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1.
Membrane potentials of mouse parathyroid cells were measured by means of the intracellular microelectrode method. The membrane potential in external Krebs solution containing 2.5 mM of Ca++ was -23.6 +/- 0.4 mV (mean +/- standard error of mean). The low concentration of Ca++ (1.0 mM) caused hyperpolarization of the membrane potential to -61.7 +/- 0.8 mV. The membrane potential was proportional to the logarithm of the concentration of K ion in the solution of low Ca ion. The concentration of external Na+, C1- and HPO4-- had no effect on the membrane potential. The sigmoidal transition of membrane potentials was induced by the change of Ca ion concentration in the range from 2.5 to 1.0 mM. The change of the membrane potentials in low Ca ion is originated from increase in potassium permeability of the cell membrane. The similar sigmoidal changes of the membrane potentials were observed in the solution containing 4 to 3 mM of Sr ion. The Mg and Ba ion showed smaller effect on the membrane potential. The Goldman equation was extended to divalent ions. Appling the extended membrane potential equation, ratios of the permeability coefficients were obtained as follows: PK/PCa = 0.067 for 2.5 mM Ca++, 0.33 for 1.0 mM Ca++; PK/PSr = 0.08 for 4 mM Sr++ and 0.4 for 3 mM Sr++; PK/PMg = 0.5; PK/PBa = 0.67 for all range of concentration. The Hill constants of Sr ion and Ca ion were 20; the relationship between Sr ion and Ca ion was competitive. The Hill constants of Mg and Ba ion were 1 each. The Hill constant of Ca ion was depend of the temperature; nmax = 20 at 36 degrees C, n = 9 at 27 degrees C, n = 2 at 22 degrees C. The enthalpy of Ca-binding reaction was obtained from the Van't Hoff plot as 0.58 kcal. The activation energies of the K+ permeability increase were obtained from the Arrhenius plots as 3.3 kcal and 4 kcal. The difference, 0.7 kcal, corresponds to the enthalpy change of this reaction, of which value is close to that of the Ca-binding reaction.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Net K movements in reconstituted human red cell ghosts and the resealing of ghosts to cations after osmotic hemolysis of red cells have been studied as functions of the free Ca ion concentration. The Ca-dependent specific increase in K permeability was shown to be mediated by a site close to the internal surface of the membrane with an apparent dissociation constant at pH 7.2 for Ca (K D1) of 3–5×10–7 m, for Sr of 7×10–6 m. Ba and Mg did not increase the K-permeability of the membrane but inhibited the Ca-mediated permeability changes.K D1 decreased in a nonlinear fashion when the pH was increased from 6.0 to 8.5. Two different pK values of this membrane site were found at pH 8.3 and 6.3. The Ca-activated net K efflux into a K-free medium was almost completely inhibited by an increase in intracellular Na from 4 to 70mm. Extracellular K antagonized this Na effect. Changes in the extracellular Na (0.1–140mm) or K(0.1–6mm) concentrations had little effect and did not changeK D1. The Ca-stimulated recovery of a low cation permeability in ghost cells appeared to be mediated by a second membrane site which was accessible to divalent cations only during the process of hemolysis in media of low ionic strength. The apparent dissociation constant for Ca at this site (K D2) varied between 6×10–7 and 4×10–6 m at pH 7.2. Mg, Sr, and Ba could replace Ca functionally. The selectivity sequence was Ca>Sr>Ba>Mg.K D2 was independt on the pH value in the range between 6.0 and 8.0. Hill coefficients of 2 were observed for the interaction of Ca with both membrane sites suggesting that more than one Ca ion is bound per site. The Hill coefficients were affected neither by the ion composition nor by the pH values of the intra- and extracellular media. It is concluded that two different pathways for the permeation of cations across the membrane are controlled by membrane sites with high affinities for Ca: One specific for K, one unspecific with respect to cations. The K-specific channel has properties similar to the K channel in excitable tissues.