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1.
Although ion permeation and gating of L-type Ca(2+) channels are generally considered separate processes controlled by distinct components of the channel protein, ion selectivity can vary with the kinetic state. To test this possibility, we studied single-channel currents (cell-attached) of recombinant L-type channels (Ca(V)1.2, beta(2a), and alpha(2)delta) transiently expressed in tsA201 cells in the presence of the channel agonist BayK 8644 which promotes long channel openings (Mode 2 openings). We found that both the brief (Mode 1) and long (Mode 2) mean open times in the presence of Ca(2+) were relatively longer than those with Ba(2+). The unitary slope conductance with Ba(2+) was significantly larger (p<0.05) in Mode 2 openings than for brief Mode 1 openings, whereas the conductance with Ca(2+) did not vary with mode gating. Consequently, the gamma(Ba):gamma(Ca) ratio was greater for Mode 2 than Mode 1 openings. Our findings indicate that both ion permeation and gating kinetics of the L-type channel are differentially modulated by permeable ions. Ca(2+) binding to the L-type channel may stabilize the alteration of channel ion permeability mediated by gating kinetics, and thus, play a role in preventing excessive ion entry when the activation gating of the channel is promoted to the prolonged open state.  相似文献   

2.
Although a considerable number of studies have characterized inactivation and facilitation of macroscopic L-type Ca(2+) channel currents, the single channel properties underlying these important regulatory processes have only rarely been examined using Ca(2+) ions. We have compared unitary L-type Ca(2+) channel currents recorded with a low concentration of Ca(2+) ions with those recorded with Ba(2+) ions to elucidate the ionic dependence of the mechanisms responsible for the prepulse-dependent modulation of Ca(2+) channel gating kinetics. Conditioning prepulses were applied across a wide range of voltages to examine their effects on the subsequent Ca(2+) channel activity, recorded at a constant test potential. All recordings were made in the absence of any Ca(2+) channel agonists. Moderate-depolarizing prepulses resulted in a decrease in the probability of opening of the Ca(2+) channels during subsequent test voltage steps (inactivation), the extent of which was more dramatic with Ca(2+) ions than Ba(2+) ions. Facilitation, or increase of the average probability of opening with strong predepolarization, was due to long-duration mode 2 openings with Ca(2+) ions and Ba(2+) ions, despite a decrease in Ca(2+) channel availability (inactivation) under these conditions. The degree of both prepulse-induced inactivation and facilitation decreased with increasing Ba(2+) ion concentration. The time constants (and their proportions) describing the distributions of Ca(2+) channel open times (which reflect mode switching) were also prepulse-, and ion-dependent. These results support the hypothesis that both prior depolarization and the nature and concentration of permeant ions modulate the gating properties of cardiac L-type Ca(2+) channels.  相似文献   

