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1.
The location of reactive cysteine residues on the ryanodine receptor (RyR) calcium release channel was assessed from the changes in channel activity when oxidizing or reducing reagents were added to the luminal or cytoplasmic solution. Single sheep cardiac RyRs were incorporated into lipid bilayers with 10−7 m cytoplasmic Ca2+. The thiol specific-lipophilic-4,4′-dithiodipyridine (4,4′-DTDP, 1 mm), as well as the hydrophilic thimerosal (1 mm), activated and then inhibited RyRs from either the cis (cytoplasmic) or trans (luminal) solutions. Activation was associated with an increase in the (a) mean channel open time and (b) number of exponential components in the open time distribution from one (∼2 msec) to three (∼1 msec; ∼7 msec; ∼15 msec) in channels activated by trans 4,4′-DTDP or cis or trans thimerosal. A longer component (∼75 msec) appeared with cis 4,4′-DTDP. Activation by either oxidant was reversed by the thiol reducing agent, dithiothreitol. The results suggest that three classes of cysteines are available to 4,4′-DTDP or thimerosal, SHa or SHa* activating the channel and SHi closing the channel. SHa is either distributed over luminal and cytoplasmic RyR domains, or is located within the channel pore. SHi is also located within the transmembrane domain. SHa* is located on the cytoplasmic domain of the protein. Received: 17 March 1998/Revised: 26 October 1998  相似文献   

2.
We show that rabbit skeletal RyR channels in lipid bilayers can be activated or inhibited by NO, in a manner that depends on donor concentration, membrane potential and the presence of channel agonists. 10 μm S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP) increased RyR activity at −40 mV within 15 sec of addition to the cis chamber, with a 2-fold increase in frequency of channel opening (F o ). 10 μm SNAP did not alter activity at +40 mV and did not further activate RyRs previously activated by 2 mm cis ATP at +40 or −40 mV. In contrast to the increase in F o with 10 μm SNAP, 1 mm SNAP caused a 2-fold reduction in F o but a 1.5-fold increase in mean open time (T o ) at −40 mV in the absence of ATP. 1 mm SNAP or 0.5 mm sodium nitroprusside (SNP) induced ∼3-fold reductions in F o and T o at +40 or −40 mV when channels were activated by 2 mm cis ATP or in channels activated by 6.5 μm peptide A at −40 mV (peptide A corresponds to part of the II–III loop of the skeletal dihydropyridine receptor). Both SNAP-induced activation and SNAP/SNP-induced inhibition were reversed by 2 mm dithiothreitol. The results suggest that S-Nitrosylation or oxidation of at least three classes of protein thiols by NO each produced characteristic changes in RyR activity. We propose that, in vivo, initial release of NO activates RyRs, but stronger release increases [NO] and inhibits RyR activity and contraction. Received: 27 August 1999/Revised: 25 October 1999  相似文献   

3.
The reactive disulfide 4,4′-dithiodipyridine (4,4′DTDP) was added to single cardiac ryanodine receptors (RyRs) in lipid bilayers. The activity of native RyRs, with cytoplasmic (cis) [Ca2+] of 10−7 m (in the absence of Mg2+ and ATP), increased within ∼1 min of addition of 1 mm 4,4′-DTDP, and then irreversibly ceased 5 to 6 min after the addition. Channels, inhibited by either 1 mm cis Mg2+ (10−7 m cis Ca2+) or by 10 mm cis Mg2+ (10−3 m cis Ca2+), or activated by 4 mm ATP (10−7 m cis Ca2+), also responded to 1 mm cis 4,4′-DTDP with activation and then loss of activity. P o and mean open time (T o ) of the maximally activated channels were lower in the presence of Mg2+ than in its absence, and the number of openings within the long time constant components of the open time distribution was reduced. In contrast to the reduced activation by 1 mm 4,4′-DTDP in channels inhibited by Mg2+, and the previously reported enhanced activation by 4,4′-DTDP in channels activated by Ca2+ or caffeine (Eager et al., 1997), the activation produced by 1 mm cis 4,4′-DTDP was the same in the presence and absence of ATP. These results suggest that there is a physical interaction between the ATP binding domain of the cardiac RyR and the SH groups whose oxidation leads to channel activation. Received: 8 September 1997/Revised: 20 January 1998  相似文献   

