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1.
Batrachotoxin (BTX)-modified Na+ currents were characterized in GH3 cells with a reversed Na+ gradient under whole-cell voltage clamp conditions. BTX shifts the threshold of Na+ channel activation by approximately 40 mV in the hyperpolarizing direction and nearly eliminates the declining phase of Na+ currents at all voltages, suggesting that Na+ channel inactivation is removed. Paradoxically, the steady-state inactivation (h infinity) of BTX-modified Na+ channels as determined by a two-pulse protocol shows that inactivation is still present and occurs maximally near -70 mV. About 45% of BTX-modified Na+ channels are inactivated at this voltage. The development of inactivation follows a sum of two exponential functions with tau d(fast) = 10 ms and tau d(slow) = 125 ms at -70 mV. Recovery from inactivation can be achieved after hyperpolarizing the membrane to voltages more negative than -120 mV. The time course of recovery is best described by a sum of two exponentials with tau r(fast) = 6.0 ms and tau r(slow) = 240 ms at -170 mV. After reaching a minimum at -70 mV, the h infinity curve of BTX-modified Na+ channels turns upward to reach a constant plateau value of approximately 0.9 at voltages above 0 mV. Evidently, the inactivated, BTX-modified Na+ channels can be forced open at more positive potentials. The reopening kinetics of the inactivated channels follows a single exponential with a time constant of 160 ms at +50 mV. Both chloramine-T (at 0.5 mM) and alpha-scorpion toxin (at 200 nM) diminish the inactivation of BTX-modified Na+ channels. In contrast, benzocaine at 1 mM drastically enhances the inactivation of BTX-modified Na+ channels. The h infinity curve reaches minimum of less than 0.1 at -70 mV, indicating that benzocaine binds preferentially with inactivated, BTX-modified Na+ channels. Together, these results imply that BTX-modified Na+ channels are governed by an inactivation process.  相似文献   

2.
Ionic currents through sodium channels modified by batrachotoxin were measured by the voltage clamp method on a myelinated frog nerve fiber membrane. The reversal potential (Erev) of steady-state currents was shown to be on the average 5 mV less positive than Erev corresponding to the initial (peak) values of the currents. The results of control experiments using procaine and tetrodotoxin showed that the change in Erev observed during a depolarizing pulse is not connected with the presence of unmodified sodium channels or unblocked potassium channels, with nonlinearity of leakage, or with a change in transmembrane gradients of current-carrving cations. In experiments with measurement of "instant" currents it was shown that Erev becomes less positive as the amplitude and duration of preliminary depolarization increase. The results support the view that sodium-potassium selectivity of batrachotoxin-modified sodium channels depends on potential.  相似文献   

3.
We have observed the opening and closing of single batrachotoxin (BTX)-modified sodium channels in neuroblastoma cells using the patch-clamp method. The conductance of a single BTX-modified channel is approximately 10 pS. At a given membrane potential, the channels are open longer than are normal sodium channels. As is the case for normal sodium channels, the open dwell times become longer as the membrane is depolarized. For membrane potentials more negative than about -70 mV, histograms of both open-state dwell times and closed-state dwell times could be fit by single exponentials. For more depolarized potentials, although the open-state histograms could still be fit by single exponentials, the closed-state histograms required two exponentials. This data together with macroscopic voltage clamp data on the same system could be accounted for by a three-state closed-closed-open model with transition rates between these states that are exponential functions of membrane potential. One of the implications of this model, in agreement with experiment, is that there are always some closed BTX-modified sodium channels, regardless of membrane potential.  相似文献   

4.
Associated with the opening and closing of the sodium channels of nerve membrane is a small component of capacitative current, the gating current. After termination of a depolarizing step the gating current and sodium current decay with similar time courses. Both currents decay more rapidly at relatively negative membrane voltages than at positive ones. The gating current that flows during a depolarizing step is diminished by a pre-pulse that inactivates the sodium permeability. A pre-pulse has no effect after inactivation has been destroyed by internal perfusion with the proteolytic enzyme pronase. Gating charge (considered as positive charge) moves outward during a positive voltage step, with voltage dependent kinetics. The time constant of the outward gating current is a maximum at about minus 10 mV, and has a smaller value at voltages either more positive or negative than this value.  相似文献   