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of different extracellular alkaline-earth cations (Ca2+, Mg2+, Sr2+, Ba2+) upon the threshold membrane potential for spike initiation in crayfish axon has been studied by means of intracellular microelectrodes. This was done at the following extracellular concentrations of the divalent uranyl ion (UO2/2+): 1.0 X 10(-6) M, 3.0 X 10(-6) M, and 9.0 X 10(-6) M. At each concentration employed, extensive neutralization of axonal surface charges by UO2/2+ was evidenced by the fact that equal concentrations (50 mM) of alkaline-earth cations did not have the same effect on the threshold potential. The selectivity sequences observed at the different uranyl-ion concentrations were: 1.0 X 10(-6) M UO2/2+, Ca2+ greater than Mg2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Ba2+; 3.0 X 10(-6) M UO2/2+, Ca2+ greater than Mg2+ greater than Ba2+ larger than or equal to Sr2+; 9.0 X 10(-6) M UO2/2+, Ca2+ approximately Ba2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Mg2+. These selectivity sequences are in accord with the equilibrium selectivity theory for alkaline-earth cations. At each of the concentrations used, uranyl ion did not have any detectable effect on the actual shape of the action potential itself. It is concluded that many (if not most) of the surface acidic groups in the region of the sodium gates represent phosphate groups of membrane phospholipids, but that the m gates themselves are probably protein-aceous in structure.  相似文献   

4.
The Na-K ATPase found in sedimentable fractions of intestinal epithelium of rats hydrolyzed cytidine triphosphate nearly as well as ATP (25% to 50%); was active only in presence of divalent cations, with specificity for Mg (100%), Mn (50%) and Ca (10%); showed a plateau of activation when Mg concentrations were in excess of substrate; and was inhibited by a second divalent cation (Zn > Mn > Ca), and by 3 × 10?4 M ouabain (50%). Parallel assays of rat red cell ghosts showed differences in substrate specificity (CTP was not utilized), in activation kinetics (activation peak with Mg) and in greater specificity to Mg (Mn was a weaker activator and Zn was a weaker inhibitor). Stabilities also differed in the two preparations: Na? K ATPase of intestinal epithelium was activated by sucrose extraction and denatured during cytolysis at room temperature, while that of red cell fragments was denatured during sucrose extraction and preserved by hemolysis at room temperature. Other properties of Na? K ATPase studied in the two tissues included activation by monovalent cations (optimum at 160 mM Na, 15 mM K), specificity to monovalent cations, and sensitivity to lipid solvents and to some drugs. The data were discussed in terms of comparative properties of Na? K ATPases of various cells. Residual ATPase activities of intestinal epithelium and red cell ghosts were shown to differ in substrate specificity, inhibition and activation. “Residual ATPase” from intestinal epithelium was a zinc-activated nucleoside polyphosphate phosphohydrolase, while ghosts contained Mg? ATPase. Only the latter enzyme was specific to ATP and Mg, activated by Ca in presence of Mg, and sensitive to inhibition by PCMB and Zn.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of thyroid hormones receptors isolated from normal and cancer cells on bilayer phospholipid membranes (BPhLM) conductivity, has been studied. The receptor isolated from normal cells in complex X with the hormone selectively induces H+-conductivity of BPhLM generating transmembrane potential equal to 42 mV on the membrane at pH gradient equal to 1. In the presence of K+, Na+, Ca+, Mn2+, Sr2+, Mg2+ the changes of BPhLM are not observed. Neither hormones (T3, T4) nor receptor in free position affect the BPhLM conductivity. Thyroid hormone receptor isolated from mamalignantly transformed cells in a complex with T3 or T4 increases the BPhLM permeability for Ca2+. The transmembrane potential measured at 10fold Ca2+ ion concentration is equal to 16 mV. In the presence of H+, K+, Na+, Mn2+, Sr2+, Mg2+, Ba2+, the resistance of BPhLM doesn't change.  相似文献   

6.