4.
The understanding of the role of cytoplasmic pH in modulating sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) ion channels involved in Ca2+ regulation is important for the understanding of the function of normal and adversely affected muscles. The dependency of the SR small chloride (SCl) channel from rabbit skeletal muscle on cytoplasmic pH (pH cis ) and luminal pH (pH trans ) was investigated using the lipid bilayer-vesicle fusion technique. Low pH cis 6.75–4.28 modifies the operational mode of this multiconductance channel (conductance levels between 5 and 75 pS). At pH cis 7.26–7.37 the channel mode is dominated by the conductance and kinetics of the main conductance state (65–75 pS) whereas at low pH cis 6.75–4.28 the channel mode is dominated by the conductance and kinetics of subconductance states (5–40 pS). Similarly, low pH trans 4.07, but not pH trans 6.28, modified the activity of SCl channels. The effects of low pH cis are pronounced at 10−3 and 10−4 m [Ca2+] cis but are not apparent at 10−5 m [Ca2+] cis , where the subconductances of the channel are already prominent. Low pH cis -induced mode shift in the SCl channel activity is due to modification of the channel proteins that cause the uncoupling of the subconductance states. The results in this study suggest that low pH cis can modify the functional properties of the skeletal SR ion channels and hence contribute, at least partly, to the malfunction in the contraction-relaxation mechanism in skeletal muscle under low cytoplasmic pH levels. Received: 20 May 1998/Revised: 24 September 1998  相似文献   

5.
The gating of ryanodine receptor calcium release channels (RyRs) depends on myoplasmic Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentrations. RyRs from skeletal and cardiac muscle are activated by μm Ca2+ and inhibited by mm Ca2+ and Mg2+. 45Ca2+ release from skeletal SR vesicles suggests two mechanisms for Mg2+-inhibition (Meissner, Darling & Eveleth, 1986, Biochemistry 25:236–244). The present study investigates the nature of these mechanisms using measurements of single-channel activity from cardiac- and skeletal RyRs incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. Our measurements of Mg2+- and Ca2+-dependent gating kinetics confirm that there are two mechanisms for Mg2+ inhibition (Type I and II inhibition) in skeletal and cardiac RyRs. The mechanisms operate concurrently, are independent and are associated with different parts of the channel protein. Mg2+ reduces P o by competing with Ca2+ for the activation site (Type-I) or binding to more than one, and probably two low affinity inhibition sites which do not discriminate between Ca2+ and Mg2+ (Type-II). The relative contributions of the two inhibition mechanisms to the total Mg2+ effect depend on cytoplasmic [Ca2+] in such a way that Mg2+ inhibition has the properties of Types-I and II inhibition at low and high [Ca2+] respectively. Both mechanisms are equally important when [Ca2+] = 10 μm in cardiac RyRs or 1 μm in skeletal RyRs. We show that Type-I inhibition is not the sole mechanism responsible for Mg2+ inhibition, as is often assumed, and we discuss the physiological implications of this finding. Received: 1 January 1996/Revised: 14 November 1996  相似文献   

6.
We have investigated the interaction of two peptides (ShB — net charge +3 and ShB:E12KD13K — net charge +7) derived from the NH2-terminal domain of the Shaker K+ channel with purified, ryanodine-modified, cardiac Ca2+-release channels (RyR). Both peptides produced well resolved blocking events from the cytosolic face of the channel. At a holding potential of +60 mV the relationship between the probability of block and peptide concentration was described by a single-site binding scheme with 50% saturation occurring at 5.92 ± 1.06 μm for ShB and 0.59 ± 0.14 nm for ShB:E12KD13K. The association rates of both peptides varied with concentration (4.0 ± 0.4 sec−1μm −1 for ShB and 2000 ± 200 sec−1μm −1 for ShB:E12KD13K); dissociation rates were independent of concentration. The interaction of both peptides was influenced by applied potential with the bulk of the voltage-dependence residing in Koff. The effectiveness of the inactivation peptides as blockers of RyR is enhanced by an increase in net positive charge. As is the case with inactivation and block of K+ channels, this is mediated by a large increase in Kon. These observations are consistent with the proposal that the conduction pathway of RyR contains negatively charged sites which will contribute to the ion handling properties of this channel. Received: 15 December 1997/Revised: 13 March 1998  相似文献   

