizing phase and an AP with a 'fast' depolarizing phase followed by a plateau. Although these two APs differ in their rates of depolarization (2.2 x 0.3 V/s), both APs were abolished by the addition of Co2+, Mn2+ and nifedipine or by omitting Ca2+ from the external solution. These data suggest that a Ca2+ inward current is responsible for the generation of both types of APs. Two outward currents activated at -40 mV membrane potential were prominent in isolated cardiac myocytes: a fast activating, fast inactivating outward current similar to the A-type K+ current and a slow activating outward current with kinetics similar to the delayed rectifier K+ current were recorded under voltage clamp conditions. Based on the effects of 4-AP and TEA on the electrical properties of ventricular myocytes, we suggest that the fast kinetic outward current substantially attenuates the peak values of the APs and that the slow activating outward current is involved on membrane repolarization.  相似文献   

14.
Isolated Ca currents in cultured dorsal root ganglion (DRG) cells were studied using the patch clamp technique. The currents persisted in the presence of 30 microM tetrodotoxin (TTX) or when external Na was replaced by choline. They were fully blocked by millimolar additions of Cd2+ and Ni2+ to the bath. Two components of an inward-going Ca current were observed. In 5 mM external Ca, a current of small amplitude, turned on already during steps changes to -60 mV membrane potential, leveled off at -30 mV to a value of approximately 0.2 nA. A second, larger current component, which resembled the previously described Ca current in other cells, appeared at more positive voltages (-20 to -10 mV) and had a maximum approximately 0 mV. The current component activated at the more negative membrane potentials showed the stronger dependence on external Ca. The presence of a time- and a voltage-dependent activation was indicated by the current's sigmoidal rise, which became faster with increased depolarization. Its tail currents were generally slower than those associated with the Ca currents of larger amplitude. From -60 mV holding potential, the maximum obtainable amplitude of the low depolarization-activated current was only one-tenth of that achieved from a holding potential of -90 mV. Voltage-dependent inactivation of this current component was fast compared with that of the other component. The properties of this low voltage-activated and fully inactivating Ca current suggest it is the same as the inward current that has been postulated in several central neurons (Llinas, R., and Y. Yarom, 1981, J. Physiol. (Lond.), 315:569-584), which produce depolarizing potential waves and burst-firing only when membrane hyperpolarization precedes.  相似文献   

15.
Nonlinear or asymmetric charge movement was recorded from single ventricular myocytes cultured from 17-d-old embryonic chick hearts using the whole-cell patch clamp method. The myocytes were exposed to the appropriate intracellular and extracellular solutions designed to block Na+, Ca2+, and K+ ionic currents. The linear components of the capacity and leakage currents during test voltage steps were eliminated by adding summed, hyperpolarizing control step currents. Upon depolarization from negative holding potentials the nonlinear charge movement was composed of two distinct and separable kinetic components. An early rapidly decaying component (decay time constant range: 0.12-0.50 ms) was significant at test potentials positive to -70 mV and displayed saturation above 0 mV (midpoint -35 mV; apparent valence 1.6 e-). The early ON charge was partially immobilized during brief (5 ms) depolarizing test steps and was more completely immobilized by the application of less negative holding potentials. A second slower-decaying component (decay time constant range: 0.88-3.7 ms) was activated at test potentials positive to -60 mV and showed saturation above +20 mV (midpoint -13 mV, apparent valence 1.9 e-). The second component of charge movement was immobilized by long duration (5 s) holding potentials, applied over a more positive voltage range than those that reduced the early component. The voltage dependencies for activation and inactivation of the Na+ and Ca2+ ionic currents were determined for myocytes in which these currents were not blocked. There was a positive correlation between the voltage dependence of activation and inactivation of the Na+ and Ca2+ ionic currents and the activation and immobilization of the fast and slow components of charge movement. These complementary kinetic and steady-state properties lead to the conclusion that the two components of charge movement are associated with the voltage-sensitive conformational changes that precede Na+ and Ca2+ channel openings.  相似文献   

