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1.
Summary Enterrocytes from the intestinal epithelium of the winter flounder were isolated by collagenase digestion and incubated in flounder Ringer solution. Conventional whole-cell and amphotericin-perforated whole-cell recording techniques were used to characterize the properties of a voltage-activated K current present in dissociated cells. Resting membrane potentials and series resistances were significantly lower (from –23 to – 39 mV and 29 to 13 M, respectively) when amphotericin was used to achieve the whole-cell configuration. When cells were placed in flounder Ringer solution, held at –80 mV and subsequently stepped to a series of depolarizing voltages (from–70 to 0 mV), an outward current was observed that exhibited inactivation at voltages above –20 mV. This current was sensitive to holding potential and was not activated when the cells were held at –40 mV or above. When cells were bathed in symmetric K Ringer solution and the same voltage protocol was applied to the cell, inward currents were observed in response to the negative intracellular potentials. Reversal potentials at two different extracellular K concentrations were consistent with K as the currentcarrying ion. BaCl2 (2 mM) and CsCl (0.5 mM) both produced voltage-dependent blockade of the current when added to the bathing solution. Charybdotoxin (300 nM extracellular concentration) completely blocked the current. The IC50 for charybdotoxin was 50 nM. Cyclic. GMP inhibited the voltage-activated current in flounder Ringer and in symmetric K Ringer solution. The cyclic GMP analog, 8-Br cGMP, lowered the threshold for voltage activation and potentiated inactivation of the current at voltages above–40 mV. Previous studies with intact flounder epithelium showed that K recycling and net K secretion were inhibited by Ba2+ and by cGMP. We suggest that the channel responsible for the whole-cell current described in this study may be important in K recycling and secretion.  相似文献   

2.
Ion transport measured as short circuit current (Isc) across the skin of larval frogs is activated by amiloride, acetylcholine, and ATP. In many epithelia, ATP stimulation of Isc involves an increase in intracellular calcium. To define the role of changes in intracellular calcium in ATP stimulation of Isc in larval frog skin, epithelial cells were loaded with calcium by adding 5 μM ionomycin to a 2 mM calcium apical Ringer's solution. Calcium loading had no observable effect on baseline Isc or on stimulation by ATP. Minimizing changes in intracellular calcium by loading the cell with the calcium chelator BAPTA also had no measurable effect on ATP stimulation of Isc. When the apical side was bathed with Ca2+-free Ringer's solution, ionomycin increased Isc up to 15 μA. This increase was partially blocked by 2 mM Ca2+, 2 mM Mg2+, and 10 μM W-7. Other experiments showed that baseline-stimulated and ATP-stimulated Isc were always larger in 2 mM Mg2+ Ringer's compared to 2 mM Ca2+. In dissociated cells bathed in 2 mM Ca2+ Ringer's, ATP had no effect on intracellular calcium as measured by Fluo-LR fluorescence changes. In conclusion, ATP apparently stimulates Isc without concomitant changes in intracellular calcium. This is consistent with a directly ligand-gated receptor at the apical membrane with P2X-like characteristics. Accepted: 21 April 1999  相似文献   

3.
Alison Taylor  Colin Brownlee 《Planta》1993,189(1):109-119
The electrical properties of unfertilized eggs of Fucus serratus L. were characterized using voltage clamp and current clamp with single electrodes. The plasma membrane of the unfertilized egg is excitable. Depolarizing the egg in current clamp induced a transient depolarizing voltage response, the amplitude of which was dependent on the presence of external Ca2+ or Ba2+ and was blocked by La3+. The repolarizing phase was blocked by tetraethylammonium ions. Repeated stimulation at frequencies greater than 0.5 Hz caused a transient loss of excitability. Voltage-clamp experiments revealed that an inward current with an activation threshold of -35 mV underlies the depolarizing phase of the voltage response. This current showed rapid activation and slow inactivation. The current was blocked by La3+ and could be carried by Ca2+ and Ba2+ but not by Sr2+ or Na+. Further depolarization to values more positive than-5 mV induced a slowly activating outward K+ current in addition to the inward current, which corresponded to the repolarizing phase of the voltage response. This K+ current showed little or no inactivation during stimulation and slow deactivation on return to the resting potential. Hyperpolarizing the egg elicited an inward current. On fertilization, the Fucus egg generates a depolarizing fertilization potential. Voltage-clamp experiments revealed an inward fertilization current underlying the fertilization potential. Within 15 min of fertilization a dramatic, irreversible increase in resting K+ permeability developed. The roles of the plasma-membrane channels in generation of the fertilization potential and egg activation are discussed.Abbreviations and Symbols ASW artificial seawater - SECC single-electrode current clamp - SEVC single-electrode voltage clamp - TEA tetraethylammonium - Vm membrane potential This work was supported by The Marine Biological Association U.K., Science and Engineering Research Council U.K. and The Royal Society of London.  相似文献   

