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1.
Summary Patch-clamp studies of whole-cell ionic currents were carried out in parietal cells obtained by collagenase digestion of the gastric fundus of the guinea pig stomach. Applications of positive command pulses induced outward currents. The conductance became progressively augmented with increasing command voltages, exhibiting an outwardly rectifying current-voltage relation. The current displayed a slow time course for activation. In contrast, inward currents were activated upon hyperpolarizing voltage applications at more negative potentials than the equilibrium potential to K+ (E K). The inward currents showed time-dependent inactivation and an inwardly rectifying current-voltage relation. Tail currents elicited by voltage steps which had activated either outward or inward currents reversed at nearE K, indicating that both time-dependent and voltagegated currents were due to K+ conductances. Both outward and inward K+ currents were suppressed by extracellular application of Ba2+, but little affected by quinine. Tetraethylammonium inhibited the outward current without impairing the inward current, whereas Cs+ blocked the inward current but not the outward current. The conductance of inward K+ currents, but not outward K+ currents, became larger with increasing extracellular K+ concentration. A Ca2+-mobilizing acid secretagogue, carbachol, and a Ca2+ ionophore, ionomycin, brought about activation of another type of outward K+ currents and voltage-independent cation currents. Both currents were abolished by cytosolic Ca2+ chelation. Quinine preferentially inhibited this K+ current. It is concluded that resting parietal cells of the guinea pig have two distinct types of voltage-dependent K+ channels, inward rectifier and outward rectifier, and that the cells have Ca2+-activated K+ channels which might be involved in acid secretion under stimulation by Ca2+-mobilizing secretagogues.  相似文献   

2.
The role of the inward K+ rectifier in the repetitive activity at depolarized levels was studied in guinea pig single ventricular myocytes by voltage- and current-clamp methods. In action potentials arrested at the plateau by a depolarizing current, small superimposed hyperpolarizing currents caused much larger voltage displacements than at the resting potential and sometimes induced a regenerative repolarization. Around –20 mV, sub- and suprathreshold repetitive inward currents were found. In the same voltage range, small hyperpolarizing currents reversed their polarity. During depolarizing voltage-clamp ramps, around –20 mV there was a sudden decrease in the outward current (Ins: current underlying the negative slope in the inward K+ rectifier steady state I–V relation). During repolarizing ramps, the reincrease in outward current was smaller and slower. During depolarizing and repolarizing current ramps, sudden voltage displacements showed a similar asymmetry. Repetitive Ins could continue as long as the potential was kept at the level at which they appeared. Depolarizing voltage-clamp steps also caused repetitive Ins and depolarizing current steps induced repetitive slow responses. Cadmium and verapamil reduced Ins amplitude during the depolarizing ramp. BRL 34915 (cromakalim), an opener of the ATP-sensitive K+ channel, eliminated the negative slope and Ins, whereas barium increased Ins frequency (an effect abolished by adding BRL). Depolarization-induced slow responses persisted in an NaCl-Ca-free solution. Thus, the mechanism of repetitive activity at the depolarized level appears to be related to the presence of the negative slope in the inward K+ rectifier I–V relation.  相似文献   