3.
We determined the gating and permeation properties of single L-type Ca(2+) channels, using hair cells and varying concentrations (5-70 mM) of the charge carriers Ba(2+) and Ca(2+). The channels showed distinct gating modes with high- and low-open probability. The half-activation voltage (V(1/2)) shifted in the hyperpolarizing direction from high to low permeant ion concentrations consistent with charge screening effects. However, the differences in the slope of the voltage shifts (in VM(-1)) between Ca(2+) (0.23) and Ba(2+) (0.13), suggest that channel-ion interaction may also contribute to the gating of the channel. We examined the effect of mixtures of Ba(2+) and Ca(2+) on the activation curve. In 5 mM Ca(2+), the V(1/2) was, -26.4 +/- 2.0 mV compared to Ba(2+), -34.7 +/- 2.9 mV, as the charge carrier. However, addition of 1 mM Ba(2+) in 4 mM Ca(2+), a molar ratio, which yielded an anomalous-mole fraction effect, was sufficient to shift the V(1/2) to -34.7 +/- 1.5 mV. Although Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation of the L-type channels in hair cells can yield the present findings, we provide evidence that the anomalous gating of the channel may stem from the closed interaction between ion permeation and gating.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated the mechanism whereby ions cross dihydropyridine- sensitive (L-type) Ca channels in guinea pig ventricular myocytes. At the single-channel level, we found no evidence of an anomalous mole- fraction effect like that reported previously for whole-cell currents in mixtures of Ba and Ca. With the total concentration of Ba + Ca kept constant at 10 (or 110) mM, neither conductance nor absolute unitary current exhibits a paradoxical decrease when Ba and Ca are mixed, thereby weakening the evidence for a multi-ion permeation scheme. We therefore sought independent evidence to support or reject the multi- ion nature of the L-type Ca channel by measuring conductance at various permeant ion concentrations. Contrary to the predictions of models with only one binding site in the permeation pathway, single-channel conductance does not follow Michaelis-Menten kinetics as Ba activity is increased over three orders of magnitude. Two-fold variation in the Debye length of permeant ion solutions has little effect on conductance, making it unlikely that local surface charge effects could account for these results. Instead, the marked deviation from Michaelis- Menten behavior was best explained by supposing that the permeation pathway contains three or more binding sites that can be occupied simultaneously. The presence of three sites helps explain both a continued rise in conductance as [Ba2+] is increased above 110 mM, and the high single-channel conductance (approximately 7 pS) with 1 mM [Ba2+] as the charge carrier; the latter feature enables the L-type channel to carry surprisingly large currents at physiological divalent cation concentrations. Thus, despite the absence of an anomalous mole- fraction effect between Ba and Ca, we suggest that the L-type Ca channel in heart cells supports ion flux by a single-file, multi-ion permeation mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
The voltage-dependent inhibition of single N-type Ca(2+) channels by noradrenaline (NA) and the delta-opioid agonist D-Pen(2)-D-Pen (5)-enkephalin (DPDPE) was investigated in cell-attached patches of human neuroblastoma IMR32 cells with 100 mM Ba(2+) and 5 microM nifedipine to block L-type channels. In 70% of patches, addition of 20 microM NA + 1 microM DPDPE delayed markedly the first channel openings, causing a four- to fivefold increase of the first latency at +20 mV. The two agonists or NA alone decreased also by 35% the open probability (P(o)), prolonged partially the mean closed time, and increased the number of null sweeps. In contrast, NA + DPDPE had little action on the single-channel conductance (19 versus 19.2 pS) and minor effects on the mean open time. Similarly to macroscopic Ba(2+) currents, the ensemble currents were fast activating at control but slowly activating and depressed with the two agonists. Inhibition of single N-type channels was effectively removed (facilitated) by short and large depolarizations. Facilitatory pre-pulses increased P(o) significantly and decreased fourfold the first latency. Ensemble currents were small and slowly activating before pre-pulses and became threefold larger and fast decaying after facilitation. Our data suggest that slowdown of Ca(2+) channel activation by transmitters is mostly due to delayed transitions from a modified to a normal (facilitated) gating mode. This single-channel gating modulation could be well simulated by a Monte Carlo method using previously proposed kinetic models predicting marked prolongation of first channel openings.  相似文献   

6.
Stretch-activated channels (SACs) were investigated in myocytes isolated from the lateral oviduct in cricket Gryllus bimaculatus using the cell-attached or excised inside-out patch clamp technique. Application of both negative and positive pressure (10-100 cm H(2)O) into the patch pipettes induced the unitary channel current openings. The open probability (NPo) of the channel increased when negative pressure applied into the patch pipettes increased. The single channel conductance for this channel was approximately 20 pS with 140 mM Na(+), K(+), or Cs(+) in the patch pipettes and was approximately 13 pS with 100mM Ca(2+) or Ba(2+) in the patch pipettes. External application of Gd(3+), La(3+), Cd(2+) and Zn(2+)inhibited the channel with the IC(50) values of 14, 15, 28, and 18 microM respectively. Interestingly external application of TEA, a specific blocker of K(+) channel, also inhibited this channel with IC(50) value of 8.8mM. These results show for the first time the presence of stretch activated Ca(2+)-permeable nonselective cation channel in myocytes isolated from the cricket lateral oviduct. The physiological significance of this channel in oviposition behavior is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Ba2+ currents through L-type Ca2+ channels were recorded from cell- attached patches on mouse pancreatic beta cells. In 10 mM Ba2+, single- channel currents were recorded at -70 mV, the beta cell resting membrane potential. This suggests that Ca2+ influx at negative membrane potentials may contribute to the resting intracellular Ca2+ concentration and thus to basal insulin release. Increasing external Ba2+ increased the single-channel current amplitude and shifted the current-voltage relation to more positive potentials. This voltage shift could be modeled by assuming that divalent cations both screen and bind to surface charges located at the channel mouth. The single- channel conductance was related to the bulk Ba2+ concentration by a Langmuir isotherm with a dissociation constant (Kd(gamma)) of 5.5 mM and a maximum single-channel conductance (gamma max) of 22 pS. A closer fit to the data was obtained when the barium concentration at the membrane surface was used (Kd(gamma) = 200 mM and gamma max = 47 pS), which suggests that saturation of the concentration-conductance curve may be due to saturation of the surface Ba2+ concentration. Increasing external Ba2+ also shifted the voltage dependence of ensemble currents to positive potentials, consistent with Ba2+ screening and binding to membrane surface charge associated with gating. Ensemble currents recorded with 10 mM Ca2+ activated at more positive potentials than in 10 mM Ba2+, suggesting that external Ca2+ binds more tightly to membrane surface charge associated with gating. The perforated-patch technique was used to record whole-cell currents flowing through L-type Ca2+ channels. Inward currents in 10 mM Ba2+ had a similar voltage dependence to those recorded at a physiological Ca2+ concentration (2.6 mM). BAY-K 8644 (1 microM) increased the amplitude of the ensemble and whole-cell currents but did not alter their voltage dependence. Our results suggest that the high divalent cation solutions usually used to record single L-type Ca2+ channel activity produce a positive shift in the voltage dependence of activation (approximately 32 mV in 100 mM Ba2+).  相似文献   