16.
A slowly inactivating potassium current in native oocytes of Xenopus laevis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Membrane currents were recorded in voltage-clamped oocytes of Xenopus laevis in response to voltage steps. We describe results obtained in oocytes obtained from one donor frog, which showed an unusually large outward current upon depolarization. Measurements of reversal potentials of tail currents in solutions of different K+ concentration indicated that this current is carried largely by K+ ions. It was strongly reduced by extracellular application of tetraethylammonium, though not by Ba2+ or 4-aminopyridine. Removal of surrounding follicular cells did not reduce the K+ current, indicating that it arises across the oocyte membrane proper. Activation of the K+ conductance was first detected with depolarization to about -12 mV, increased with a limiting voltage sensitivity of 3 mV for an e-fold change in current, and was half-maximally activated at about +10 mV. The current rose following a single exponential timecourse after depolarization, with a time constant that shortened from about 400 ms at -10 mV to about 15 ms at +80 mV. During prolonged depolarization the current inactivated with a time constant of about 4 s, which did not alter greatly with potential. The K+ current was independent of Ca2+, as it was not altered by addition of 10 mM Mn2+ to the bathing medium, or by intracellular injection of EGTA. Noise analysis of K+ current fluctuations indicated that the current is carried by channels with a unitary conductance of about 20 ps and a mean open lifetime of about 300 ms (at room temperature and potential of +10 to +20 mV).  相似文献   

17.
Slow components of potassium tail currents in rat skeletal muscle   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The kinetics of potassium tail currents have been studied in the omohyoid muscle of the rat using the three-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique. The currents were elicited by a two-pulse protocol in which a conditioning pulse to open channels was followed by a test step to varying levels. The tail currents reversed at a single well-defined potential (VK). At hyperpolarized test potentials (-100 mV and below), tail currents were inward and exhibited two clearly distinguishable phases of decay, a fast tail with a time constant of 2-3 ms and a slow tail with a time constant of approximately 150 ms. At depolarized potentials (-60 mV and above), tail currents were outward and did not show two such easily separable phases of decay, although a slow kinetic component was present. The slow kinetic phase of outward tail currents appeared to be functionally distinct from the slow inward tail since the channels responsible for the latter did not allow significant outward current. Substitution of Rb for extracellular K abolished current through the anomalous (inward-going) rectifier and at the same time eliminated the slow inward tail, which suggests that the slow inward tail current flows through anomalous rectifier channels. The amplitude of the slow inward tail was increased and VK was shifted in the depolarizing direction by longer conditioning pulses. The shift in VK implies that during outward currents potassium accumulates in a restricted extracellular space, and it is suggested that this excess K causes the slow inward tail by increasing the inward current through the anomalous rectifier. By this hypothesis, the tail current slowly decays as K diffuses from the restricted space. Consistent with such a hypothesis, the decay of the slow inward tail was not strongly affected by changing temperature. It is concluded that a single delayed K channel is present in the omohyoid. Substitution of Rb for K has little effect on the magnitude or time course of outward current tails, but reduces the magnitude and slows the decay of the fast component of inward tails. Both effects are consistent with a mechanism proposed for squid giant axon (Swenson and Armstrong, 1981): that (a) the delayed potassium channel cannot close while Rb is inside it, and (b) that Rb remains in the channel longer than K.  相似文献   

18.
Membrane properties of isolated mudpuppy taste cells   总被引:13,自引:3,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
The voltage-dependent currents of isolated Necturus lingual cells were studied using the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. Nongustatory surface epithelial cells had only passive membrane properties. Small, spherical cells resembling basal cells responded to depolarizing voltage steps with predominantly outward K+ currents. Taste receptor cells generated both outward and inward currents in response to depolarizing voltage steps. Outward K+ currents activated at approximately 0 mV and increased almost linearly with increasing depolarization. The K+ current did not inactivate and was partially Ca++ dependent. One inward current activated at -40 mV, reached a peak at -20 mV, and rapidly inactivated. This transient inward current was blocked by tetrodotoxin (TTX), which indicates that it is an Na+ current. The other inward current activated at 0 mV, peaked at 30 mV, and slowly inactivated. This more sustained inward current had the kinetic and pharmacological properties of a slow Ca++ current. In addition, most taste cells had inwardly rectifying K+ currents. Sour taste stimuli (weak acids) decreased outward K+ currents and slightly reduced inward currents; bitter taste stimuli (quinine) reduced inward currents to a greater extent than outward currents. It is concluded that sour and bitter taste stimuli produce depolarizing receptor potentials, at least in part, by reducing the voltage-dependent K+ conductance.  相似文献   