(-)-[3H]Desmethoxyverapamil ((-)-DMV) binds saturably to homogenates of the osteoblast-like cell lines UMR 106 and ROS 17/2.8 with KD values of 45 and 61 nM and Bmax values of 6.0 and 5 pmol/mg protein, respectively. Binding is stereoselective with (-)-DMV 8-10 times more potent than (+)-DMV. None of the dihydropyridine or benzothiazepine Ca2+ antagonists examined affect (-)-[3H]DMV binding. Monovalent cations such as Li+, Na+, and K+ inhibit (-)[3H]DMV binding in the 100-400 mM range. Divalent cations such as Ba2+, Sr2+, Ca2+, and Mg2+ are effective binding inhibitors in the 2-5 mM range. ROS 17/2.8 cells express a channel on the apical plasma membrane which conducts Ba2+ and Ca2+. With 110 mM BaCl2 or CaCl2 as charge carriers the single channel conductance is 3-5 picosiemens. In cell-excised patches the channel selects for Ba2+ over Na+ 3.3:1. In the absence of divalent ions the channel conducts Na+ ions with a single channel conductance of 13 picosiemens. This Na+ conductance decreases with physiological levels of Ca2+. The channel appears related to the (-)-[3H]DMV binding site, since its conductance is blocked by verapamil in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, DMV blocks the channel stereoselectively with relative potencies of the isomers corresponding to their affinities for the binding site. The dihydropyridine drugs BAY K 8644 or (+)-202-791 do not affect channel opening. These binding and biophysical data indicate that osteoblast cells have a phenylalkylamine receptor associated with a Ca2+ channel.  相似文献   

7.
The passive ionic membrane conductances (gj) and permeabilities (Pj) of K, Na, and Cl of crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) medial giant axons were determined in the potassium-depolarized axon and compared with that of the resting axon. Passive ionic conductances and permeabilities were found to be potassium dependent with a major conductance transition occurring around an external K concentration of 12-15 mM (Vm = -60 to -65 mV). The results showed that K, Na, and Cl conductances increased by 6.2, 6.9, and 27-fold, respectively, when external K was elevated from 5.4 to 40 mM. Permeability measurements indicated that K changed minimally with K depolarization while Na and Cl underwent an order increase in permeability. In the resting axon (K0 = 5.4 mM, pH = 7.0) PK = 1.33 X 10(-5), PCl = 1.99 X 10(-6), PNa = 1.92 X 10(-8) while in elevated potassium (K0 = 40 mM, pH 7.0), PK = 1.9 X 10(-5), PCl = 1.2 X 10(-5), and PNa = 2.7 X 10(-7) cm/s. When membrane potential is reduced to 40 mV by changes in internal ions, the conductance changes are initially small. This suggests that resting channel conductances depend also on ion environments seen by each membrane surface in addition to membrane potential. In elevated potassium, K, Na, and Cl conductances and permeabilities were measured from pH 3.8 to 11 in 0.2 pH increments. Here a cooperative transition in membrane conductance or permeability occurs when pH is altered through the imidazole pK (approximately pH 6.3) region. This cooperative conductance transition involves changes in Na and Cl but not K permeabilities. A Hill coefficient n of near 4 was found for the cooperative conductance transition of both the Na and Cl ionic channel which could be interpreted as resulting from 4 protein molecules forming each of the Na and Cl ionic channels. Tetrodotoxin reduces the Hill coefficient n to near 2 for the Na channel but does not affect the Cl channel. In the resting or depolarized axon, crosslinking membrane amino groups with DIDS reduces Cl and Na permeability. Following potassium depolarization, buried amino groups appear to be uncovered. The data here suggest that potassium depolarization produces a membrane conformation change in these ionic permeability regulatory components. A model is proposed where membrane protein, which forms the membrane ionic channels, is oriented with an accessible amino terminal group on the axon exterior. In this model the ionizable groups on protein and phospholipid have varied associations with the different ionic channel access sites for K, Na, and Cl, and these groups exert considerable control over ion permeation through their surface potentials.  相似文献   

8.