7.
2-Methoxyestradiol, an endogenous metabolite of 17β-estradiol, is known to have antitumor and antiangiogenic actions. The effects of 2-methoxyestradiol on ionic currents were investigated in an endothelial cell line (HUV-EC-C) originally derived from human umbilical vein. In the whole-cell patch-clamp configuration, 2-methoxyestradiol (0.3–30 μm) reversibly suppressed the amplitude of K+ outward currents. The IC 50 value of the 2-methoxyestradiol-induced decrease in outward current was 3 μm. Evans blue (30 μm) or niflumic acid (30 μm), but not diazoxide (30 μm), reversed the 2-methoxyestradiol-induced decrease in outward current. In the inside-out configuration, application of 2-methoxyestradiol (3 μm) to the bath did not modify the single-channel conductance of large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BKCa) channels; however, it did suppress the channel activity. 2-Methoxyestradiol (3 μm) produced a shift in the activation curve of BKCa channels to more positive potentials. Kinetic studies showed that the 2-methoxyestradiol-induced inhibition of BKCa channels is primarily mediated by a decrease in the number of long-lived openings. 2-Methoxyestradiol-induced inhibition of the channel activity was potentiated by membrane stretch. In contrast, neither 17β-estradiol (10 μm) nor estriol (10 μm) affected BKCa channel activity, whereas 2-hydroxyestradiol (10 μm) slightly suppressed it. Under current-clamp condition, 2-methoxyestradiol (10 μm) caused membrane depolarization and Evans blue (30 μm) reversed 2-methoxyestradiol-induced depolarization. The present study provides evidence that 2-methoxyestradiol can suppress the activity of BKCa channels in endothelial cells. These effects of 2-methoxyestradiol on ionic currents may contribute to its effects on functional activity of endothelial cells. Received: 27 November 2000/Revised: 13 April 2001  相似文献   

8.
The hypothesis that amiloride-sensitive Na+ channel complexes immunopurified from bovine renal papillary collecting tubules contain, as their core conduction component, an ENaC subunit, was tested by functional and immunological criteria. Disulfide bond reduction with dithiothreitol (DTT) of renal Na+ channels incorporated into planar lipid bilayers caused a reduction of single channel conductance from 40 pS to 13 pS, and uncoupled PKA regulation of this channel. The cation permeability sequence, as assessed from bi-ionic reversal potential measurements, and apparent amiloride equilibrium dissociation constant (K amil i ) of the Na+ channels were unaltered by DTT treatment. Like ENaC, the DTT treated renal channel became mechanosensitive, and displayed a substantial decrease in K amil i following stretch (0.44 ± 0.12 μm versus 6.9 ± 1.0 μm). Moreover, stretch activation induced a loss in the channel's ability to discriminate between monovalent cations, and even allowed Ca2+ to permeate. Polyclonal antibodies generated against a fusion protein of αbENaC recognized a 70 kDa polypeptide component of the renal Na+ channel complex. These data suggest that ENaC is present in the immunopurified renal Na+ channel protein complex, and that PKA sensitivity is conferred by other associated proteins. Received: 5 June 1995/Revised: 29 September 1995  相似文献   

9.
ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channels have been characterized in pituitary GH3 cells with the aid of the patch-clamp technique. In the cell-attached configuration, the presence of diazoxide (100 μm) revealed the presence of glibenclamide-sensitive KATP channel exhibiting a unitary conductance of 74 pS. Metabolic inhibition induced by 2,4-dinitrophenol (1 mm) or sodium cyanide (300 μm) increased KATP channel activity, while nicorandil (100 μm) had no effect on it. In the inside-out configuration, Mg-ATP applied intracellularly suppressed the activity of KATP channels in a concentration-dependent manner with an IC50 value of 30 μm. The activation of phospholipase A2 caused by mellitin (1 μm) was found to enhance KATP channel activity and further application of aristolochic acid (30 μm) reduced the mellitin-induced increase in channel activity. The challenging of cells with 4,4′-dithiodipyridine (100 μm) also induced KATP channel activity. Diazoxide, mellitin and 4,4′-dithiodipyridine activated the KATP channels that exhibited similar channel-opening kinetics. In addition, under current-clamp conditions, the application of diazoxide (100 μm) hyperpolarized the membrane potential and reduced the firing rate of spontaneous action potentials. The present study clearly indicates that KATP channels similar to those seen in pancreatic β cells are functionally expressed in GH3 cells. In addition to the presence of Ca2+-activated K+ channels, KATP channels found in these cells could thus play an important role in controlling hormonal release by regulating the membrane potential. Received: 19 June 2000/Revised: 13 September 2000  相似文献   