3.
Inward currents in root cap protoplasts of the aluminum-tolerant cultivar, Dade, of Phaseolus vulgaris L. were investigated using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique. The properties of these currents were similar to those seen in inward rectifying K+ channels in other plant tissues. Replacing bath K+ with Na+ nearly abolished the observed currents. Higher bath K+ concentrations increased inward currents. AlCl3 in pH 4.7 bath solutions caused inward K+ currents to activate more rapidly and at more positive voltages when compared with AlCl3 free solutions. In 10 μM AlCl3 the activated inward K+ currents were significantly larger than in the AlCl3-free solution at all voltages except at the most negative voltage of −174 mV and the least negative of −74 mV. In contrast, in 80 μM Al3+, when hyperpolarizing voltages were most negative, the inward K+ currents were inhibited relative to the currents in 10 μM AlCl3. Enhancement of inward K+ currents by AlCl3 is consistent with Al3+ binding to the external surface of the root cap protoplast, decreasing the surface charge, thus causing the channels to sense a more negative membrane potential. Inhibition of inward K+ currents with higher AlCl3 concentrations and more negative voltages is consistent with Al3+ block of K+ channels.This revised version was published online in August 2005 with a corrected cover date.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Ionic conductances of rabbit osteoclasts were investigated using both whole-cell and cell-attached configurations of the patch-clamp recording technique. The predominant conductance found in these cells was an inwardly rectifying K+ conductance. Whole-cell currents showed an N-shaped current-voltage (I–13;V) relation with inward current activated at potentials negative to EK. When external K+ was varied, I-V curves shifted 53 mV/10-fold change in [K+]out, as predicted for a K+-selective channel. Inward current was blocked by Ba2+ and showed a time-dependent decline at negative potentials, which was reduced in Na+-free external solution. Inward single-channel currents were recorded in the cell-attached configuration. Single-channel currents were identified as inward-rectifier K+ channels based on the following observations: (i) Unitary I-V relations rectified, with only inward current resolved. (ii) Unitary conductance () was 31 pS when recorded in the cell-attached configuration with 140 mm K+ in the pipette and was found to be dependent on [K+]. (iii) Addition of Ba2+ to the pipette solution abolished single-channel events. We conclude that rabbit osteoclasts possess inwardly rectifying K+ channels which give rise to the inward current recorded at negative potentials in the whole-cell configuration. This inwardly rectifying K+ current may be responsible for setting the resting membrane potential and for dissipating electrical potential differences which arise from electrogenic transport of protons across the osteoclast ruffled border.This work was supported by The Arthritis Society and the Medical Research Council of Canada. M.E.M.K. was supported by a fellowship, S.J.D. a development Grant and S.M.S. a scholarship from the Medical Research Council. We thank Dr. Zu Gang Zheng for help with scanning microscopy.  相似文献   

5.
We have previously demonstrated the expression of BK channels in human glioma cells. There was a curious feature to the whole-cell currents of glioma cells seen during whole-cell patch-clamp: large, outward current transients accompanied repolarization of the cell membrane following an activating voltage step. This transient current, I transient, activated and inactivated rapidly (1 ms). The I-V relationship of I transient had features that were inconsistent with simple ionic current through open ion channels: (i) I transient amplitude peaked with a –80 mV voltage change and was invariant over a 200 mV range, and (ii) I transient remained large and outward at –140 mV. We provide evidence for a direct relationship of I transient to glioma BK currents. They had an identical time course of activation, identical pharmacology, identical voltage-dependence, and small, random variations in the amplitude of the steady-state BK current and I transient seen over time were often perfectly in phase. Substituting intracellular K+ with Cs+, Li+, or Na + ions reversibly reduced I transient and BK currents. I transient was not observed in recordings of other BK currents (hbr5 expressed in HEK cells and BK currents in rat neurons), suggesting I transient is unique to BK currents in human glioma cells. We conclude that I transient is generated by a mechanism related to the deactivation, and level of prior activation, of glioma BK channels. To account for these findings we propose that K+ ions are trapped within glioma BK channels during deactivation and are forced to exit to the extracellular side in a manner independent of membrane potential.  相似文献   