The presence of an Na/Ca exchange system in fasciculata cells of the bovine adrenal gland was tested using isolated plasmalemmal vesicles. In the presence of an outwardly Na(+) gradient, Ca(2+) uptake was about 2-fold higher than in K(+) condition. Li(+) did not substitute for Na(+) and 5 mM Ni(2+) inhibited Ca(2+) uptake. Ca(2+) efflux from Ca(2+)-loaded vesicles was Na(+)-stimulated and Ni(2+)-inhibited. The saturable part of Na(+)-dependent Ca(2+) uptake displayed Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The relationship of Na(+)-dependent Ca(2+) uptake versus intravesicular Na(+) concentration was sigmoid (apparent K(0.5) approximately 24 mM; Hill number approximately 3) and Na(+) acted on V(max) without significant effect on K(m). Na(+)-stimulated Ca(2+) uptake was temperature-dependent (apparent Q(10) approximately 2.2). The inhibition properties of several divalent cations (Cd(2+), Sr(2+), Ni(2+), Ba(2+), Mn(2+), Mg(2+)) were tested and were similar to those observed in kidney basolateral membrane. The above results indicate the presence of an Na/Ca exchanger located on plasma membrane of zona fasciculata cells of bovine adrenal gland. This exchanger displays similarities with that of renal basolateral cell membrane.  相似文献   

9.
The properties of the cGMP-dependent channel present in membrane vesicles prepared from intact isolated bovine rod outer segments (ROS) were investigated with the optical probe neutral red. The binding of neutral red is sensitive to transport of cations across vesicular membranes by the effect of the translocated cations on the surface potential at the intravesicular membrane/water interface (Schnetkamp, P. P. M. J. Membr. Biol. 88: 249-262). Only 20-25% of ROS membrane vesicles exhibited cGMP-dependent cation fluxes. The cGMP-dependent channel in bovine ROS carried currents of alkali and earth alkali cations, but not of organic cations such as choline and tetramethylammonium; little discrimination among alkali cations (K greater than Na = Li greater than Cs) or among earth alkali cations (Ca greater than Mn greater than Sr greater than Ba = Mg) was observed. The cation dependence of cGMP-induced cation fluxes could be reasonably well described by a Michaelis-Menten equation with a dissociation constant for alkali cations of about 100 mM, and a dissociation constant for Ca2+ of 2 mM. cGMP-induced Na+ fluxes were blocked by Mg2+, but not by Ca2+, when the cations were applied to the cytoplasmic side of the channel. cGMP-dependent cation fluxes showed a sigmoidal dependence on the cGMP concentration with a Hill coefficient of 2.1 and a dissociation constant for cGMP of 92 microM. cGMP-induced cation fluxes showed two pharmacologically distinct components; one component was blocked by both tetracaine and L-cis diltiazem, whereas the other component was only blocked by tetracaine.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
A Miller  rd  S T Li    F Bronner 《The Biochemical journal》1982,208(3):773-781
The Ca2+-binding properties of isolated brush-border membranes at physiological ionic strength and pH were examined by rapid Millipore filtration. A comprehensive analysis of the binding data suggested the presence of two types of Ca2+-binding sites. The high-affinity sites, Ka = (6.3 +/- 3.3) X 10(5) M-1 (mean +/- S.E.M.), bound 0.8 +/- 0.1 nmol of Ca2+/mg of protein and the low-affinity sites, Ka = (2.8 +/- 0.3) X 10(2) M-1, bound 33 +/- 3.5 nmol of Ca2+/mg of protein. The high-affinity site exhibited a selectivity for Ca2+, since high concentrations of competing bivalent cations were required to inhibit Ca2+ binding. The relative effectiveness of the competing cations (1 and 10 mM) for the high-affinity site was Mn2+ approximately equal to Sr2+ greater than Ba2+ greater than Mg2+. Data from the pH studies, treatment of the membranes with carbodi-imide and extraction of phospholipids with aqueous acetone and NH3 provided evidence that the low-affinity sites were primarily phospholipids and the high-affinity sites were either phosphoprotein or protein with associated phospholipid. Two possible roles for the high-affinity binding sites are suggested. Either high-affinity Ca2+ binding is involved with specific enzyme activities or Ca2+ transport across the luminal membrane occurs via a Ca2+ channel which contains a high-affinity Ca2+-specific binding site that may regulate the intracellular Ca2+ concentration and gating of the channel.  相似文献   

12.