8.
We examined the concentration dependence of currents through Ca(V)3.1 T-type calcium channels, varying Ca(2+) and Ba(2+) over a wide concentration range (100 nM to 110 mM) while recording whole-cell currents over a wide voltage range from channels stably expressed in HEK 293 cells. To isolate effects on permeation, instantaneous current-voltage relationships (IIV) were obtained following strong, brief depolarizations to activate channels with minimal inactivation. Reversal potentials were described by P(Ca)/P(Na) = 87 and P(Ca)/P(Ba) = 2, based on Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz theory. However, analysis of chord conductances found that apparent K(d) values were similar for Ca(2+) and Ba(2+), both for block of currents carried by Na(+) (3 muM for Ca(2+) vs. 4 muM for Ba(2+), at -30 mV; weaker at more positive or negative voltages) and for permeation (3.3 mM for Ca(2+) vs. 2.5 mM for Ba(2+); nearly voltage independent). Block by 3-10 muM Ca(2+) was time dependent, described by bimolecular kinetics with binding at approximately 3 x 10(8) M(-1)s(-1) and voltage-dependent exit. Ca(2+)(o), Ba(2+)(o), and Mg(2+)(o) also affected channel gating, primarily by shifting channel activation, consistent with screening a surface charge of 1 e(-) per 98 A(2) from Gouy-Chapman theory. Additionally, inward currents inactivated approximately 35% faster in Ba(2+)(o) (vs. Ca(2+)(o) or Na(+)(o)). The accelerated inactivation in Ba(2+)(o) correlated with the transition from Na(+) to Ba(2+) permeation, suggesting that Ba(2+)(o) speeds inactivation by occupying the pore. We conclude that the selectivity of the "surface charge" among divalent cations differs between calcium channel families, implying that the surface charge is channel specific. Voltage strongly affects the concentration dependence of block, but not of permeation, for Ca(2+) or Ba(2+).  相似文献   

9.
Modulation of smooth muscle, L-type Ca(2+) channels (class C, Ca(V)1.2b) by thionitrite S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) was investigated in the human embryonic kidney 293 expression system at the level of whole-cell and single-channel currents. Extracellular administration of GSNO (2 mM) rapidly reduced whole-cell Ba(2+) currents through channels derived either by expression of alpha1C-b or by coexpression of alpha1C-b plus beta2a and alpha2-delta. The non-thiol nitric oxide (NO) donors 2,2-diethyl-1-nitroso-oxhydrazin (2 mM) and 3-morpholinosydnonimine-hydrochloride (2 mM), which elevated cellular cGMP levels to a similar extent as GSNO, failed to affect Ba(2+) currents significantly. Intracellular administration of copper ions, which promote decomposition of the thionitrite, antagonized its inhibitory effect, and loading of cells with high concentrations of dithiothreitol (2 mM) prevented the effect of GSNO on alpha1C-b channels. Intracellular loading of cells with oxidized glutathione (2 mM) affected neither alpha1C-b channel function nor their modulation by GSNO. Analysis of single-channel behavior revealed that GSNO inhibited Ca(2+) channels mainly by reducing open probability. The development of GSNO-induced inhibition was associated with the transient occurrence of a reduced conductance state of the channel. Our results demonstrate that GSNO modulates the alpha1 subunit of smooth muscle L-type Ca(2+) channels by an intracellular mechanism that is independent of NO release and stimulation of guanylyl cyclase. We suggest S-nitrosation of intracellularly located sulfhydryl groups as an important determinant of Ca(2+) channel gating and conductance.  相似文献   