6.
Using the two-microelectrode voltage clamp technique in Xenopus laevis oocytes, we estimated Na+-K+-ATPase activity from the dihydroouabain-sensitive current (I DHO) in the presence of increasing concentrations of tetraethylammonium (TEA+; 0, 5, 10, 20, 40 mm), a well-known blocker of K+ channels. The effects of TEA+ on the total oocyte currents could be separated into two distinct parts: generation of a nonsaturating inward current increasing with negative membrane potentials (V M) and a saturable inhibitory component affecting an outward current easily detectable at positive V M. The nonsaturating component appears to be a barium-sensitive electrodiffusion of TEA+ which can be described by the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation, while the saturating component is consistent with the expected blocking effect of TEA+ on K+ channels. Interestingly, this latter component disappears when the Na+-K+-ATPase is inhibited by 10 m DHO. Conversely, TEA+ inhibits a component of I DHO with a k d of 25±4 mm at +50 mV. As the TEA+-sensitive current present in I DHO reversed at –75 mV, we hypothesized that it could come from an inhibition of K+ channels whose activity varies in parallel with the Na+-K+-ATPase activity. Supporting this hypothesis, the inward portion of this TEA+-sensitive current can be completely abolished by the addition of 1 mm Ba2+ to the bath. This study suggests that, in X. laevis oocytes, a close link exists between the Na-K-ATPase activity and TEA+-sensitive K+ currents and indicates that, in the absence of effective K+ channel inhibitors, I DHO does not exclusively represent the Na+-K+-ATPase-generated current.  相似文献   

7.
In freshly dissociated uterine myocytes, the outward current is carried by K+ through channels highly selective for K+. Typically, nonpregnant myocytes have rather noisy K+ currents; half of them also have a fast-inactivating transient outward current (ITO). In contrast, the current records are not noisy in late pregnant myocytes, and ITO densities are low. The whole-cell IK of nonpregnant myocytes respond strongly to changes in [Ca2+]o or changes in [Ca2+]i caused by photolysis of caged Ca2+ compounds, nitr 5 or DM-nitrophene, but that of late-pregnant myocytes respond weakly or not at all. The Ca2+ insensitivity of the latter is present before any exposure to dissociating enzymes. By holding at −80, −40, or 0 mV and digital subtractions, the whole-cell IK of each type of myocyte can be separated into one noninactivating and two inactivating components with half-inactivation at approximately −61 and −22 mV. The noninactivating components, which consist mainly of iberiotoxin-susceptible large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ currents, are half-activated at 39 mV in nonpregnant myocytes, but at 63 mV in late-pregnant myocytes. In detached membrane patches from the latter, identified 139 pS, Ca2+-sensitive K+ channels also have a half-open probability at 68 mV, and are less sensitive to Ca2+ than similar channels in taenia coli myocytes. Ca2+-activated K+ currents, susceptible to tetraethylammonium, charybdotoxin, and iberiotoxin contribute 30–35% of the total IK in nonpregnant myocytes, but <20% in late-pregnant myocytes. Dendrotoxin-susceptible, small-conductance delayed rectifier currents are not seen in nonpregnant myocytes, but contribute ∼20% of total IK in late-pregnant myocytes. Thus, in late-pregnancy, myometrial excitability is increased by changes in K+ currents that include a suppression of the ITO, a redistribution of IK expression from large-conductance Ca2+-activated channels to smaller-conductance delayed rectifier channels, a lowered Ca2+ sensitivity, and a positive shift of the activation of some large-conductance Ca2+-activated channels.  相似文献   

8.
Using the voltage-clamp technique, we investigated transmembrane ion currents in isolated smooth muscle cells of the guinea pigtaenia coli. In our study, we identified and studied a charibdotoxin-sensitive component of Ca2+-dependent K+ current carried through the channels of high conductance (in most publications called “big conductance,”I BK(Ca)). This component was completely blocked by 100 nM charibdotoxin and by tetraethylammonium in concentrations as low as 1 mM.I BK(Ca) demonstrated fast kinetics of inactivation, which nearly coincided with that of Ca2+ current. In addition to the dependence on Ca2+ concentration, this current also showed voltage-dependent properties: with a rise in the level of depolarization its amplitude increased. In many cells, depolarizing shifts in the membrane potential evoke spontaneous outward currents. Such currents probably represent the secondary effect of cyclic Ca2+ release from the caffeine-sensitive intracellular stores that result in short-term activation of charibdotoxin-sensitive Ca2+-dependent K+ channels.  相似文献   