General properties of ouabain-sensitive K+ binding to purified Na+,K+-ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] were studied by a centrifugation method with 42K+. 1) The affinity for K+ was constant at pH values higher than 6.4, and decreased at pH values lower than 6.4. 2) Mg2+ competitively inhibited the K+ binding. The dissociation constant (Kd) for Mg2+ of the enzyme was estimated to be about 1 mM, and the ratio of Kd for Mg2+ to Kd for K+ was 120 : 1. The order of inhibitory efficiency of divalent cations toward the K+ binding was Ba2+ congruent to Ca2+ greater than Zn2+ congruent to Mn2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Co2+ greater than Ni2+ greater than Mg2+. 3) The order of displacement efficiency of monovalent cations toward the K+ binding in the presence or absence of Mg2+ was Tl+ greater than Rb+ greater than or equal to (K+) greater than NH4+ greater than or equal to Cs+ greater than Na+ greater than Li+. The inhibition patterns of Na+ and Li+ were different from those of other monovalent cations, which competitively inhibited the K+ binding. 4) The K+ binding was not influenced by different anions, such as Cl-, SO4(2-), NO3-, acetate, and glycylglycine, which were used for preparing imidazole buffers. 5) Gramicidin D and valinomycin did not affect the K+ binding, though the former (10 micrograms/ml) inhibited the Na+,K+-ATPase activity by about half. Among various inhibitors of the ATPase, 0.1 mM p-chloromercuribenzoate and 0.1 mM tri-n-butyltin chloride completely inhibited the K+ binding. Oligomycin (10 micrograms/ml) and 10 mM N-ethylmaleimide had no effect on the K+ binding. In the presence of Na+, however, oligomycin decreased the K+ binding by increasing the inhibitory effect of Na+, whether Mg2+ was present or not. 6) ATP, adenylylimido diphosphate and ADP each at 0.2 mM decreased the K+ binding to about one-fourth of the original level at 10 microM K+ without MgCl2 and at 60 microM K+ with 5 mM MgCl2. On the other hand, AMP, Pi, and p-nitrophenylphosphate each at 0.2 mM had little effect on the K+ binding.  相似文献   

13.
NMDA receptors are glutamate-regulated ion channels that are of great importance for many physiological and pathophysiological conditions in the mammalian central nervous system. We have previously shown that, at low pH, glutamate decreases binding of the open-channel blocker [3H](+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a,d]cyclohepten, 5,10-imine ([3H]MK-801) to NMDA receptors in the presence of 1 mM Mg2+ but not in Krebs buffer. Here, we investigated which cations that block the glutamate-induced decrease in Krebs buffer, using [3H]MK-801 binding assays in membrane preparations from the rat cerebral cortex. At pH 6.0, Na+, K+, and Ca2+ antagonized the glutamate-induced decrease with cross-over values, which is a measure of the antagonist potencies of the cations, of 81, 71, and 26 mM, respectively, in the absence of added glycine. Thus, in Krebs buffer only the concentration of Na+ (126 mM) is sufficiently high to block the glutamate-induced decrease observed at low pH. In the presence of 1 mM Mg2+ and 10 mM Ca2+ at pH 7.4, the cross-over values for Na+, K+, and Ca2+ were 264, 139, and 122 mM, respectively, in the absence of added glycine. This is the same rank order of potency as observed at pH 6.0, suggesting that the less H+-sensitive and the less Ca2+-sensitive, glutamate-induced decreases in [3H]MK-801 binding represent the same entity. The glycine site antagonists 7-chlorokynurenate (10 microM) and 7-chloro-4-hydroxy-3-(3-phenoxy)phenyl-2(H)-quinoline (L-701,324; 1 microM) antagonized the glutamate-induced decrease in [3H]MK-801 binding observed in presence of Mg2+ at pH 6.0, suggesting that glycine is required together with glutamate to induce the decrease observed at low pH. These results suggest that in addition to a previously described high-affinity binding site for H+ and Ca2+ there exist a low-affinity binding site for H+, Ca2+, Na+, and K+ on NMDA receptors. The latter site may under physiological conditions be blocked by Na+ or K+, depending on the extra/intracellular localization of the modulatory site. Both the high-affinity and low-affinity cation sites mediate antagonistic effects on the glutamate- and glycine-induced decrease of the affinity of the [3H]MK-801 binding site, which may correspond to similar changes in the affinity of the voltage-sensitive Mg2+-block site inside the NMDA receptor channel pore, which in turn may affect current and Ca2+ influx through activated NMDA receptor channels.  相似文献   

14.