10.
The pore properties and the reciprocal interactions between permeant ions and the gating of KCNQ channels are poorly understood. Here we used external barium to investigate the permeation characteristics of homomeric KCNQ1 channels. We assessed the Ba(2+) binding kinetics and the concentration and voltage dependence of Ba(2+) steady-state block. Our results indicate that extracellular Ba(2+) exerts a series of complex effects, including a voltage-dependent pore blockade as well as unique gating alterations. External barium interacts with the permeation pathway of KCNQ1 at two discrete and nonsequential sites. (a) A slow deep Ba(2+) site that occludes the channel pore and could be simulated by a model of voltage-dependent block. (b) A fast superficial Ba(2+) site that barely contributes to channel block and mostly affects channel gating by shifting rightward the voltage dependence of activation, slowing activation, speeding up deactivation kinetics, and inhibiting channel inactivation. A model of voltage-dependent block cannot predict the complex impact of Ba(2+) on channel gating in low external K(+) solutions. Ba(2+) binding to this superficial site likely modifies the gating transitions states of KCNQ1. Both sites appear to reside in the permeation pathway as high external K(+) attenuates Ba(2+) inhibition of channel conductance and abolishes its impact on channel gating. Our data suggest that despite the high degree of homology of the pore region among the various K(+) channels, KCNQ1 channels display significant structural and functional uniqueness.  相似文献   

11.
The conduction properties of the alkaline earth divalent cations were determined in the purified sheep cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum ryanodine receptor channel after reconstitution into planar phospholipid bilayers. Under bi-ionic conditions there was little difference in permeability among Ba2+, Ca2+, Sr2+, and Mg2+. However, there was a significant difference between the divalent cations and K+, with the divalent cations between 5.8- and 6.7-fold more permeant. Single-channel conductances were determined under symmetrical ionic conditions with 210 mM Ba2+ and Sr2+ and from the single-channel current-voltage relationship under bi-ionic conditions with 210 mM divalent cations and 210 mM K+. Single-channel conductance ranged from 202 pS for Ba2+ to 89 pS for Mg2+ and fell in the sequence Ba2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Ca2+ greater than Mg2+. Near-maximal single-channel conductance is observed at concentrations as low as 2 mM Ba2+. Single-channel conductance and current measurements in mixtures of Ba(2+)-Mg2+ and Ba(2+)-Ca2+ reveal no anomalous behavior as the mole fraction of the ions is varied. The Ca(2+)-K+ reversal potential determined under bi-ionic conditions was independent of the absolute value of the ion concentrations. The data are compatible with the ryanodine receptor channel acting as a high conductance channel displaying moderate discrimination between divalent and monovalent cations. The channel behaves as though ion translocation occurs in single file with at most one ion able to occupy the conduction pathway at a time.  相似文献   