9.
The efficacy and mechanism of -dendrotoxin (DTX) block of K+ channel currents in Vicia stomatal guard cells was examined. Currents carried by inward- and outward-rectifying K+ channels were determined under voltage clamp in intact guard cells, and block was characterized as a function of DTX and external K+ (K+) concentrations. Added to the bath, 0.1-30 nM DTX blocked the inward-rectifying K+ current (IK,in), but was ineffective in blocking current through the outward-rectifying K+ channels (IK,out) even at concentrations of 30 nM. DTX block was independent of clamp voltage and had no significant effect on the voltage-dependent kinetics for IK,in, neither altering its activation at voltages negative of –120 mV nor its deactivation at more positive voltages. No evidence was found for a use dependence to DTX action. Block of IK,in followed a simple titration function with an apparent K1/2 for block of 2.2 nM in 3 mm K o + . However, DTX block was dependent on the external K+ concentration. Raising K+ from 3 to 30 mm slowed block and resulted in a 60–70% reduction in its efficacy (apparent K i = 10 mm in 10 nm DTX). The effect of K+ in protecting I K,in was competitive with DTX and specific for permeant cations. A joint analysis of IK,in block with DTX and K+ concentration was consistent with a single class of binding sites with a K d for DTX of 240 pm. A K d of 410 m for extracellular K+ was also indicated. These results complement previous studies implicating a binding site requiring extracellular K+ (K1/2 1 mm) for IK,in activation; they parallel features of K+ channel block by DTX and related peptide toxins in many animal cells, demonstrating the sensitivity of plant plasma membrane K+ channels to nanomolar toxin concentrations under physiological conditions; the data also highlight one main difference: in the guard cells, DTX action appears specific to the K+ inward rectifier.We thank J.O. Dolly (Imperial, London) and S.M. Jarvis (University of Kent, Canterbury) for several helpful discussions. This work was supported by SERC grant GR/H07696 and was aided by equipment grants from the Gatsby Foundation, the Royal Society and the University of London Central Research Fund. G.O. was supported by an Ausbildungsstipendium (OB 85/1-1) from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. F.A. holds a Sainsbury Studentship.  相似文献   

10.
In leech P neurons the inhibition of the Na+-K+ pump by ouabain or omission of bath K+ leaves the membrane potential unaffected for a prolonged period or even induces a marked membrane hyperpolarization, although the concentration gradients for K+ and Na+ are attenuated substantially. As shown previously, this stabilization of the membrane potential is caused by an increase in the K+ conductance of the plasma membrane, which compensates for the reduction of the K+ gradient. The data presented here strongly suggest that the increased K+ conductance is due to Na+-activated K+ (KNa) channels. Specifically, an increase in the cytosolic Na+ concentration ([Na+]i) was paralleled by a membrane hyperpolarization, a decrease in the input resistance (Rin) of the cells, and by the occurrence of an outwardly directed membrane current. The relationship between Rin and [Na+]i followed a simple model in which the Rin decrease was attributed to K+ channels that are activated by the binding of three Na+ ions, with half-maximal activation at [Na+]i between 45 and 70 mM. At maximum channel activation, Rin was reduced by more than 90%, suggesting a significant contribution of the KNa channels to the physiological functioning of the cells, although evidence for such a contribution is still lacking. Injection experiments showed that the KNa channels in leech P neurons are also activated by Li+.  相似文献   

11.
Voltage-gated whole-cell currents were recorded from cultured microglial cells which had been developed in the presence of the macrophage/microglial growth factor granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor. Outward K+ currents (I K) were most prominent in these cells. I Kcould be activated at potentials more positive than –40 mV. Half-maximal activation of I Kwas achieved at –13.8 mV and half-maximal inactivation of I Kwas determined at –33.8 mV. The recovery of I Kfrom inactivation was described by a time constant of 7.9 sec. For a tenfold change in extracellular K+ concentration the reversal potential of I Kshifted by 54 mV.Extracellularly applied 10 mm tetraethylammonium chloride reduced I K by about 50%, while 5 mm 4-aminopyridine almost completely abolished I K. Several divalent cations (Ba2+, Cd2+, Co2+, Zn2+) reduced current amplitudes and shifted the activation curve of I Kto more positive values. Charybdotoxin (IC50 = 1.14 nm) and noxiustoxin (IC50=0.89 nm) blocked I Kin a concentration-dependent manner, whereas dendrotoxin and mast cell degranulating peptide had no effect on the current amplitudes.  相似文献   