5.
Astrocytes (both type 1 and type 2), cultured from the central nervous system of newborn or 7 day old rats show voltage gated sodium and potassium channels that are activated when the membrane is depolarized to greater than -40 mV. The sodium channels in these cells have an h-infinity curve similar to that of nodal membranes but the activation (peak current-voltage) curves are shifted along the voltage axis by about +30 mV. These sodium currents are blocked only by high concentrations of tetrodotoxin. The voltage activated potassium currents in both types of astrocyte show at least two components; an inactivating component that is suppressed at holding potentials of greater than -40 mV and a persistent, non-inactivating current. Several types of single channel currents were observed in outside-out membrane patches from type 2 astrocytes. One type of potassium channel showed inactivation on depolarization and may contribute to the whole-cell inactivating current. In contrast, oligodendrocytes showed no obvious voltage gated membrane channels. The properties of the type 2 astrocyte-oligodendrocyte progenitor cell were investigated in two ways: 1) by examination of cells just beginning to differentiate along the "electrically silent" oligodendrocyte pathway or 2) by recording from progenitor cells cultured for 24 hours in the presence of cycloheximide to block the appearance of new membrane channels. In both cases, voltage gated inward (sodium) and outward (potassium) currents were noted. The outward current response showed both an inactivating and a non-inactivating component. Similar voltage activated inward and outward membrane currents were noted in reactive astrocytes freshly isolated (3-6 hours) from lesioned areas of adult rat brains.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Electrical activity in the fertilized egg of the tunicate Clavelina was studied with microelectrode recording and voltage clamp techniques. The resting potential could assume either of two stable values (approximately ?70 or ?30 mV) and could be shifted between these values by direct current stimulation. Spontaneous shifts between two stable resting potentials were also seen. Egg cells produced action potentials spontaneously and in response to depolarizing stimuli. Inward currents were carried by both Na and Ca ions and a prominent outward potassium current was seen with depolarization to voltages above ?15 mV. The steady-state current-voltage relationship (I–V curve) of the membrane showed two voltages where the net membrane current equaled zero: approximately ?35 and ?70 mV. Between these two voltages, membrane current was inward and carried by noninactivating Na and Ca currents. Inward rectification, which was blocked by external Rb, occurred at voltages below ?70 mV. The voltage dependence of inward rectification is thought by the authors to be important for establishing the more negative resting potential; it is also thought the presence of inward current which does not inactivate completely at voltages more negative than about ?20 mV is an important determinant of the more depolarized resting potential.  相似文献   

7.
Batrachotoxin (BTX) modification and tetrodotoxin (TTX) block of BTX-modified Na channels were studied in single cardiac cells of neonatal rats using the whole-cell patch-clamp recording technique. The properties of BTX-modified Na channels in heart are qualitatively similar to those in nerve. However, quantitative differences do exist between the modified channels of these two tissues. In the heart, the shift of the conductance-voltage curve for the modified channel was less pronounced, the maximal activation rate constant, (tau m)max, of modified channels was considerably slower, and the slow inactivation of the BTX-modified cardiac Na channels was only partially abolished. TTX blocked BTX-modified mammalian cardiac Na channels and the block decreased over the potential range of -80 to -40 mV. The apparent dissociation constant of TTX changed from 0.23 microM at -50 mV to 0.69 microM at 0 mV. No further reduction of block was observed at potentials greater than -40 mV. This is the potential range over which gating from closed to open states occurred. These results were explained by assuming that TTX has a higher affinity for closed BTX-modified channels than for open modified channels. Hence, the TTX-binding rate constants are considered to be state dependent rather than voltage dependent. This differs from the voltage dependence of TTX block reported for BTX-modified Na channels from membrane vesicles incorporated into lipid bilayers and from amphibian node of Ranvier.  相似文献   