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

5.
In order to test the hypothesis that excitation in Drosophila photoreceptors is mediated by Ca2+ released from internal stores, the Ca2+ buffers EGTA, BAPTA and di-bromo-BAPTA (DBB) were introduced into dissociated photoreceptors via whole-cell recording pipettes. All buffers were preloaded with Ca2+ to provide the same free Ca2+ concentration (250 nM). EGTA (up to 18 mM free buffer) had only weak effects upon voltage-clamped flash responses in normal Ringer's solution (1.5 mM Ca 0 2+ ), and no effect in Ca2+-free solution. The maximum BAPTA concentration tested (14.4 mM free BAPTA) reduced the initial rate of rise by ca. 5000-fold in normal Ringer's solution; by ca. 500-fold in Ca2+free solution; and only ca. 60-fold in the absence of Mg2+, which preferentially blocks one component of the light-sensitive current. Although BAPTA delayed the time-to-peak in normal Ringer's solution, responses in Ca2+ free Ringer's solution were accelerated. These results support the role of Ca2+ influx in regulating sensitivity and response kinetics; however, in view of the high concentrations required to attenuate responses in Ca2+ free Ringer's solution, the role of Ca2+ release in excitation remains unclear. DBB was ca. 2–3 fold more potent than BAPTA, and at concentrations > 5 mM had a qualitatively different action, greatly delaying the time-to-peak. This suggests DBB may have distinct pharmacological actions or access to compartments inaccessible to BAPTA.The only current activated by introducing 5–500 M Ca2+ (buffered with nitrilo-triacetic acid) was electrogenic Na+/Ca2+ exchange. When this was blocked by removing Nao 0 + , a novel cationic conductance was activated. However, its properties did not resemble those the light-activated conductance, and thus do not support the hypothesis that Ca2+ is sufficient for excitation.Abbreviations BAPTA bis-(o-aminophenoxy)-ethane-N,N,N-tetracetic acid - DBB Di-bromo-bapta - NTA nitrilo-triacetic acid - InsP 3 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate  相似文献   

6.
7.
There have been periodic reports of nonclassic (4-aminopyridine insensitive) transient outward K+ current in guinea pig ventricular myocytes, with the most recent one describing a novel voltage-gated inwardly rectifying type. In the present study, we have investigated a transient outward current that overlaps inward Ca2+ current (I(Ca,L)) in myocytes dialyzed with 10 mM K+ solution and superfused with Tyrode's solution. Although depolarizations from holding potential (Vhp) -40 to 0 mV elicited relatively small inward I(Ca,L) in these myocytes, removal of external K+ or addition of 0.2 mM Ba2+ more than doubled the amplitude of the current. The basis of the enhancement of I(Ca,L) was the suppression of a large transient outward K+ current. Similar enhancement was observed when Vhp was moved to -80 mV and test depolarizations were preceded by short prepulses to -40 mV. Investigation of the time and voltage properties of the outward K+ transient indicated that it was inwardly rectifying and unlikely to be carried by voltage-gated channels. The outward transient was attenuated in myocytes dialyzed with high-Mg2+ solution, accelerated in myocytes dialyzed with 100 microM spermine solution, and abolished with time in myocytes dialyzed with ATP-free solution. These and other findings suggest that the outward transient is a component of classic "time-independent" inwardly rectifying K+ current.  相似文献   

