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1.
The calcium pump of plasma membranes catalyzes the hydrolysis of ATP and phosphoric esters like p-nitrophenyl phosphate (pNPP). The latter activity requires the presence of ATP and/or calmodulin, and Ca2+ [22, 25]. We have studied the effects of nucleotide-analogues and chemical modifications of nucleotide binding sites on Ca2+-pNPPase activity. Treatment with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), abolished Ca2+-ATPase and ATP-dependent pNPPase, but affected only 45% of the calmodulin-dependent pNPPase activity. The nucleotide analogue eosin-Y had an inhibitory effect on calmodulin-dependent pNPPase (Ki eosin-Y= 2 μm). FITC treatment increased Ki eosin-Y 15 times. Acetylation of lysine residues with N-hydroxysuccinimidyl acetate inactivates Ca2+-ATPase by modifying the catalytic site, and impairs stimulation by modulators by modifying residues outside this site [9]. Acetylation suppressed the ATP-dependent pNPPase with biphasic kinetics. ATP or pNPP during acetylation cancels the fast component of inactivation. Acetylation inhibited only partially the calmodulin-dependent pNPPase, but neither ATP nor pNPP prevented this inactivation. From these results we conclude: (i) ATP-dependent pNPPase depends on binding of ATP to the catalytic site; (ii) the catalytic site plays no role in calmodulin-dependent pNPPase. The decreased affinity for eosin-Y of the FITC-modified enzyme, suggests that the sites for these two molecules are closely related but not overlapped. Acetimidation of the pump inhibited totally the calmodulin-dependent pNPPase, but only partially the ATP-pNPPase. Since calmodulin binds to E1, the E1 conformation or the E2? E1 transition would be involved during calmodulin-dependent pNPPase activity. Received: 20 January 1998  相似文献   

2.
To gain insight into the structure and conformational coupling in the Na,K-ATPase, this study characterized the reaction of the α1 subunit transmembrane cysteines with a small probe. Intact HeLa cells expressing heterologous Na,K-ATPase were treated with (μm) HgCl2 after placing the enzyme predominantly in either of two conformations, phosphorylated E2P.Na/E2P or dephosphorylated ATP.E1.K/ATP.E1. Under both conditions the treatment led to enzyme inactivation following a double exponential kinetic as determined by ouabain-sensitive K+ uptake measurements. However, the rate constant of the slow reacting component was ten times larger when the protein was probed in a medium that would favor enzyme phosphorylation. Enzymes carrying mutations of cysteines located in the α1 subunit transmembrane region were used to identify the reacting–SH groups. Replacement Cys104Ser reduced enzyme inactivation by removing the slow reacting component under both treatment conditions. Replacement of Cys964 reduced the inactivation rate constant of the fast reacting component (79%) and removed the slow reacting component when the dephosphorylated enzyme was treated with Hg2+. Moreover, Cys964Ser substituted enzyme was insensitive to Hg2+ when treated under phosphorylation conditions. These results indicate that Cys964 is involved in the fast inactivation by Hg2+. Although the double mutant Cys964, 104Ser was still partially inactivated by treatment under nonphosphorylating conditions, an enzyme devoid of transmembrane cysteines was insensitive to Hg2+ under all treatment conditions. Thus, this enzyme provides a background where accessibility of engineered transmembrane cysteines can be tested. Received: 13 March 2000/Revised: 23 June 2000  相似文献   