12.
Voltage-gated potassium (K+) channels are multi-ion pores. Recent studies suggest that, similar to calcium channels, competition between ionic species for intrapore binding sites may contribute to ionic selectivity in at least some K+ channels. Molecular studies suggest that a putative constricted region of the pore, which is presumably the site of selectivity, may be as short as one ionic diameter in length. Taken together, these results suggest that selectivity may occur at just a single binding site in the pore. We are studying a chimeric K+ channel that is highly selective for K+ over Na+ in physiological solutions, but conducts Na+ in the absence of K+. Na+ and K+ currents both display slow (C-type) inactivation, but had markedly different inactivation and deactivation kinetics; Na+ currents inactivated more rapidly and deactivated more slowly than K+ currents. Currents carried by 160 mM Na+ were inhibited by external K+ with an apparent IC50 <30 μM. K+ also altered both inactivation and deactivation kinetics of Na+ currents at these low concentrations. In the complementary experiment, currents carried by 3 mM K+ were inhibited by external Na+, with an apparent IC50 of ∼100 mM. In contrast to the effects of low [K+] on Na+ current kinetics, Na+ did not affect K+ current kinetics, even at concentrations that inhibited K+ currents by 40–50%. These data suggest that Na+ block of K+ currents did not involve displacement of K+ from the high affinity site involved in gating kinetics. We present a model that describes the permeation pathway as a single high affinity, cation-selective binding site, flanked by low affinity, nonselective sites. This model quantitatively predicts the anomalous mole fraction behavior observed in two different K+ channels, differential K+ and Na+ conductance, and the concentration dependence of K+ block of Na+ currents and Na+ block of K+ currents. Based on our results, we hypothesize that the permeation pathway contains a single high affinity binding site, where selectivity and ionic modulation of gating occur.  相似文献   

13.
In the epithelium of rat distal colon the acetylcholine analogue carbachol induces a transient increase of short-circuit current (Isc) via stimulation of cellular K+ conductances. Inhibition of the turnover of inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) by LiCl significantly reduced both the amplitude and the duration of this response. When the apical membrane was permeabilized with nystatin, LiCl nearly abolished the carbachol-induced activation of basolateral K+ conductances. In contrast, in epithelia, in which the basolateral membrane was bypassed by a basolateral depolarization, carbachol induced a biphasic increase in the K+ current across the apical membrane consisting of an early component carried by charybdotoxin- and tetraethylammonium-sensitive K+ channels followed by a sustained plateau carried by channels insensitive against these blockers. Only the latter was sensitive against LiCl or inhibition of protein kinases. In contrast, the stimulation of the early apical K+ conductance by carbachol proved to be resistant against inhibition of phospholipase C or protein kinases. However, apical dichlorobenzamil, an inhibitor of Na+/Ca2+ exchangers, or a Ca2+-free mucosal buffer solution significantly reduced the early component of the carbachol-induced apical K+ current. The presence of an apically localized Na+/Ca2+-exchanger was proven immunohistochemically. Taken together these experiments reveal divergent regulatory mechanisms for the stimulation of apical Ca2+-dependent K+ channels in this secretory epithelium, part of them being activated by an inflow of Ca2+ across the apical membrane.
G. SchultheissEmail:
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14.
Membrane potential and ionic currents were studied in cultured rabbit retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells using whole-cell patch clamp and perforated-patch recording techniques. RPE cells exhibited both outward and inward voltage-dependent currents and had a mean membrane capacitance of 26±12 pF (sd, n=92). The resting membrane potential averaged ?31±15 mV (n=37), but it was as high as ?60 mV in some cells. When K+ was the principal cation in the recording electrode, depolarization-activated outward currents were apparent in 91% of cells studied. Tail current analysis revealed that the outward currents were primarily K+ selective. The most frequently observed outward K+ current was a voltage- and time-dependent outward current (I K) which resembled the delayed rectifier K+ current described in other cells. I K was blocked by tetraethylammonium ions (TEA) and barium (Ba2+) and reduced by 4-aminopyridine (4-AP). In a few cells (3–4%), depolarization to ?50 mV or more negative potentials evoked an outwardly rectifying K+ current (I Kt) which showed more rapid inactivation at depolarized potentials. Inwardly rectifying K+ current (I KI) was also present in 41% of cells. I KI was blocked by extracellular Ba2+ or Cs+ and exhibited time-dependent decay, due to Na+ blockade, at negative potentials. We conclude that cultured rabbit RPE cells exhibit at least three voltage-dependent K+ currents. The K+ conductances reported here may provide conductive pathways important in maintaining ion and fluid homeostasis in the subretinal space.  相似文献   