8.
Summary In this paper we describe current fluctuations in the mammalian epithelium, rabbit descending colon. Pieces of isolated colon epithelium bathed in Na+ or K+ Ringer's solutions were studied under short-circuit conditions with the current noise spectra recorded over the range of 1–200 Hz. When the epithelium was bathed on both sides with Na+ Ringer's solution (the mucosal solution contained 50 m amiloride), no Lorentzian components were found in the power spectrum. After imposition of a potassium gradient across the epithelium by replacement of the mucosal solution by K+ Ringer's (containing 50 m amiloride), a Lorentzian component appeared with an average corner frequency,f c=15.6±0.91 Hz and a mean plateau valueS o=(7.04±2.94)×10–20 A2 sec/cm2. The Lorentzian component was enhanced by voltage clamping the colon in a direction favorable for K+ entry across the apical membrane. Elimination of the K+ gradient by bathing the colon on both sides with K+ Ringer's solutions abolished the noise signal. The Lorentzian component was also depressed by mucosal addition of Cs+ or tetraethylammonium (TEA) and by serosal addition of Ba2+. The one-sided action of these K+ channel blockers suggests a cellular location for the fluctuating channels. Addition of nystatin to the mucosal solution abolished the Lorentzian component. Serosal nystatin did not affect the Lorentzian noise. This finding indicates an apical membrane location for the fluctuating channels. The data were similar in some respects to K+ channel fluctuations recorded from the apical membranes of amphibian epithelia such as the frog skin and toad gallbladder. The results are relevant to recent reports concerning transcellular potassium secretion in the colon and indicate that the colon possesses spontaneously fluctuating potassium channels in its apical membranes in parallel to the Na+ transport pathway.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Veratridine opens voltage-dependent Na+ channels in many metazoans. InParamecium, which has voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels and a Ca/K action potential, no such Na+ channels are known. A Ca-inward current is correlated to an intracellular increase in cGMP. The addition of veratridine toParamecium wildtype and to pawn mutant cells, which lack the Ca-inward current, transiently increased intracellular levels of cGMP about sevenfold to 40 pmol/mg protein. A half-maximal effect was obtained with 250 m veratridine. The increase in cGMP was maximal about 15 sec after the addition of veratridine and declined rapidly afterwards. Intracellular cAMP levels were not affected. The effect of veratridine on cGMP was dependent on the presence of extracellular Ca2+. The time dependence and extent of stimulation closely resembled the effects observed after stimulation by Ba2+, which causes the repetitive firing of action potentials, Ca-dependent ciliary reversal, and cGMP formation. The effects of Ba2+ and veratridine were not additive. Wildtype cells and, surprisingly, also pawn mutant cells showed avoiding reactions upon addition of veratridine indicating that it induced a Ca2+ influx into the cilia, which causes ciliary reversal. The potency of veratridine to stimulate cGMP formation was little affected by Na+ in wildtype cells, three pawn mutant strains, and in the cell line fast-2, which is defective in a Ca-dependent Na-inward current. Divalent cations (Ca2+, Mg2+, and Ba2+) inhibited the effects the veratridine similar to metazoan cells. The results indicate that veratridine can open the voltage-operated Ca2+ channels inParamecium wildtype and, most interestingly, in pawn mutant cells. The pawn mutation is suggested to represent a defect in the activation of the Ca2+ channel. This explains the lack of differences in ciliary proteins between wildtype and pawn cells reported earlier.  相似文献   

10.
Macroscopic instantaneous and time-dependent currents have been measured in the vacuolar membrane of Beta vulgaris using a patch clamp configuration analogous to whole cell mode. At low cytosolic Ca2+ and in the absence of Mg2+, only an instantaneous current was observed. This current is carried predominantly by cations (PKPCl 71, pnapcl 41 and arginine is also conducted). The instantaneous current can be activated by ATP4– (e.g., ATP-activated mean K+ current density was –20 mA.m–2 at a membrane voltage of –20 mV) and by increasing cytosolic pH and Mg2+ (raising Mg2+ from 0 to 0.4 mm induced a mean current density increase of –7 mA.m–2 at –20 mV). Such current can be activated by simultaneous addition of putative in vivo concentrations of ATP4–/MgATP/Mg free 2+ (in the presence of bafilomycin to inhibit the vacuolar ATPase) and further modulated by cytosolic pH. With vacuolar K+ concentration greater than that of the cytosol, activation of the instantaneous current would mediate vacuolar K+ release over the range of physiological membrane voltage. It is argued that the ATP4–-activated current, in addition to acting as a K+ mobilization pathway, could provide a counter-ion (shunt) conductance, allowing the two electrogenic H+ pumps which reside in the vacuolar membrane to acidify the vacuolar lumen.A separate time-dependent current, which was not observed at low Ca2+ concentrations (less than 500 nm) could also be elicited by addition of Mg2+ at the cytoplasmic membrane face. This current was stimulated by increasing cytoplasmic pH.The authors are grateful to the BBSRC for financial support (Grant PG87/529) and to the Royal Society (University Research Fellowship to J.M.D.). We thank C. Abbott, K. Partridge and J. Robinson for plant cultivation; A. Amtmann, A. Bertl, D. Gradmann and G. Thiel for helpful discussion.  相似文献   