12.
Myocytes were enzymatically isolated from large epicardial arteries of the pig. In the cell attached configuration, we studied currents through L-type Ca-channels. At 22 degrees C, open channel conductance was 9 pS with 110 mM Ca2+ and 24 pS with 110 mM Ba2+ as charge carrier. According to the life time of the open state, 2 'modes' of gating are distinguished; mode 1 contributed time constants shorter than 1 ms, mode 2 those longer than 6 ms to the open time distribution. Mode 2 openings appeared spontaneously, more frequently with Ba2+ than with Ca2+ as charge carrier. The Ca-agonist Bay K 8644 (0.5 microM) facilitated the appearance of mode 2. Bath application of the phenylalkylamine D600 (1 microM) did not change the gating modes, but it reduced the channel openness by increasing the percentage of blank records. With whole cell recordings, we studied reduction of ICa by 1 microM D 600 at 3.6 mM [Ca2+] and 35 degrees C. At a holding potential of -45 mV, D 600 induced an 'initial block' of 35% (10% at -65 mV). Upon repetitive 1 Hz pulsing (170 ms to 0 mV) an additional, 'use-dependent' block developed with time. More negative holding potentials attenuated reduction of ICa by D 600, hyperpolarizations to -100 mV had an 'unblocking' effect. In regard to reduction of ICa, we compared the partially uncharged D 600 (membrane permeable) with the completely charged compound D 890 (membrane impermeable). When applied with the bath, 1 or 10 microM D 600 reduced ICa dose-dependently whereas D 890 was ineffective. When D 890 was applied via the patch electrode to the cytosol, it reduced ICa. We discuss that D 600 enters the cell in the uncharged lipid soluble form and reaches form the inside its receptor associated with the Ca-channel.  相似文献   

13.
Little is known about the native properties of unitary cardiac L-type calcium currents (i(Ca)) measured with physiological calcium (Ca) ion concentration, and their role in excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling. Our goal was to chart the concentration-dependence of unitary conductance (gamma) to physiological Ca concentration and compare it to barium ion (Ba) conductance in the absence of agonists. In isolated, K-depolarized rat myocytes, i(Ca) amplitudes were measured using cell-attached patches with 2 to 70 mM Ca or 2 to 105 mM Ba in the pipette. At 0 mV, 2 mM of Ca produced 0.12 pA, and 2 mM of Ba produced 0.19 pA unitary currents. Unitary conductance was described by a Langmuir isotherm relationship with a maximum gammaCa of 5.3 +/- 0.2 pS (n = 15), and gammaBa of 15 +/- 1 pS (n = 27). The concentration producing half-maximal gamma, Kd(gamma), was not different between Ca (1.7 +/- 0.3 mM) and Ba (1.9 +/- 0.4 mM). We found that quasi-physiological concentrations of Ca produced currents that were as easily resolvable as those obtained with the traditionally used higher concentrations. This study leads to future work on the molecular basis of E-C coupling with a physiological concentration of Ca ions permeating the Ca channel.  相似文献   

14.
Effects of changing cytosolic free Mg(2+) concentration on L-type Ca(2+) (I(Ca)) and Ba(2+) currents (I(Ba)) were investigated in rat ventricular myocytes voltage-clamped with pipettes containing 0.2 or 1.8mM [Mg(2+)] ([Mg(2+)](p)) buffered with 30mM citrate and 10mM ATP. Increasing [Mg(2+)](p) from 0.2 to 1.8mM reduced current amplitude and accelerated its decay under a variety of experimental conditions. To investigate the mechanism for these effects, steady-state and instantaneous current-voltage relationships were studied with two-pulse and tail current (I(T)) protocols, respectively. Increasing [Mg(2+)](p) shifted the V(M) for half inactivation by -20mV but dramatically decreased I(Ca) amplitude at all potentials tested, consistent with a change in gating kinetics that decreases channel availability. This conclusion was supported by analysis of I(T) amplitude, but these latter experiments also suggested that, in the millimolar concentration range, [Mg(2+)](p) might also inhibit permeation through open Ca(2+) channels at positive V(M).  相似文献   

15.
In flagellate green algae, behavioral responses to photo- and mechanoshock are induced by different external stimuli within 10-15 ms. In the accompanying changes in flagella beat, Ca(2+) has important regulatory roles. Although the axonemal Ca(2+) responsive elements are well characterized, analyses of flagellar channels involved in Ca(2+) signalling as well as other ion channels at the single-channel level were not yet conducted in green algae. To gain a further understanding of these important signaling elements in movement responses, intact flagella of Spermatozopsis similis were isolated and characterized and the solubilized flagellar membrane proteins were reconstituted into liposomes. We observed three types of channel activity, two of which were weakly anion and cation-selective and in the high-conductance regime typical for porin-like solute channels. The dominating channel activity was a voltage dependent, rectifying, low conductance (Lambda=80 pS in 50 mM KCl) cation-selective channel modulated by, and highly permeable to, Ca(2+) ions (SFC1: Spermatozopsis flagellar cation channel 1). Depolarizations necessary to activate SFC1 probably only occur in vivo during avoidance reactions of this alga. Ca(2+)-activation of SFC1 points to a direct link to Ca(2+)-mediated signaling pathway(s) in the flagella. Both the response to mechanoshock and SFC1 activity were inhibited by Gd(3+) and Ba(2+), thus supporting our assumption that SFC1 represents a major flagellar ion channel involved in this green algal avoidance reaction.  相似文献   