10.
A Ca2+-activated Cl conductance in rat submandibular acinar cells was identified and characterized using whole-cell patch-clamp technique. When the cells were dialyzed with Cs-glutamate-rich pipette solutions containing 2 mm ATP and 1 μm free Ca2+ and bathed in N-methyl-d-glucamine chloride (NMDG-Cl) or Choline-Cl-rich solutions, they mainly exhibited slowly activating currents. Dialysis of the cells with pipette solutions containing 300 nm or less than 1 nm free Ca2+ strongly reduced the Cl currents, indicating the currents were Ca2+-dependent. Relaxation analysis of the ``on' currents of slowly activating currents suggested that the channels were voltage-dependent. The anion permeability sequence of the Cl channels was: NO 3 (2.00) > I (1.85) ≥ Br (1.69) > Cl (1.00) > bicarbonate (0.77) ≥ acetate (0.70) > propionate (0.41) ≫ glutamate (0.09). When the ATP concentration in the pipette solutions was increased from 0 to 10 mm, the Ca2+-dependency of the Cl current amplitude shifted to lower free Ca2+ concentrations by about two orders of magnitude. Cells dialyzed with a pipette solution (pCa = 6) containing ATP-γS (2 mm) exhibited currents of similar magnitude to those observed with the solution containing ATP (2 mm). The addition of the calmodulin inhibitors trifluoperazine (100 μm) or calmidazolium (25 μm) to the bath solution and the inclusion of KN-62 (1 μm), a specific inhibitor of calmodulin kinase, or staurosporin (10 nm), an inhibitor of protein kinase C to the pipette solution had little, if any, effect on the Ca2+-activated Cl currents. This suggests that Ca2+/Calmodulin or calmodulin kinase II and protein kinase C are not involved in Ca2+-activated Cl currents. The outward Cl currents at +69 mV were inhibited by NPPB (100 μm), IAA-94 (100 μm), DIDS (0.03–1 mm), 9-AC (300 μm and 1 mm) and DPC (1 mm), whereas the inward currents at −101 mV were not. These results demonstrate the presence of a bicarbonate- and weak acid-permeable Cl conductance controlled by cytosolic Ca2+ and ATP levels in rat submandibular acinar cells. Received: 9 January 1996/Revised: 20 May 1996  相似文献   

11.
The lipid bilayer technique was used to examine the effects of the ATP-sensitive K+ channel inhibitor (glibenclamide) and openers (diazoxide, minoxidil and cromakalim) and Cl channel activators (GABA and diazepam) on two types of chloride channels in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) from rabbit skeletal muscle. Neither diazepam at 100 μm nor GABA at 150 μm had any significant effect on the conductance and kinetics of the 75 pS small chloride (SCl) channel. Unlike the 150 pS channel, the SCl channel is sensitive to cytoplasmic glibenclamide with K i ∼ 30 μm. Glibenclamide induced reversible decline in the values of current (maximal current amplitude, I max and average mean current, I′) and kinetic parameters (frequency of opening F o , probability of the channel being open P o and mean open time, T o , of the SCl channel. Glibenclamide increased mean closed time, T c , and was a more potent blocker from the cytoplasmic side (cis) than from the luminal side (trans) of the channel. Diazoxide increased I′, P o , and T o in the absence of ATP and Mg2+ but it had no effect on I max and also failed to activate or remove the glibenclamide- and ATP-induced inhibition of the SCl channel. Minoxidil induced a transient increase in I′ followed by an inhibition of I max, whereas cromakalim reduced P o and I′ by increasing channel transitions to the closed state and reducing T o without affecting I max. The presence of diazoxide, minoxidil or cromakalim on the cytoplasmic side of the channel did not prevent [ATP] cis or [glibenclamide] cis from blocking the channel. The data suggest that the action(s) of these drugs are not due to their effects on the phosphorylation of the channel protein. The glibenclamide- and cromakalim-induced effects on the SCl channel are mediated via a ``flicker' type block mechanism. Modulation of the SCl channel by [diazoxide] cis and [glibenclamide] cis highlights the therapeutic potential of these drugs in regulating the Ca2+-counter current through this channel. Received: 2 September 1997/Revised: 20 March 1998  相似文献   