11.
  • 1.1.We applied whole cell voltage clamp techniques to freshly dissociated rat placental cells (20–21 days gestation). Tetraethylammonium (TEA)-sensitive outward currents were recorded in about 50% of cells.
  • 2.2.The outward current had a reversal potential of -50mV which is more positive than the potassium equilibrium potential (−82mV).
  • 3.3.The bath solution without NaCI decreased the outward current amplitude, while the elimination of only Na ions from the bath solution did not modify the outward current.
  • 4.4.The results suggest a possible contribution of chloride ions to the outward currents in rat placental cells.
  相似文献   

12.
Summary Cell K activity,a k, was measured in the short-circuited frog skin by simultaneous cell punctures from the apical surface with open-tip and K-selective microelectrodes. Strict criteria for acceptance of impalements included constancy of the open-tip microelectrode resistance, agreement within 3% of the fractional apical voltage measured with open-tip and K-selective microelectrodes, and constancy of the differential voltage recorded between the open-tip and the K microelectrodes 30–60 sec after application of amiloride or substitution of apical Na. Skins were bathed on the serosal surface with NaCl Ringer and, to reduce paracellular Cl conductance and effects of amiloride on paracellular conductance, with NaNO3 Ringer on the apical surface.Under control conditionsa k r was nearly constant among skins (mean±SD=92±8mM, 14 skins) in spite of a wide range of cellular currents (5 to 70 A/cm2). Cell current (and transcellular Na transport) was inhibited by either apical addition of amiloride or substitution of Na by other cations. Although in some experiments the expected small increase ina k r after inhibition of cell current was observed, on the average the change was not significant (98±11mM after amiloride, 101±12mM after Na substitution), even 30 min after the inhibition of cell current. The membrane potential, which in the control state ranged from –42 to –77 mV, hyperpolarized after inhibition of cell current, initially to –109±5mV, then depolarizing to a stable value (–88±5mV) after 15–25 min. At this time K was above equilibrium (E k=98±2mV), indicating that the active pump mechanism is still operating after inhibition of transcellular Na transport.The measurement ofa k r permitted the calculation of the passive K current and pump current under control conditions. assuming a constant current source with almost all of the basolateral conductance attributable to K. We found a significant correlation between pump current and cell current with a slope of 0.31, indicating that about one-third of the cell current is carried by the pump, i.e., a pump stoichiometry of 3Na/2K.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Stage V and VI (Dumont, J.N., 1972.J. Morphol. 136:153–180) oocytes ofXenopus laevis were treated with collagenase to remove follicular cells and were placed in K-free solution for 2 to 4 days to elevate internal [Na]. Na/K pump activity was studied by restoring the eggs to normal 3mm K Barth's solution and measuring membrane current-voltage (I–V) relationships before and after the addition of 10 m dihydroouabain (DHO) using a two-microelectrode voltage clamp. Two pulse protocols were used to measure membraneI–V relationships, both allowing membrane currents to be determined twice at each of a series of membrane potentials: (i) a down-up-down sequence of 5 mV, 1-sec stair steps and (ii) a similar sequence of 1-sec voltage pulses but with consecutive pulses separated by 4-sec recovery periods at the holding potential (–40 mV). The resulting membraneI–V relationships determined both before and during exposure to DHO showed significant hysteresis between the first and second current measurements at each voltage. DHO difference curves also usually showed hysteresis indicating that DHO caused a change in a component of current that varied with time. Since, by definition, the steady-state Na/K pumpI–V relationship must be free of hysteresis, the presence of hysteresis in DHO differenceI–V curves can be used as a criterion for excluding such data from consideration as a valid measure of the Na/K pumpI–V relationship. DHO differenceI–V relationships that did not show hysteresis were sigmoid functions of membrane potential when measured in normal (90mm) external Na solution. The Na/K pump current magnitude saturated near 0 mV at a value of 1.0–1.5 A cm–2, without evidence of negative slope conductance for potentials up to +55 mV. The Na/K pump current magnitude in Na-free external solution was approximately voltage independent. Since these forward-going Na/K pumpI–V relationships do not show a region of negative slope over the voltage range –110 to +55 mV, it is not necessary to postulate the existence of more than one voltage-dependent step in the reaction cycle of the forward-going Na/K pump.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Outward rectifying. cation channels were observed in the epithelial cells of the urinary bladder of the toad.Bufo marinus. As studied in isolated cells using the patch-clamp technique, the channel has an average conductance of 24 and 157 pS for pipette potentials between 0 and +60 mV and –60 to –100 mV, respectively, when the major cation in both bath and pipette solutions is K+. The conductance of the cannel decreasen with increasing dehydration energy of the permeant monovalent cation in the oder Rb+=K+>Na+>Li+. Reversal potentials near zero under biionic conditions imply that the permeabilities for all four of these cations are smiliar. The channel is sensitive to quinidine sulfate but not to amiloride. It shares several pharmacological and biophysical properties with an outwardly-rectifying, vasopressin-sensitive pical K+ conductive pathway described previously for the toad urinary bladder. We demonstrate, in both single-channel and whole-bladder studies, that the outward rectification is a consequence of interaction of the chanel with extracellular divalent cations, particularly Ca2+, which blocks inward but not outward current. Various divalent cations impart different degrees of outward rectification to the conductive pathway. Concentrations of Mg2+ and Ca2+ required for halfmaximal effect are 3×10–4 and 10–4 m, resopectively. For Co2+ the values are 10–6 m at +50 mV and a 10–4 m at +200 mV. The mechanism of blockade by divalent cations is not established, but does not seem to involve a voltage-dependent interaction in which the blocker penetrates the transmembrane electric field. In the absence of divalent cations in the mucosal solution, the magnitudes of inward current carried by Rb+, K+, Na+ and Li+ through the apical K+ pathway at any transepithelial voltage, are in the same order as in the single-channel studies. We propose that the cation channel observed by us in isolated epithelial cells is the single-channel correlate of the vasopressin-sensitive apical K+ conductive pathway in the toad urinary bladder and is also related to the oxytocin- and divalent cation-sensitive apical condictivity observed in frog skin and urinary bladder.  相似文献   