Photosynthetic characteristics, leaf ionic content, and net fluxes of Na(+), K(+), and Cl(-) were studied in barley (Hordeum vulgare L) plants grown hydroponically at various Na/Ca ratios. Five weeks of moderate (50 mM) or high (100 mM) NaCl stress caused a significant decline in chlorophyll content, chlorophyll fluorescence characteristics, and stomatal conductance (g(s)) in plant leaves grown at low calcium level. Supplemental Ca(2+) enabled normal photochemical efficiency of PSII (F(v)/F(m) around 0.83), restored chlorophyll content to 80-90% of control, but had a much smaller (50% of control) effect on g(s). In experiments on excised leaves, not only Ca(2+), but also other divalent cations (in particular, Ba(2+) and Mg(2+)), significantly ameliorated the otherwise toxic effect of NaCl on leaf photochemistry, thus attributing potential targets for such amelioration to leaf tissues. To study the underlying ionic mechanisms of this process, the MIFE technique was used to measure the kinetics of net Na(+), K(+), and Cl(-) fluxes from salinized barley leaf mesophyll in response to physiological concentrations of Ca(2+), Ba(2+), Mg(2+), and Zn(2+). Addition of 20 mM Na(+) as NaCl or Na(2)SO(4) to the bath caused significant uptake of Na(+) and efflux of K(+). These effects were reversed by adding 1 mM divalent cations to the bath solution, with the relative efficiency Ba(2+)>Zn(2+)=Ca(2+)>Mg(2+). Effect of divalent cations on Na(+) efflux was transient, while their application caused a prolonged shift towards K(+) uptake. This suggests that, in addition to their known ability to block non-selective cation channels (NSCC) responsible for Na(+) entry, divalent cations also control the activity or gating properties of K(+) transporters at the mesophyll cell plasma membrane, thereby assisting in maintaining the high K/Na ratio required for optimal leaf photosynthesis.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Depolarizing response of rat parathyroid cells to divalent cations   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Membrane potentials were recorded from rat parathyroid glands continuously perfused in vitro. At 1.5 mM external Ca++, the resting potential averages -73 +/- 5 mV (mean +/- SD, n = 66). On exposure to 2.5 mM Ca++, the cells depolarize reversibly to a potential of -34 +/- 8 mV (mean +/- SD). Depolarization to this value is complete in approximately 2-4 min, and repolarization on return to 1.5 mM Ca++ takes about the same time. The depolarizing action of high Ca++ is mimicked by all divalent cations tested, with the following order of effectiveness: Ca++ greater than Sr++ greater than Mg++ greater than Ba++ for alkali-earth metals, and Ca++ greater than Cd++ greater than Mn++ greater than Co++ greater than Zn++ for transition metals. Input resistance in 1.5 mM Ca++ was 24.35 +/- 14 M omega (mean +/- SD) and increased by an average factor of 2.43 +/- 0.8 after switching to 2.5 mM Ca++. The low value of input resistance suggests that cells are coupled by low-resistance junctions. The resting potential in low Ca++ is quite insensitive to removal of external Na+ or Cl-, but very sensitive to changes in external K+. Cells depolarize by 61 mV for a 10- fold increase in external K+. In high Ca++, membrane potential is less sensitive to an increase in external K+ and is unchanged by increasing K+ from 5 to 25 mM. Depolarization evoked by high Ca++ may be slowed, but is unchanged in amplitude by removal of external Na+ or Cl-. Organic (D600) and inorganic (Co++, Cd++, and Mn++) blockers of the Ca++ channels do not interfere with the electrical response to Ca++ changes. Our results show remarkable parallels to previous observations on the control of parathormone (PTH) release by Ca++. They suggest an association between membrane voltage and secretion that is very unusual: parathyroid cells secrete when fully polarized, and secrete less when depolarized. The extraordinary sensitivity of parathyroid cells to divalent cations leads us to hypothesize the existence in their membranes of a divalent cation receptor that controls membrane permeability (possibly to K+) and PTH secretion.  相似文献   

17.