16.
The single-channel properties for monovalent and divalent cations of a voltage-independent cation channel from Tetrahymena cilia were studied in planar lipid bilayers. The single-channel conductance reached a maximum value as the K+ concentration was increased in symmetrical solutions of K+. The concentration dependence of the conductance was approximated to a simple saturation curve (a single-ion channel model) with an apparent Michaelis constant of 16.3 mM and a maximum conductance of 354 pS. Divalent cations (Ca2+, Ba2+, Sr2+, and Mg2+) also permeated this channel. The sequence of permeability determined by zero current potentials at high ionic concentrations was Ba2+ greater than or equal to K+ greater than or equal to Sr2+ greater than Mg2+ greater than Ca2+. Single-channel conductances for Ca2+ were nearly constant (13.9 pS-20.5 pS) in the concentrations between 0.5 mM and 50 mM Ca-gluconate. In the experiments with mixed solutions of K+ and Ca2+, a maximum conductance of Ca2+ (gamma Camax) and an apparent Michaelis constant of Ca2+ (K Cam) were obtained by assuming a simple competitive relation between the cations. Gamma Camax and K Cam were 14.0 pS and 0.160 mM, respectively. Single-channel conductances in mixed solutions were well-fitted to this competitive model supporting that this cation channel behaves as a single-ion channel. This channel had relatively high-affinity Ca2+-binding sites.  相似文献   

17.
The light-dependent K conductance of hyperpolarizing Pecten photoreceptors exhibits a pronounced outward rectification that is eliminated by removal of extracellular divalent cations. The voltage-dependent block by Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) that underlies such nonlinearity was investigated. Both divalents reduce the photocurrent amplitude, the potency being significantly higher for Ca(2+) than Mg(2+) (K(1/2) approximately 16 and 61 mM, respectively, at V(m) = -30 mV). Neither cation is measurably permeant. Manipulating the concentration of permeant K ions affects the blockade, suggesting that the mechanism entails occlusion of the permeation pathway. The voltage dependency of Ca(2+) block is consistent with a single binding site located at an electrical distance of delta approximately 0.6 from the outside. Resolution of light-dependent single-channel currents under physiological conditions indicates that blockade must be slow, which prompted the use of perturbation/relaxation methods to analyze its kinetics. Voltage steps during illumination produce a distinct relaxation in the photocurrent (tau = 5-20 ms) that disappears on removal of Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) and thus reflects enhancement or relief of blockade, depending on the polarity of the stimulus. The equilibration kinetics are significantly faster with Ca(2+) than with Mg(2+), suggesting that the process is dominated by the "on" rate, perhaps because of a step requiring dehydration of the blocking ion to access the binding site. Complementary strategies were adopted to investigate the interaction between blockade and channel gating: the photocurrent decay accelerates with hyperpolarization, but the effect requires extracellular divalents. Moreover, conditioning voltage steps terminated immediately before light stimulation failed to affect the photocurrent. These observations suggest that equilibration of block at different voltages requires an open pore. Inducing channels to close during a conditioning hyperpolarization resulted in a slight delay in the rising phase of a subsequent light response; this effect can be interpreted as closure of the channel with a divalent ion trapped inside.  相似文献   