15.
Summary When bathed on both sides with identical chloride-containing salines thein vitro preparation of the plaice intestine maintains a negative (serosa to mucosa) short-circuit current of 107±11 A/cm2, a transepithelial potential difference of 5.5±0.6 mV (serosa negative), and a mean mucosal membrane potential of –45.4±0.6 mV. Under these conditions the intracellular chloride activity is 32mm.If chloride in the bathing media is partially, or completely substituted by thiocyanate the measured electrical parameters do not change but transepithelial flux determinations show a reduction in chloride fluxes and the presence of a significant thiocyanate flux. The addition of piretanide (10–4 m) reduced the short-circuit current and the mucosa-to-serosa fluxes of chloride and thiocyanate; this inhibition is similar to the effect of piretanide on chloride transport in this tissue.The results indicate that thiocyanate is transported in this tissue via the piretanide-sensitive chloride pathway and are compared with the effects of thiocyanate on other tissues reported in the literature.  相似文献   

16.
Using a patch-clamp technique in the whole-cell configuration, we studied the effect of a nitric oxide (NO) donor, nitroglycerin (NG), on outward transmembrane ion current in isolated smooth muscle cells (SMC) of the main pulmonary artery of the rabbit. We also studied the characteristics of unitary high-conductance Ca2+-dependent K+ channels (KCa channels) in the SMC membrane in the cell-attached and outside-out configurations. Nitroglycerin in a 10 M concentration increased the amplitude and intensified oscillations of outward transmembrane current induced by step depolarization. In this case, the threshold of activation of the current (–40 mV) did not change. If the potential was +70 mV, the transmembrane current in the presence of NG increased, as compared with the control, by 32.6 ± 19.4% (n = 6), on average. Simultaneous addition of 10 M NG and 1 mM tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA), a blocker of KCa channels, to the external solution at the potential of +70 mV decreased the amplitude of outward transmembrane current with respect to the control by 25.2 ± 11% (n = 6) and suppressed oscillations of this current. In the series of experiments carried out in the outside-out configuration (concentration of K+ ions in the external solution was 5.9 mM), we calculated the conductance of a single KCa channel, which was approximately 150 pS. In the case where the potential was equal to +40 mV, 1 mM TEA suppressed completely the current through unitary KCa channels. In the series of experiments performed in the cell-attached configuration, 100 M NG to a considerable extent intensified the activity of unitary high-conductance KCa channels by increasing the probability of the channel open state (P 0), on average, by 80 ± 1%, as compared with the control. In this case, NG did not influence the conductance of single KCa channels. We concluded that the NO donor NG increases the amplitude of outward transmembrane current in SMC of the rabbit main pulmonary artery by stimulation of the activity of TEA-sensitive high-conductance KCa channels. Our experiments carried out on single KCa channels demonstrated that the activating effect of NG on KCa channels is realized at the expense of an increase in the P 0 of these channels, but not of a change in the conductance of single channels.