15.
The initial response of coleoptile cells to growth hormones and light is a rapid change in plasma-membrane polarization. We have isolated protoplasts from the cortex of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles to study the electrical properties of their plasma membrane by the patch-clamp techniqueUsing the whole-cell configuration and cell-free membrane patches we could identify an H+-ATPase, hyperpolarizing the membrane potential often more negative than -150 mV, and a voltage-dependent, inward-rectifying K+ channel (unit conductance 5–7 pS) as the major membrane conductan-ces Potassium currents through this channel named CKC1in (for Coleoptile K + Channel inward rectifier) were elicited upon voltage steps negative to -80 mV, characterized by a half-activation potential of -112 mV. The kinetics of activation, well described by a double-exponential process, were strongly dependent on the degree of hyperpolarization and the cytoplasmic Ca2+ level. Whereas at nanomolar Ca2+ concentrations K+ currents increased with a t1/2=16 ms (at -180 mV), higher calcium levels slowed the activation process about fourto fivefoldUpon changes in the extracellular K+ concentration the reversal potential of the K+ channel followed the Nernst potential for potassium with a 56-mV shift for a tenfold increaseThe absence of a measurable conductance for Na+, Rb+, Cs+ and a permeability ratio PNH 4 + /PK+ around 0.25 underlines the high selectivity of CKC1in for K+In contrast to Cs+, which at submillimolar concentration blocks the channel in a voltage-dependent manner, Rb+, often used as a tracer for K+, does not permeate this type of K+ channelThe lack of Rb+ permeability is unique with respect to other K+ transporters. Therefore, future molecular analysis of CKC1in, considered as a unique variation of plant inward rectifiers, might help to understand the permeation properties of K+ channels in general.Abbreviations CKC1in Coleoptile K + Channel inward rectifier - U membrane voltage - Iss steady-state currents - Itail tail currents Experiments were conducted in the laboratory of F.G. during the stay of RHas a guest professor sponsored by Special Project RAISA, subproject N2.1, paper N2155.  相似文献   

16.
Mesophyll K+ retention ability has been recently reported as an important component of salinity stress tolerance in wheat. In order to investigate the role of ROS in regulating NaCl-induced K+ efflux in wheat leaf mesophyll, a series of pharmacological experiments was conducted using MV (methyl viologen, superoxide radical inducer), DPI (an inhibitor of NADPH oxidase), H2O2 (to mimic apoplastic ROS), and EGCG ((−)-Epigallocatechin gallate, ROS scavenger). Mesophyll pre-treatment with 10 μM MV resulted in a significantly higher NaCl-induced K+ efflux in leaf mesophyll, while 50 μM EGCG pre-treatment alleviated K+ leakage under salt stress. No significant change in NaCl-induced K+ efflux in leaf mesophyll was found in specimens pre-treated by H2O2 and DPI, compared with the control. The highest NaCl-induced H+ efflux in leaf mesophyll was also found in samples pre-treated with MV, suggesting a futile cycle between increased H+-ATPase activity and ROS-induced K+ leak. Overall, it is suggested that, under saline stress, K+ efflux from wheat mesophyll is mediated predominantly by non-selective cation channels (NSCC) regulated by ROS produced in chloroplasts, at least in bread wheat.  相似文献   