12.
The polyene antibiotic amphotericin B (AmB) is known to form two types of ionic channels across sterol-containing liposomes, depending on its concentration and time after mixing (Cohen, 1992). In the present study, it is shown that AmB only kills unicellular Leishmania promastigotes (LPs) when aqueous pores permeable to small cations and anions are formed. Changes of membrane potential across ergosterol-containing liposomes and LPs were followed by fluorescence changes of 3,3′ dipropylthiadicarbocyanine (DiSC3(5)). In KCl-loaded liposomes suspended in an iso-osmotic sucrose solution, low AmB concentrations (≤0.1 μm) induced a polarization potential, indicating K+ leakage, but no movement of cations and anions was allowed until AmB concentrations greater than 0.1 μm were added. In agreement with these data, it was found that AmB altered the negative membrane potential held across LPs in a manner consistent with the differential cation/anion selectivity exhibited by the channels formed in liposomes. Thus, LPs suspended in an iso-osmotic sucrose solution did not exhibit any AmB-induced membrane depolarization effect brought about by efflux of anions until 0.1 μm or higher AmB concentrations were added. By contrast, LPs suspended in an iso-osmotic NaCl solution and exposed to 0.05 μm AmB exhibited a nearly total collapse of the negative membrane potential, indicating Na+ entry into the cells. The concentration dependence of the AmB-induced permeability to different salts was also measured across vesicles derived from the plasma membrane of leishmanias (LMVs), by using a rapid mixing technique. At concentrations above 0.1 μm, AmB induced the formation of aqueous pores across LMVs with a positive cooperativity, yielding Hill coefficients between 2 to 3. Measured anion selectivity across such aqueous pores followed the sequence: SCN > NO3 > Cl > I > Br > acetate (SO2− 4 being impermeable). Cell killing by AmB was followed by fluorescence changes of the DNA-binding compound ethidium bromide (EB). At low concentrations (≤0.1 μm), AmB was found to be nonlethal against LPs but, above this concentration, leishmanias were rapidly killed. The rate and extent of such an effect were found to be dependent on the type of cation and anion present in the external aqueous solution. For both NH+ 4 and Na+ salts, the measured rank order of AmB cell killing followed the same sequence that was determined for AmB-induced salt permeation across LMVs. Further, replacement of either extracellular Na+ by choline or Cl by SO2− 4, or its partial substitution by sucrose, in iso-osmotic conditions, led to a complete inhibition of the killing effect exerted by otherwise lethal AmB concentrations. Finally, it was shown that tetraethylammonium (TEA+), an organic cation that is known to block AmB-induced salt permeation across LMVs was able to retard the time lag observed for EB incorporation across LPs, indicating that this parameter can be taken to represent the time taken for salt accumulation inside the parasites. The present results thus indicate clearly that low AmB concentrations (≤0.1 μm) were able to form across LPs, cation channels that collapsed the parasite membrane potential but are not lytic. At high concentrations (<≥0.1 μm), a salt influx via the aqueous pores formed by the antibiotic was followed by osmotic changes leading to cell lysis. This last stage is supported by electron microscopy observations of the changes of parasite morphology immediately upon addition of AmB, which indicated that the typical elongated promastigote cell forms became rounded and the flagella swells and round up. The present work is the first demonstration of the in vitro sensitivity of Leishmania promastigotes to osmotic lysis by AmB. Received: 25 September 1995/Revised: 11 March 1996  相似文献   

13.
The lipid bilayer technique is used to examine the biophysical properties of anion and cation channels frequently formed by platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) venom (OaV). The OaV-formed anion channel in 250/50 mm KCl cis/trans has a maximum conductance of 857 ± 23 pS (n= 5) in 250/50 mm KCl cis/trans. The current-voltage relationship of this channel shows strong inward rectification. The channel activity undergoes time-dependent inactivation that can be removed by depolarizing voltage steps more positive than the reversal potential for chloride, E Cl , (+40 mV). The reversal potential of the OaV-formed slow current activity in 250/50 mm KCl cis/trans is close to the potassium equilibrium potential (E K ) of −40 mV. The conductance values for the slow channel are 22.5 ± 2.6 pS and 41.38 ± 4.2 pS in 250/50 and 750/50 mm cis/trans, respectively. The gating kinetics of the slow ion channels are voltage-dependent. The channel open probability (P o ) is between 0.1 and 0.8 at potentials between 0 and +140 mV. The channel frequency (F o ) increases with depolarizing voltages between 0 and +140 mV, whereas mean open time (T o ) and mean closed time (T c ) decrease. Ion substitution experiments of the cis solution show that the channel has conductance values of 21.47 ± 2.3 and 0.53 ± 0.1 pS in 250 mm KCl and choline Cl, respectively. The amplitude of the single channel current is dependent on [K+] cis and the current reversal potential (E rev ) responds to increases in [K+] cis by shifting to more negative voltages. The increase in current amplitude as a function of increasing [K+] cis can be best described by a third order polynomial fit. At +140 mV, the values of the maximal single channel conductance (γ max ) and the concentration for half maximal γ (K s ) are 38.6 pS and 380 mm and decline to 15.76 pS and 250 mm at 0 mV, respectively. The ion selectivity of the channel to K+, Na+, Cs+ and choline+ was determined in ion substitution experiments. The permeability values for P K+ :P Na+ :P Cs+ :P choline+ were 1:1:0.63:0.089, respectively. On the other hand, the activity of the slow channel was eliminated (Fig. 7B). The slow channel was reversibly inhibited by [TEA+] trans and the half-maximal inhibitory concentration (K i ) was ∼48 mm. Received: 26 April 1999/Revised: 19 July 1999  相似文献   