Caldwell CR 《Plant physiology》1989,91(4):1339-1344
Temperature and cations modified the reaction of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Conguest) root plasma membrane protein sulfhydryl groups with N-4-(7-diethylamino-4-methylcoumarin-3-yl)-phenyl maleimide (CPM). The pseudo-first-order rate constants for the formation of fluorescent CPM-protein adducts increased as the temperature was raised above 30°C, suggesting changes in protein conformation. Monovalent [K(I), Na(I), L(I)] and certain divalent cations [Ba(II), Mg(II)] increased the reaction rates. Other divalent cations [Ca(II), Mn(II), Ni(II), Co(II), Sr(II), Cd(II), Hg(II)] decreased the rate of fluorescent adduct formation. Na(I) promoted and Ca(II) delayed the onset of the temperature-dependent increases in reaction rates. The results are discussed in terms of lipid-mediated, temperature-dependent changes in membrane protein conformation and ion-protein interactions.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetics of ATP hydrolysis and cation effects on ATPase activity in plasma membrane from Candida albicans ATCC 10261 yeast cells were investigated. The ATPase showed classical Michaelis-Menten kinetics for the hydrolysis of Mg X ATP, with Km = 4.8 mM Mg X ATP. Na+ and K+ stimulated the ATPase slightly (9% at 20 mM). Divalent cations in combination with ATP gave lower ATPase activity than Mg X ATP (Mg greater than Mn greater than Co greater than Zn greater than Ni greater than Ca). Divalent cations inhibited the Mg X ATPase (Zn greater than Ni greater than Co greater than Ca greater than Mn). Free Mg2+ inhibited Mg X ATPase weakly (20% inhibition at 10 mM). Computed analyses of substrate concentrations showed that free Zn2+ inhibited Zn X ATPase, mixed (Zn2+ + Mg2+) X ATPase, and Mg X ATPase activities. Zn X ATP showed high affinity for ATPase (Km = 1.0 mM Zn X ATP) but lower turnover (52%) relative to Mg X ATP. Inhibition of Mg X ATPase by (free) Zn2+ was noncompetitive, Ki = 90 microM Zn2+. The existence of a divalent cation inhibitory site on the plasma membrane Mg X ATPase is proposed.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
The ability of the divalent cations calcium, magnesium, and barium to permeate through the cGMP-gated channel of catfish cone outer segments was examined by measuring permeability and conductance ratios under biionic conditions and by measuring their ability to block current carried by sodium when presented on the cytoplasmic or extracellular side of the channel. Current carried by divalent cations in the absence of monovalent cations showed the typical rectification pattern observed from these channels under physiological conditions (an exponential increase in current at both positive and negative voltages). With calcium as the reference ion, the relative permeabilities were Ca > Ba > Mg, and the chord conductance ratios at +50 mV were in the order of Ca approximately Mg > Ba. With external sodium as the reference ion, the relative permeabilities were Ca > Mg > Ba > Na with chord conductance ratios at +30 mV in the order of Na >> Ca = Mg > Ba. The ability of divalent cations presented on the intracellular side to block the sodium current was in the order Ca > Mg > Ba at +30 mV and Ca > Ba > Mg at -30 mV. Block by external divalent cations was also investigated. The current-voltage relations showed block by internal divalent cations reveal no anomalous mole fraction behavior, suggesting little ion-ion interaction within the pore. An Eyring rate theory model with two barriers and a single binding site is sufficient to explain both these observations and those for monovalent cations, predicting a single-channel conductance under physiological conditions of 2 pS and an inward current at -30 mV carried by 82% Na, 5% Mg, and 13% Ca.  相似文献   

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