17.
Three types of ionic current essentially determine the firing pattern of nerve cells: the persistent Na+ current, the M current and the low-voltage-activated Ca2+ current. The present article summarizes recent experiments concerned with the basic properties of these currents. Keynes and Meves (Proc R Soc Lond B (1993) 253, 61–68) studied the persistent or steady-state Na+ current on dialysed squid axons and measured the probability of channel opening both for the peak and the steady-state Na+ current (PFpeak and PFss) as a function of voltage. Whereas PFpeak starts to rise at −50 mV and reaches a maximum at +40 to +50 mV, PFss only begins to rise appreciably at around 0 mV and is still increasing at +100 mV. This differs from observations on vertebrate excitable tissues where the persistent Na+ current turns on in the threshold region and saturates at around 0 mV. Schmitt and Meves (Pflügers Arch (1993) 425, 134–139) recorded M current, a non-inactivating K+ current, from NG108-15 neuroblastoma × glioma hybrid cells, voltage-clamped in the whole-cell mode, and studied the effects of phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDB), an activator of protein kinase C (PKC), and arachidonic acid (AA). PDB and AA both decreased IM, the effective concentrations being 0.1–1 μM and 5–25 μM, respectively; while the PDB effect was regularly observed, the M current depression by AA was highly variable from cell to cell. The PKC 19–31 peptide, an effective inhibitor of PKC, in a concentration of 1 μM almost totally prevented the effects of PDB and AA on M current, suggesting that both are mediated by PKC. Schmitt and Meves (Pflügers Arch (1994a) 426, Suppl R 59) measured low-voltage-activated (l-v-a) and high-voltage-activated (h-v-a) Ca2+ currents on NG108-15 cells and investigated the effect of AA and PDB on both types of current. At pulse potentials > −20 mV, AA (25–100 μM) decreased l-v-a and h-v-a ICa. The decrease was accompanied by a small negative shift and a slight flattening of the activation and inactivation curves of the l-v-a ICa. The AA effect was not prevented by 50 μM eicosa-5,8,11,14-tetraynoic acid (ETYA), an inhibitor of AA metabolism, or PKC 19–31 peptide and not mimicked by 0.1–1 μM PDB. Probably, AA acts directly on the channel protein or its lipid environment. The physiological relevance of these three sets of observations is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Extracellular acidification and reduction of extracellular K+ are known to decrease the currents of some voltage-gated potassium channels. Although the macroscopic conductance of WT hKv1.5 channels is not very sensitive to [K+]o at pH 7.4, it is very sensitive to [K+]o at pH 6.4, and in the mutant, H463G, the removal of K+ o virtually eliminates the current at pH 7.4. We investigated the mechanism of current regulation by K+ o in the Kv1.5 H463G mutant channel at pH 7.4 and the wild-type channel at pH 6.4 by taking advantage of Na+ permeation through inactivated channels. Although the H463G currents were abolished in zero [K+]o, robust Na+ tail currents through inactivated channels were observed. The appearnnce of H463G Na+ currents with a slow rising phase on repolarization after a very brief depolarization (2 ms) suggests that channels could activate directly from closed-inactivated states. In wild-type channels, when intracellular K+ was replaced by NMG+ and the inward Na+ current was recorded, addition of 1 mM K+ prevented inactivation, but changing pH from 7.4 to 6.4 reversed this action. The data support the idea that C-type inactivation mediated at R487 in Kv1.5 channels is influenced by H463 in the outer pore. We conclude that both acidification and reduction of [K+]o inhibit Kv1.5 channels through a common mechananism (i.e., by increasing channel inactivation, which occurs in the resting state or develops very rapidly after activation).  相似文献   