14.
These experiments were done to determine the effect of glibenclamide and diazoxide on the growth of human bladder carcinoma (HTB-9) cells in vitro. Cell growth was assayed by cell counts, protein accumulation, and 3H-thymidine uptake. Glibenclamide added at 75 and 150 μm for 48 hr reduced cell proliferation. Dose-inhibition curves showed that glibenclamide added for 48 hr reduced cell growth at concentrations as low as 1 μm (IC50= 73 μm) when growth was assayed in the absence of added serum. This μM-effect on cell growth was in agreement with the dose range in which glibenclamide decreased open probability of membrane KATP channels. Addition of glibenclamide for 48 hr also altered the distribution of cells within stages of the cell cycle as determined by flow cytometry using 10−5 m bromodeoxyuridine. Glibenclamide (100 μm) increased the percentage of cells in G0/G1 from 33.6% (vehicle control) to 38.3% (P < 0.05), and it reduced the percentage of cells in S phase from 38.3% to 30.6%. On the other hand, diazoxide, which opens membrane KATP channels in HTB-9 cells, stimulated growth measured by protein accumulation, but it did not increase the cell number. We conclude that the sulfonylurea receptor and the corresponding membrane KATP channel are involved in mechanisms controlling HTB-9 cell growth. However, KATP is not rate-limiting among the signaling mechanisms or molecular switches that regulate the cell cycle. Received: 12 June 1997/Revised: 21 October 1997  相似文献   

15.
The Ca2+-activated maxi K+ channel was found in the apical membrane of everted rabbit connecting tubule (CNT) with a patch-clamp technique. The mean number of open channels (NP o ) was markedly increased from 0.007 ± 0.004 to 0.189 ± 0.039 (n= 7) by stretching the patch membrane in a cell-attached configuration. This activation was suggested to be coupled with the stretch-activation of Ca2+-permeable cation channels, because the maxi K+ channel was not stretch-activated in both the cell-attached configuration using Ca2+-free pipette and in the inside-out one in the presence of 10 mm EGTA in the cytoplasmic side. The maxi K+ channel was completely blocked by extracellular 1 μm charybdotoxin (CTX), but was not by cytoplasmic 33 μm arachidonic acid (AA). On the other hand, the low-conductance K+ channel, which was also found in the same membrane, was completely inhibited by 11 μm AA, but not by 1 μm CTX. The apical K+ conductance in the CNT was estimated by the deflection of transepithelial voltage (ΔV t ) when luminal K+ concentration was increased from 5 to 15 mEq. When the tubule was perfused with hydraulic pressure of 0.5 KPa, the ΔV t was only −0.7 ± 0.4 mV. However, an increase in luminal fluid flow by increasing perfusion pressure to 1.5 KPa markedly enhanced ΔV t to −9.4 ± 0.9 mV. Luminal application of 1 μm CTX reduced the ΔV t to −1.3 ± 0.6 mV significantly in 6 tubules, whereas no significant change of ΔV t was recorded by applying 33 μm AA into the lumen of 5 tubules (ΔV t =−7.2 ± 0.5 mV in control vs.ΔV t =−6.7 ± 0.6 mV in AA). These results suggest that the Ca2+-activated maxi K+ channel is responsible for flow-dependent K+ secretion by coupling with the stretch-activated Ca2+-permeable cation channel in the rabbit CNT. Received: 21 August 1997/Revised: 20 March 1998  相似文献   