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Summary When a bundle of cardiac muscle cells is hyperpolarized, membrane current declines with time. Voltage clamp experiments on sheep and cat ventricular bundles showed that the magnitude of inward current depended on the external K+ concentration. Following prolonged hyperpolarization, membrane current near the resting potential was generally outward. The half-time of decay of this outward current was approximately 2.5 sec at –60 mV. The potential measured in the absence of externally supplied current was generally more negative than it would have been without conditioning hyperpolarization.The half-time of recovery of the current response following hyperpolarization was also approximately 2.5 sec at –60 mV, a factor of approximately 3.7 slower than the preceding decline of inward current. The rate of recovery has only a slight temperature dependence (Q 101.2).The experimental results are consistent with the idea that during hyperpolarization K+ is depleted from approximately 3% of the total muscle volume, and that the replenishment of K+ occurs primarily by K+ diffusion from a much larger fraction of the extracellular space.  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.
Summary Taste discs were dissected from the tongue ofR. ridibunda and their cells dissociated by a collagenase/low Ca/mechanical agitation protocol. The resulting cell suspension contained globular epithelial cells and, in smaller number, taste receptor cells. These were identified by staining properties and by their preserved apical process, the tip of which often remained attached to an epithelial (associated) cell. When the patch pipette contained 110mm KCl and the cells were superfused with NaCl Ringer's during whole-cell recording, the mean zero-current potential of 22 taste receptor cells was –65.2 mV and the slope resistance 150 to 750 M. Pulse-depolarization from a holding voltage of –80 mV activated a transient TTX-blockable inward Na current. Activation became noticeable at –25 mV and was half-maximal at –8 mV. Steady-state inactivation was half-maximal at –67 mV and complete at –50 mV. Peak Na current averaged –0.5 nA/cell. The Ca-ionophore A23187 shifted the activation and inactivation curve to more negative voltages. Similar shifts occurred when the pipette Ca was raised. External Ni (5mm) shifted the activation curve towards positive voltages by 10 mV. Pulse depolarization also activated outward K currents. Activation was slower than that of Na current and inactivation slower still. External TEA (7.5mm) and 4-aminopyridine (1mm) did not block, but 5mm Ba blocked the K currents. K-tail currents were seen on termination of depolarizing voltage pulses. A23187 shifted theI K(V)-curve to more negative voltages. Action potentials were recorded when passing pulses of depolarizing outward current. Of the frog gustatory stimulants, 10mm Ca caused a reversible 5-to 10-mV depolarization in the current-clamp mode. Quinine (0.1mm, bitter) produced a reversible depolarization accompanied by a full block of Na current and, with slower time-course, a partial block of K currents. Cyclic AMP (5mm in the external solution or 0.5 m in the pipette) caused reversible depolarization (to –40 to –20 mV) due to partial blockage of K currents, but only if ATP was added to the pipette solution. Similar responses were elicited by stimulating the adenylate cyclase with forskolin. Blockage of cAMP-phosphodiesterase enhanced the response to cAMP. These results suggest that cAMP may be one of the cytosolic messengers in taste receptor cells. Replacement of ATP by AMP-PNP in the pipette abolished the depolarizing response to cAMP. Inclusion of ATP--S in the pipette caused slow depolarization to –40 to –20 mV, due to partial blockage of K currents. Subsequently, cAMP was without effect. The remaining K currents were blockable by Ba. These results suggest that cAMP initiates phosphorylation of one set of K channels to a nonconducting conformation.  相似文献   

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