19.
Summary Cell-attached patch-clamp recordings from Ehrlich ascites tumor cells reveal nonselective cation channels which are activated by mechanical deformation of the membrane. These channels are seen when suction is applied to the patch pipette or after osmotic cell swelling. The channel activation does not occur instantaneously but within a time delay of 1/2 to 1 min. The channel is permeable to Ba2+ and hence presumably to Ca2+. It seems likely that the function of the nonselective, stretch-activated channels is correlated with their inferred Ca2+ permeability, as part of the volume-activated signal system. In isolated insideout patches a Ca2+-dependent, inwardly rectifying K+ channel is demonstrated. The single-channel conductance recorded with symmetrical 150 mm K+ solutions is for inward current estimated at 40 pS and for outward current at 15 pS. Activation of the K+ channel takes place after an increase in Ca2+ from 10–7 to 10–6 m which is in the physiological range. Patch-clamp studies in cellattached mode show K+ channels with spontaneous activity and with characteristics similar to those of the K+ channel seen in excised patches. The single-channel conductance for outward current at 5 mm external K+ is estimated at about 7 pS. A K+ channel with similar properties can be activated in the cellattached mode by addition of Ca2+ plus ionophore A23187. The channel is also activated by cell swelling, within 1 min following hypotonic exposure. No evidence was found of channel activation by membrane stretch (suction). The time-averaged number of open K+ channels during regulatory volume decrease (RVD) can be estimated at 40 per cell. The number of open K+ channels following addition of Ca2+ plus ionophore A23187 was estimated at 250 per cell. Concurrent activation in cell-attached patches of stretch-activated, nonselective cation channels and K+ channels in the presence of 3 mm Ca2+ in the pipette suggests a close spatial relationship between the two channels. In excised inside-out patches (with NMDG chloride on both sides) a small 5-pS chloride channel with low spontaneous activity is observed. The channel activity was not dependent on Ca2+ and could not be activated by membrane stretch (suction). In cell-attached mode singlechannel currents with characteristics similar to the channels seen in isolated patches are seen. In contrast to the channels seen in isolated patches, the channels in the cell-attached mode could be activated by addition of Ca2+ plus ionophore A23187. The channel is also activated by hypotonic exposure with a single-channel conductance at 7 pS (or less) and with a time delay at about 1 min. The number of open channels during RVD is estimated at 80 per cell. Two other types of Cl channels were regularly recorded in excised inside-out patches: a voltage-activated 400-pS channel and a 34-pS Cl channel which show properties similar to the Cl channel in the apical membrane in human airway epithelial cells. There is no evidence for a role in RVD for either of these two channels.  相似文献   

20.
Mechano-electrical feedback was studied in the single ventricular myocytes. A small fraction (approximately 10%) of the cell surface could be stretched or compressed by a glass stylus. Stretch depolarised, shortened the action potential and induced extra systoles. Stretch activated non-selective cation currents (Ins) showed a linear voltage dependence, a reversal potential of 0 mV, a pure cation selectivity, and were blocked by 8 μM Gd3+ or 30 μM streptomycin. Stretch reduced Ca2+ and K+ (IK) currents. Local compression of broadwise attached cells activated IK but not Ins. Cytochalasin D or colchicin, thought to disrupt the cytoskeleton, suppressed the mechanosensitivity of Ins and IK. During stretch, the cytosolic sodium concentration increased with spatial heterogeneities, local hotspots with [Na+]c>24 mM appeared close to surface membrane and t-tubules (pseudoratiometric imaging using Sodium Green fluorescence). Electronprobe microanalysis confirmed this result and indicated that stretch increased total sodium [Na] in cell compartments such as mitochondria, nuclear envelope and nucleus. Our results obtained by local stretch differ from those obtained by end-to-end stretch (literature). We speculate that channels may be activated not only by axial but also by shear stress, and, that stretch can activate channels outside the deformed sarcomeres via second messenger.  相似文献   

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