16.
Patch clamp experiments were performed on two human osteosarcoma cell lines (MG-63 and SaOS-2 cells) that show an osteoblasticlike phenotype to identify and characterize the specific K channels present in these cells. In case of MG-63 cells, in the cell-attached patch configuration (CAP) no channel activity was observed in 2 mm Ca Ringer (control condition) at resting potential. In contrast, a maxi-K channel was observed in previously silent CAP upon addition of 50 nm parathyroid hormone (PTH), 5 nm prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) or 0.1 mm dibutyryl cAMP + 1 μm forskolin to the bath solution. However, maxi-K channels were present in excised patches from both stimulated and nonstimulated cells in 50% of total patches tested. A similar K channel was also observed in SaOS-2 cells. Characterization of this maxi-K channel showed that in symmetrical solutions (140 mm K) the channel has a conductance of 246 ± 4.5 pS (n = 7 patches) and, when Na was added to the bath solution, the permeability ratio (PK/PNa) was 10 and 11 for MG-63 and SaOS-2 cells respectively. In excised patches from MG-63 cells, the channel open probability (P o ) is both voltage- (channel opening with depolarization) and Ca-dependent; the presence of Ca shifts the P o vs. voltage curve toward negative membrane potential. Direct modulation of this maxi-K channel via protein kinase A (PKA) is very unlikely since in excised patches the activity of this channel is not sensitive to the addition of 1 mm ATP + 20 U/ml catalytic subunit of PKA. We next evaluated the possibility that PGE2 or PTH stimulated the channel through a rise in intracellular calcium. First, calcium uptake (45Ca++) by MG-63 cells was stimulated in the presence of PTH and PGE2, an effect inhibited by Nitrendipine (10 μm). Second, whereas PGE2 stimulated the calcium-activated maxi-K channel in 2 mm Ca Ringer in 60% of patches studied, in Ca-free Ringer bath solution, PGE2 did not open any channels (n = 10 patches) nor did cAMP + forskolin (n = 3 patches), although K channels were present under the patch upon excision. In addition, in the presence of 2 mm Ca Ringer and 10 μm Nitrendipine in CAP configuration, PGE2 (n = 5 patches) and cAMP + forskolin (n = 2 patches) failed to open K channels present under the patch. As channel activation by phosphorylation with the catalytic subunit of PKA was not observed, and Nitrendipine addition to the bath or the absence of calcium prevented the opening of this channel, it is concluded that activation of this channel by PTH, PGE2 or dibutyryl cAMP + forskolin is due to an increase in intracellular calcium concentration via Ca influx. Received: 17 September 1995/Revised: 7 December 1995  相似文献   

17.
GABAA channels were activated by GABA in outside-out patches from rat cultured hippocampal neurons. They were blocked by bicuculline and potentiated by diazepam. In 109 of 190 outside-out patches, no channels were active before exposure to GABA (silent patches). The other 81 patches showed spontaneous channel activity. In patches containing spontaneous channel activity, rapid application of GABA rapidly activated channels. In 93 of the silent patches, channels could be activated by GABA but only after a delay that was sometimes as long as 10 minutes. The maximum channel conductance of the channels activated after a delay increased with GABA concentration from less than 10 pS (0.5 μm GABA) to more than 100 pS (10 mm GABA). Fitting the data with a Hill-type equation gave an EC 50 value of 33 μm and a Hill coefficient of 0.6. The channels showed outward rectification and were chloride selective. In the presence of 1 μm diazepam, the GABA EC 50 decreased to 0.2 μm but the maximum conductance was unchanged. Diazepam decreased the average latency for channel opening. Bicuculline, a GABA antagonist, caused a concentration-dependent decrease in channel conductance. In channels activated with 100 μm GABA the bicuculline IC 50 was 19 μm. The effect of GABA on channel conductance shows that the role of the ligand in GABAA receptor channel function is more complex than previously thought. Received: 23 October 2000/Revised: 27 February 2001  相似文献   

18.
These experiments were conducted to determine the membrane K+ currents and channels in human urinary bladder (HTB-9) carcinoma cells in vitro. K+ currents and channel activity were assessed by the whole-cell voltage clamp and by either inside-out or outside-out patch clamp recordings. Cell depolarization resulted in activation of a Ca2+-dependent outward K+ current, 0.57 ± 0.13 nS/pF at −70 mV holding potential and 3.10 ± 0.15 nS/pF at 30 mV holding potential. Corresponding patch clamp measurements demonstrated a Ca2+-activated, voltage-dependent K+ channel (KCa) of 214 ± 3.0 pS. Scorpion venom peptides, charybdotoxin (ChTx) and iberiotoxin (IbTx), inhibited both the activated current and the KCa activity. In addition, on-cell patch recordings demonstrated an inwardly rectifying K+ channel, 21 ± 1 pS at positive transmembrane potential (V m ) and 145 ± 13 pS at negative V m . Glibenclamide (50 μm), Ba2+ (1 mm) and quinine (100 μm) each inhibited the corresponding nonactivated, basal whole-cell current. Moreover, glibenclamide inhibited K+ channels in inside/out patches in a dose-dependent manner, and the IC50= 46 μm. The identity of this K+ channel with an ATP-sensitive K+ channel (KATP) was confirmed by its inhibition with ATP (2 mm) and by its activation with diazoxide (100 μm). We conclude that plasma membranes of HTB-9 cells contain the KCa and a lower conductance K+ channel with properties consistent with a sulfonylurea receptor-linked KATP. Received: 12 June 1997/Revised: 21 October 1997  相似文献   