8.
Squid giant axons were used to investigate the reversible effects of intracellular pH(pHi) on the kinetic properties of ionic channels. The pharmacologically separated K+ and Na+ currents were measured under: (a) internal perfusion, (b) enzymatic Pronase treatment, and (c) continuous estimate of periaxonal ion accumulation. Variation of internal pH from 4.8 to 11 resulted in: (a) a decrease of steady-state sodium inactivation at positive potentials similar to the effect of the proteolytic enzyme Pronase, (b) a shift of the h infinity (E) curve toward depolarizing voltages, and (c) a decrease of the time constant of inactivation for potentials below -20 mV (an increase above). A plot of the steady-state sodium conductance at E = +40 mV as a function of pHi suggests that two groups with pKa 10.4 and 5.6 affect respectively the inactivation gate and the rate constants for the transition from the inactivated to the second open state (h2) (Chandler and Meves, 1970b). The voltage shifts of the kinetic parameters predicted by the Gouy-Chapman-Stern theory are well satisfied at high pHi and less at low. Once corrected for voltage shifts, the forward rate constants for channel opening were found to be slowed with the acidity of the internal or external solution.  相似文献   

9.
Squid optic nerve sodium channels were characterized in planar bilayers in the presence of batrachotoxin (BTX). The channel exhibits a conductance of 20 pS in symmetrical 200 mM NaCl and behaves as a sodium electrode. The single-channel conductance saturates with increasing the concentration of sodium and the channel conductance vs. sodium concentration relation is well described by a simple rectangular hyperbola. The apparent dissociation constant of the channel for sodium is 11 mM and the maximal conductance is 23 pS. The selectivity determined from reversal potentials obtained in mixed ionic conditions is Na+ approximately Li+ greater than K+ greater than Rb+ greater than Cs+. Calcium blocks the channel in a voltage-dependent manner. Analysis of single-channel membranes showed that the probability of being open (Po) vs. voltage relation is sigmoidal with a value of 0.5 between -90 and -100 mV. The fitting of Po requires at least two closed and one open state. The apparent gating charge required to move through the whole transmembrane voltage during the closed-open transition is four to five electronic charges per channel. Distribution of open and closed times are well described by single exponentials in most of the voltage range tested and mean open and mean closed times are voltage dependent. The number of charges associated with channel closing is 1.6 electronic charges per channel. Tetrodotoxin blocked the BTX-modified channel being the blockade favored by negative voltages. The apparent dissociation constant at zero potential is 16 nM. We concluded that sodium channels from the squid optic nerve are similar to other BTX-modified channels reconstituted in bilayers and to the BTX-modified sodium channel detected in the squid giant axon.  相似文献   

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

11.
We studied the activation properties of members of the Shaker-related subfamily of voltage-gated K+ channels cloned from rat brain and expressed in Xenopus oocytes. We find that Kv1.1, Kv1.4, Kv1.5, and Kv1.6 have similar activation and deactivation kinetics. The K+ currents produced by step depolarisations increase with a sigmoidal time course that can be described by a delay and by the derivative of the current at the inflection point. The delay tends to zero and the logarithmic derivative seems to approach a finite value at large positive voltages, but these asymptotic values are not yet reached at +80 mV. Deactivation of the currents upon stepping to negative membrane potentials below -60 mV is fairly well described by a single exponential. The decrease of the deactivation time constant at increasingly negative voltages tends to become less steep, indicating that this parameter also has a finite limiting value, which is not yet reached, however, at –160 mV The various clones studied have very similar voltage dependencies of activation with half-activation voltages ranging between –50 and –11 mV and maximum steepness yielding an e-fold change for voltage increments between 3.8 and 7.0 mV The shallower activation curve of Kv1.4 is likely to be due to coupling with the fast inactivation process present in this clone. Correspondence to: O. Moran  相似文献   