19.
Ionic currents underlying the action potential of Rana pipiens oocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Ionic currents in immature, ovulated Rana pipiens oocytes (metaphase I) were studied using the voltage-clamp technique. At this stage of maturity the oocyte can produce action potentials in response to depolarizing current or as an "off response" to hyperpolarizing current. Reducing external Na+ to 1/10 normal (choline substituted) eliminated the action potentials and both the negative-slope region and zero-crossing of the I-V relation. Reducing external Cl- to 1/10 or 1/100 normal (methanesulfonate substituted) lengthened the action potential. The outward current was reduced and a net inward current was revealed. By changing external Na+, Cl-, and K+ concentrations and using blocking agents (SITS, TEA), three voltage- and time-dependent currents were identified, INa, IK and ICl. The Na+ current activated at about 0 mV and reversed at very positive values which decreased during maturation. Inward Na+ current produced the upstroke of the action potential. During each voltage-clamp step the Na+ current activated slowly (seconds) and did not inactivate within many minutes. The Na+ current was not blocked by TTX at micromolar concentrations. The K+ current was present only in the youngest oocytes. Because IK was superimposed on a large leakage current, it appeared to reverse at the resting potential. When leakage currents were subtracted, the reversal potential for IK was more negative than -110 mV in Ringer's solution. IK was outwardly rectifying and strongly activated above -50 mV. The outward K+ current produced an after hyperpolarization at the end of each action potential. IK was blocked completely and reversibly by 20 mM external TEA. The Cl- current activated at about +10 mV and was outwardly rectifying. ICl was blocked completely and reversibly by 400 microM SITS added to the bathing medium. This current helped repolarize the membrane following an action potential in the youngest oocytes and was the only repolarizing current in more mature oocytes that had lost IK. The total leakage current had an apparently linear I-V relation and was separated into two components: a Na+ current (IN) and a smaller component carried by as yet unidentified ions.  相似文献   

20.
Sodium and calcium currents in dispersed mammalian septal neurons   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Voltage-gated Na+ and Ca2+ conductances of freshly dissociated septal neurons were studied in the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. All cells exhibited a large Na+ current with characteristic fast activation and inactivation time courses. Half-time to peak current at -20 mV was 0.44 +/- 0.18 ms and maximal activation of Na+ conductance occurred at 0 mV or more positive membrane potentials. The average value was 91 +/- 32 nS (approximately 11 mS cm-2). At all membrane voltages inactivation was well fitted by a single exponential that had a time constant of 0.44 +/- 0.09 ms at 0 mV. Recovery from inactivation was complete in approximately 900 ms at -80 mV but in only 50 ms at -120 mV. The decay of Na+ tail currents had a single time constant that at -80 mV was faster than 100 microseconds. Depolarization of septal neurons also elicited a Ca2+ current that peaked in approximately 6-8 ms. Maximal peak Ca2+ current was obtained at 20 mV, and with 10 mM external Ca2+ the amplitude was 0.35 +/- 0.22 nA. During a maintained depolarization this current partially inactivated in the course of 200-300 ms. The Ca2+ current was due to the activity of two types of conductances with different deactivation kinetics. At -80 mV the closing time constants of slow (SD) and fast (FD) deactivating channels were, respectively, 1.99 +/- 0.2 and 0.11 +/- 0.03 ms (25 degrees C). The two kinds of channels also differed in their activation voltage, inactivation time course, slope of the conductance-voltage curve, and resistance to intracellular dialysis. The proportion of SD and FD channels varied from cell to cell, which may explain the differential electrophysiological responses of intracellularly recorded septal neurons.  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