18.
Single channel and whole cell recordings were used to study ion permeation through Ca channels in isolated ventricular heart cells of guinea pigs. We evaluated the permeability to various divalent and monovalent cations in two ways, by measuring either unitary current amplitude or reversal potential (Erev). According to whole cell measurements of Erev, the relative permeability sequence is Ca2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Ba2+ for divalent ions; Mg2+ is not measurably permeant. Monovalent ions follow the sequence Li+ greater than Na+ greater than K+ greater than Cs+, and are much less permeant than the divalents. These whole cell measurements were supported by single channel recordings, which showed clear outward currents through single Ca channels at strong depolarizations, similar values of Erev, and similar inflections in the current-voltage relation near Erev. Information from Erev measurements stands in contrast to estimates of open channel flux or single channel conductance, which give the sequence Na+ (85 pS) greater than Li+ (45 pS) greater than Ba2+ (20 pS) greater than Ca2+ (9 pS) near 0 mV with 110-150 mM charge carrier. Thus, ions with a higher permeability, judged by Erev, have lower ion transfer rates. In another comparison, whole cell Na currents through Ca channels are halved by less than 2 microM [Ca]o, but greater than 10 mM [Ca]o is required to produce half-maximal unitary Ca current. All of these observations seem consistent with a recent hypothesis for the mechanism of Ca channel permeation, which proposes that: ions pass through the pore in single file, interacting with multiple binding sites along the way; selectivity is largely determined by ion affinity to the binding sites rather than by exclusion by a selectivity filter; occupancy by only one Ca ion is sufficient to block the pore's high conductance for monovalent ions like Na+; rapid permeation by Ca ions depends upon double occupancy, which only becomes significant at millimolar [Ca]o, because of electrostatic repulsion or some other interaction between ions; and once double occupancy occurs, the ion-ion interaction helps promote a quick exit of Ca ions from the pore into the cell.  相似文献   

19.
CRAC (calcium release-activated Ca(2+)) channels attain an extremely high selectivity for Ca(2+) from the blockade of monovalent cation permeation by Ca(2+) within the pore. In this study we have exploited the blockade by Ca(2+) to examine the size of the CRAC channel pore, its unitary conductance for monovalent cations, and channel gating properties. The permeation of a series of methylammonium compounds under divalent cation-free conditions indicates a minimum pore diameter of 3.9 A. Extracellular Ca(2+) blocks monovalent flux in a manner consistent with a single intrapore site having an effective K(i) of 20 microM at -110 mV. Block increases with hyperpolarization, but declines below -100 mV, most likely due to permeation of Ca(2+). Analysis of monovalent current noise induced by increasing levels of block by extracellular Ca(2+) indicates an open probability (P(o)) of approximately 0.8. By extrapolating the variance/mean current ratio to the condition of full blockade (P(o) = 0), we estimate a unitary conductance of approximately 0.7 pS for Na(+), or three to fourfold higher than previous estimates. Removal of extracellular Ca(2+) causes the monovalent current to decline over tens of seconds, a process termed depotentiation. The declining current appears to result from a reduction in the number of active channels without a change in their high open probability. Similarly, low concentrations of 2-APB that enhance I(CRAC) increase the number of active channels while open probability remains constant. We conclude that the slow regulation of whole-cell CRAC current by store depletion, extracellular Ca(2+), and 2-APB involves the stepwise recruitment of silent channels to a high open-probability gating mode.  相似文献   

20.
L-type Ca channels from porcine cardiac sarcolemma were incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. We characterized interactions of permeant and blocking ions with the channel's pore by (a) studying the current-voltage relationships for Ca2+ and Na+ when equal concentrations of the ions were present in both internal and external solutions, (b) testing the dose-dependent block of Ba2+ currents through the channels by internally applied cadmium, and (c) examining the dose and voltage dependence of the block of Na+ currents through the channels by internally and externally applied Ca2+. We found that the I-V relationship for Na+ appears symmetrical through the origin when equal concentrations of Na+ are present on both sides of the channel (gamma = 90 pS in 200 mM NaCl). The conductance for outward Ca2+ currents with 100 mM Ca2+ on both sides of the channel is approximately 8 pS, a value identical to that observed for inward currents when 100 mM Ca2+ was present outside only. This provides evidence that ions pass through the channel equally well regardless of the direction of net flux. In addition, we find that internal Cd2+ is as effective as external Cd2+ in blocking Ba2+ currents through the channels, again suggesting identical interactions of ions with each end of the pore. Finally, we find that micromolar Ca2+, either in the internal or in the external solution, blocks Na+ currents through the channels. The affinity for internally applied Ca2+ appears the same as that for externally applied Ca2+. The voltage dependence of the Ca(2+)-block suggests that the sites to which Ca2+ binds are located approximately 15% and approximately 85% of the electric field into the pore. Taken together, these data provide direct experimental evidence for the existence of at least two ion binding sites with high affinity for Ca2+, and support the idea that the sites are symmetrically located within the electric field across L-type Ca channels.  相似文献   

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