12.
Neurons were acutely dissociated from the CA1 region of hippocampal slices from guinea pigs. Whole-cell recording techniques were used to record and control membrane potential. When the electrode contained KF, the average resting potential was about -40 mV and action potentials in cells at -80 mV (current-clamped) had an amplitude greater than 100 mV. Cells were voltage-clamped at 22-24 degrees C with electrodes containing CsF. Inward currents generated with depolarizing voltage pulses reversed close to the sodium equilibrium potential and could be completely blocked with tetrodotoxin (1 microM). The amplitude of these sodium currents was maximal at about -20 mV and the amplitude of the tail currents was linear with potential, which indicates that the channels were ohmic. The sodium conductance increased with depolarization in a range from -60 to 0 mV with an average half-maximum at about -40 mV. The decay of the currents was not exponential at potentials more positive than -20 mV. The time to peak and half-decay time of the currents varied with potential and temperature. Half of the channels were inactivated at a potential of -75 mV and inactivation was essentially complete at -40 to -30 mV. Recovery from inactivation was not exponential and the rate varied with potential. At lower temperatures, the amplitude of sodium currents decreased, their time course became longer, and half-maximal inactivation shifted to more negative potentials. In a small fraction of cells studied, sodium currents were much more rapid but the voltage dependence of activation and inactivation was very similar.  相似文献   

13.
Using the lipid bilayer technique we have optimized recording conditions and confirmed that alpha human atrial natriuretic peptide [alpha-hANP(1-28)] forms single ion channels. The single channel currents recorded in 250/50 mM KCl cis/trans chambers show that the ANP-formed channels were heterogeneous, and differed in their conductance, kinetic, and pharmacological properties. The ANP-formed single channels were grouped as: (i) H202- and Ba2+-sensitive channel with fast kinetics; the nonlinear current-voltage (I-V) relationship of this channel had a reversal potential (Erev) of -28.2 mV, which is close to the equilibrium potential for K+ (EK = -35 mV) and a maximal slope conductance (gmax) of 68 pS at positive potentials. Sequential ionic substitution (KCl, K gluconate and choline Cl) of the cis solution suggests that the current was carried by cations. The fast channel had three modes (spike mode, burst mode, and open mode) that differed in their kinetics but not in their conductance properties. (ii) A large conductance channel possessing several subconductance levels that showed time-dependent inactivation at positive and negative membrane potentials (Vm). The inactivation ratio of the current at the end of the voltage step (Iss) to the initial current (Ii) activated immediately after the voltage step, (Iss/Ii), was voltage dependent and described by a bell-shaped curve. The maximal current-voltage (I-V) relationship of this channel, which had an Erev of +17.2 mV, was nonlinear and the value of gmax was 273 pS at negative voltages. (iii) A transiently-activated channel: the nonlinear I-V relationship of this channel had an Erev of -29.8 mV and the value of gmax was 160 pS at positive voltages. We propose that the voltage-dependence of the ionic currents and the kinetic parameters of these channel types indicate that if they were formed in vivo and activated by cytosolic factors they could change the membrane potential and the electrolyte homeostasis of the cell.  相似文献   

14.
Whole-cell patch-clamp analysis revealed a resting membrane potential of −60 mV in primary osteoblasts and in the MG-63 osteoblast-like cells. Depolarization-induced action potentials were characterized by duration of 60 ms, a minimal peak-to-peak distance of 180 ms, a threshold value of −20 mV and a repolarization between the spikes to −45 mV. Expressed channels were characterized by application of voltage pulses between −150 mV and 90 mV in 10 mV steps, from a holding potential of −40 mV. Voltages below −60 mV induced an inward current. Depolarizing voltages above −30 mV evoked two currents: (a) a fast activated and inactivated inward current at voltages between −30 and 30 mV, and (b) a delayed-activated outward current that was induced by voltages above −30 mV. Electrophysiological and pharmacological parameters indicated that hyperpolarization activated strongly rectifying K+ (Kir) channels, whereas depolarization activated tetrodotoxin sensitive voltage gated Na+ (Nav) channels as well as delayed, slowly activated, non-inactivating, and tetraethylammonium sensitive voltage gated K+ (Kv) channels. In addition, RT-PCR showed expression of Nav1.3, Nav1.4, Nav1.5, Nav1.6, Nav1.7, and Kir2.1, Kir2.3, and Kir2.4 as well as Kv2.1. We conclude that osteoblasts express channels that allow firing of action potentials.  相似文献   