19.
Ca2+-activated K+ channels (K(Ca2+)) constitute key regulators of the endothelial cell electrophysiological response to InsP3-mobilizing agonists. Inside-out and outside-out patch clamp experiments were thus undertaken to determine if the gating properties of a voltage-insensitive K(Ca2+) channel of intermediate conductance present in bovine aortic endothelial (BAE) cells could be modified by specific sulfhydryl (SH) oxidative and/or reducing reagents. The results obtained first indicate that cytosolic application of hydrophilic oxidative reagents such as 5,5′-dithio-bis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) (0.2 to 5 mm) or [(O-carboxyphenyl)thio]ethyl mercury sodium salt (thimerosal) (0.5 to 5 mm) reduces gradually the K(Ca2+) channel activity with no modification of the channel unitary conductance. The inhibitory action of DTNB (1 to 5 mm) or thimerosal (1 to 5 mm) was not reserved following withdrawal of the oxidative agents, but channel activity could partly be restored by the addition of the SH group reducing agents dithiothreitol (DTT) (5 mm) or reduced glutathione (GSH) (5 mm) in 53% and 50% of the inside-out experiments performed with DTNB and thimerosal respectively. Similar results were obtained using H2O2 at concentrations ranging from 500 μm to 10 mm as oxidative reagent. In contrast, the lipid soluble oxidative agent 4,4′-dithiodipyridine (4-PDS) (1 mm) appeared in inside-out experiments less potent than DTNB and thimerosal at inhibiting the K(Ca2+) channel activity, suggesting that the critical SH groups involved in channel gating are localized at the inner face of the cell membrane. This conclusion was further substantiated by a series of outside-out patch clamp experiments which showed that DTNB (5 mm) and thimerosal (5 mm) were unable to inhibit the K(Ca2+) channel activity when applied to the external surface of the excised membrane. Finally, no significant changes of the gating properties of the K(Ca2+) channel were observed in inside-out experiments where the SH group reducing agents DTT and GSH were applied immediately following membrane excision. However, the application of either GSH or DTT was found to partly restore channel activity in experiments where the K(Ca2+) channels showed significant rundown. Received: 7 August 1996/Revised: 20 February 1997  相似文献   

20.
The existence of invertebrate forms of the RyR has recently been confirmed (Takeshima et al., 1994, Puente et al., 2000). However, information on the functional properties of this insect RyR is still limited. We report the functional characterization of a RyR from the thoracic muscle of H. virescens (Scott-Ward et al., 1997). A simple purification protocol produced membranes from homogenized prefrozen H. virescens thoracic muscle with a [3H]-ryanodine binding activity of 1.19 ± 0.21 pmol/mg protein (mean ±se; n= 4). [3H]-Ryanodine binding to the H. virescens receptor was dependent on the ryanodine concentration in a hyperbolic fashion with a K D of 3.82 nm (n= 4). [3H]-ryanodine binding was dependent on [Ca2+] in a biphasic manner and was stimulated by 1 mm ATP. Millimolar caffeine did not stimulate [3H]-ryanodine binding to H. virescens membranes in the presence of either nanomolar or micromolar Ca2+. A protein of at least 400 KDa was recognized in H. virescens membrane proteins by a specific anti-H. virescens RyR antibody. Discontinuous density sucrose gradient fractionation of microsomal membranes produced vesicles suitable for single-channel studies. Ca2+-sensitive, Ca2+-permeable channels were successfully inserted into artificial lipid bilayers from H. virescens membrane vesicles. The H. virescens RyR-channel displayed a Ca2+ conductance of ∼110 pS and underwent a persistent and characteristic modification of ion handling and gating following addition of 100 nm ryanodine. The gating of H. virescens channels was sensitive to ATP and ruthenium red in a manner similar to mammalian RyR. This is the first report to describe the single channel and [3H]-ryanodine binding properties of a native insect RyR. Received: 3 July 2000/Revised: 17 October 2000  相似文献   

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