15.
Tight-seal recording was employed to investigate membrane currents in hyperpolarizing ciliary photoreceptors enzymatically isolated from the eyes of the file clam (Lima scabra) and the bay scallop (Pecten irradians). These two organisms are unusual in that their double retinas also possess a layer of depolarizing rhabdomeric cells. Ciliary photoreceptors from Lima have a rounded soma, 15-20 microns diam, and display a prominent bundle of fine processes up to 30 microns long. The cell body of scallop cells is similar in size, but the ciliary appendages are modified, forming small spherical structures that protrude from the cell. In both species light stimulation at a voltage near the resting potential gives rise to a graded outward current several hundred pA in amplitude, accompanied by an increase in membrane conductance. The reversal potential of the photocurrent is approximately -80 mV, and shifts in the positive direction by approximately 39 mV when the concentration of extracellular K is increased from 10 to 50 mM, consistent with the notion that light activates K-selective channels. The light-activated conductance increases with depolarization in the physiological range of membrane voltages (-30 to -70 mV). Such outward rectification is greatly reduced after removal of divalent cations from the superfusate. In Pecten, cell- attached recordings were also obtained; in some patches outwardly directed single-channel currents could be activated by light but not by voltage. The unitary conductance of these channels was approximately 26 pS. Solitary ciliary cells also gave evidence of the post stimulus rebound, which is presumably responsible for initiating the "off" discharge of action potentials at the termination of a light stimulus: in patches containing only voltage-dependent channels, light stimulation suppressed depolarization-induced activity, and was followed by a strong burst of openings, directly related to the intensity of the preceding photostimulation.  相似文献   

16.
The patch clamp records obtained from mitoplast membranes prepared in the presence of a calcium chelator generally lack channel activity. However, multiconductance channel (MCC) activity can be induced by membrane potentials above ±60mV [Kinnallyet al., Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 176, 1183–1188 (1991)]. Once activated, the MCC activity persists at all voltages. The present report characterizes the activation by voltage of multiconductance channels of rat heart inner mitochondrial membranes using patch-clamping. In some membrane patches, the size of single current transitions progressively increases with time upon application of voltage. The inhibitor cyclosporin has also been found to decrease channel conductance in steps. The results suggest that voltage-induced effects which are inhibited by cyclosporin Aare likely to involve either an increase in effective pore diameter or the assembly of low-conductance units. In activated patches, we have found at high membrane potentials (e.g., 130 mV) changes in conductance as high as 5 nS occurring in large steps (up to 2.7 nS). These were generally preceded by a smaller transition. Similar results were obtained less frequently at lower voltages. These results can be explained on the assumption that once assembled the channels may act in unison.  相似文献   

17.
Single sodium channel currents were analysed in cell attached patches from single ventricular cells of guinea pig hearts in the presence of a novel cardiotonic compound DPI 201-106. The mean single channel conductance of DPI-treated Na channels was not changed by DPI (20.8 +/- 4 pS, control, 3 patches; 21.3 +/- 1 pS with DPI, 5 mumol/1,3 patches). DPI voltage-dependently prolongs the cardiac sodium channel openings by removal of inactivation at potentials positive to -40 mV. At potentials negative to -40 mV a clustering of short openings at the very beginning of the depolarizing voltage steps can be observed causing a transient time course of the averaged currents. Long openings induced an extremely slow inactivation. Short openings, long openings and nulls appeared in groups referring to a modal gating behaviour of DPI-treated sodium channels. DPI-modified Na channels showed a monotonously prolonged mean open time with increased depolarizing voltage steps, e.g. the open state probability within a sweep was increased. However, the number of non-empty sweeps was decreased with the magnitude of the depolarizing steps, e.g. the probability of the channel being open as calculated from the averaged currents was voltage-dependently decreased by DPI (50% decrease at -50.7 +/- 9 9 mV, 3 patches). Short and long openings of DPI-modified channels could be separated by variation of the holding potential. The occurrence of long Na channel openings was much more suppressed by reducing the holding potential (half maximum inactivation at -112 +/- 8 mV, 4 patches) than that of short openings (half maximum inactivation at -88 +/- 8 mV, 4 patches). Otherwise, short living openings completely disappeared at potentials positive to -40 mV where the occurrence of long openings was favoured. The differential voltage dependence of blocking and activating effects of DPI on cardiac Na channels as well as the differential voltage dependence of the appearance of short and long openings refers to a modal gating behaviour of cardiac Na channels.  相似文献   

18.
Currents through batrachotoxin (BTX)-modified sodium channels were measured under voltage clamp conditions on the Ranvier node membrane. Potential-dependence of the fraction of activated BTX-modified channels was determined on the basis of data showing nonlinearity of the momentary current-voltage characteristic curve in the region of high negative potentials. BTX induces a shift of the sodium channel activation curve toward negative potentials on average by 67 mV, but does not, under these circumstances, alter the potential-sensitivity of their activation mechanism. The results of experiments with preliminary depolarization, of varied amplitude and duration, showed that BTX-modified sodium channels are capable of partial inactivation. The high level of steady-state conduction of the modified channels is evidently due to the fact that as a result of modification by BTX the open state of the channel becomes energetically more advantageous than the inactivated state. It is concluded that the action of BTX on inactivation differs in principle from the action of pronase.Institute of Cytology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. A. V. Vishnevskii Institute of Surgery, Academy of Medical Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 16, No. 1, pp. 18–26. January–February, 1984.  相似文献   

19.
Measurements of chloride flux ratios across frog skin at different clamping voltages showed that chloride transport at clamping voltages from 0 mV to and beyond the spontaneous potential is probably electrodiffusion. At reversed potentials a significant fraction of chloride transport could be described formally as exchange diffusion. Chloride conductance was found to be highly voltage dependent, being largest at hyperpolarizing clamping voltages. The transition from the less conducting state to the more conducting one was studied by recording the time course of the current after a step change in clamping voltage from 0 mV to hyperpolarizing voltages. The shape of the curve is sigmoidal, and the relative rate of change of current increases with increasing hyperpolarization. It is proposed that the change in conductance is governed by the same mechanism as in the toad skin, namely a change in chloride permeability due to voltage gating of chloride channels. The time course of transepithelial conductance after addition of amiloride to the outside solution indicates that a fraction of the decrease in conductance is due to closure of chloride channels caused by the change in intracellular potential due to the inhibition of the sodium channels.  相似文献   

20.
The apically restricted, voltage-dependent K+ conductance of Necturus taste receptor cells was studied using cell-attached, inside-out and outside-out configurations of the patch-clamp recording technique. Patches from the apical membrane typically contained many channels with unitary conductances ranging from 30 to 175 pS in symmetrical K+ solutions. Channel density was so high that unitary currents could be resolved only at negative voltages; at positive voltages patch recordings resembled whole-cell recordings. These multi-channel patches had a small but significant resting conductance that was strongly activated by depolarization. Patch current was highly K+ selective, with a PK/PNa ratio of 28. Patches containing single K+ channels were obtained by allowing the apical membrane to redistribute into the basolateral membrane with time. Two types of K+ channels were observed in isolation. Ca(2+)-dependent channels of large conductance (135-175 pS) were activated in cell-attached patches by strong depolarization, with a half-activation voltage of approximately -10 mV. An ATP-blocked K+ channel of 100 pS was activated in cell-attached patches by weak depolarization, with a half-activation voltage of approximately -47 mV. All apical K+ channels were blocked by the sour taste stimulus citric acid directly applied to outside-out and perfused cell-attached patches. The bitter stimulus quinine also blocked all channels when applied directly by altering channel gating to reduce the open probability. When quinine was applied extracellularly only to the membrane outside the patch pipette and also to inside-out patches, it produced a flickery block. Thus, sour and bitter taste stimuli appear to block the same apical K+ channels via different mechanisms to produce depolarizing receptor potentials.  相似文献   

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