3.
The α1 subunit coding for the human brain type E calcium channel (Schneider et al., 1994) was expressed in Xenopus oocytes in the absence, and in combination with auxiliary α2δ and β subunits. α1E channels directed with the expression of Ba2+ whole-cell currents that completely inactivated after a 2-sec membrane pulse. Coexpression of α1E with α2bδ shifted the peak current by +10 mV but had no significant effect on whole-cell current inactivation. Coexpression of α1E with β2a shifted the peak current relationship by −10 mV, and strongly reduced Ba2+ current inactivation. This slower rate of inactivation explains that a sizable fraction (40 ± 10%, n= 8) of the Ba2+ current failed to inactivate completely after a 5-sec prepulse. Coinjection with both the cardiac/brain β2a and the neuronal α2bδ subunits increased by ≈10-fold whole-cell Ba2+ currents although coinjection with either β2a or α2bδ alone failed to significantly increase α1E peak currents. Coexpression with β2a and α2bδ yielded Ba2+ currents with inactivation kinetics similar to the β2a induced currents, indicating that the neuronal α2bδ subunit has little effect on α1E inactivation kinetics. The subunit specificity of the changes in current properties were analyzed for all four β subunit genes. The slower inactivation was unique to α1E2a currents. Coexpression with β1a, β1b, β3, and β4, yielded faster-inactivating Ba2+ currents than currents recorded from the α1E subunit alone. Furthermore, α1E2bδ/β1a; α1E2bδ/β1b; α1E2bδ/β3; α1E2bδ/β4 channels elicited whole-cell currents with steady-state inactivation curves shifted in the hyperpolarized direction. The β subunit-induced changes in the properties of α1E channel were comparable to modulation effects reported for α1C and α1A channels with β3≈β1b > β1a≈β4≫β2a inducing fastest to slowest rate of whole-cell inactivation. Received: 27 March 1997/Revised: 10 July 1997  相似文献   

4.
We have expressed recombinant α-subunits of hH1 (human heart subtype 1), rSkM1 (rat skeletal muscle subtype 1) and hSkM1 (human skeletal muscle) sodium channels in human embryonic kidney cell line, namely the tsA201 cells and compared the effects of ATX II on these sodium channel subtypes. ATX II slows the inactivation phase of hH1 with little or no effect on activation. At intermediate concentrations of ATX II the time course of inactivation is biexponential due to the mixture of free (fast component, τfast h ) and toxin-bound (slow component, τslow h ) channels. The relative amplitude of τslow h allows an estimate of the IC50 values ∼11 nm. The slowing of inactivation in the presence of ATX II is consistent with destabilization of the inactivated state by toxin binding. Further evidence for this conclusion is: (i) The voltage-dependence of the current decay time constants (τ h ) is lost or possibly reversed (time constants plateau or increase at more positive voltages in contrast to these of untreated channels). (ii) The single channel mean open times are increased by a factor of two in the presence of ATX II. (iii) The recovery from inactivation is faster in the presence of ATX II. Similar effects of ATX II on rSkM1 channel behavior occur, but only at higher concentrations of toxin (IC50= 51 nm). The slowing of inactivation on hSkM1 is comparable to the one seen with rSkM1. A residual or window current appears in the presence of ATX II that is similar to that observed in channels containing mutations associated with some of the familial periodic paralyses. Received: 5 December 1995/Revised: 1 March 1996  相似文献   

5.
We have previously demonstrated (Diabetes 39:707–711, 1990) that in vitro glycation of the red cell Ca2+ pump diminishes the Ca2+-ATPase activity of the enzyme up to 50%. Such effect is due to the reaction of glucose with lysine residues of the Ca2+ pump (Biochem. J. 293:369–375, 1993). The aim of this work was to determine whether the effect of glucose is due to a full inactivation of a fraction of the total population of Ca2+ pump, or to a partial inactivation of all the molecules. Glycation decreased the V max for the ATPase activity leaving unaffected the apparent affinities for Ca2+, calmodulin or ATP. The apparent turnover was identical in both, the glycated and the native enzyme. Glycation decreased the V max for the ATP-dependent but not for the calmodulin-activated phosphatase activities. Concomitantly with the inhibition, up to 6.5% of the lysine residues were randomly glycated. The probabilistic analysis of the relation between the enzyme activity and the fraction of nonmodified residues indicates that only one Lys residue is responsible for the inhibition. We suggest that glucose decreases the Ca2+-ATPase activity by reacting with one essential Lys residue probably located in the vicinity of the catalytic site, which results in the full inactivation of the enzyme. Thus, Ca2+-ATPase activity measured in erythrocyte membranes or purified enzyme preparations preincubated with glucose depends on the remaining enzyme molecules in which the essential Lys residue stays unglycated. Received: 9 March 1999/Revised: 11 May 1999  相似文献   

6.
To investigate Na+ binding to the ion-binding sites presented on the cytoplasmic side of the Na,K-ATPase, equilibrium Na+-titration experiments were performed using two fluorescent dyes, RH421 and FITC, to detect protein-specific actions. Fluorescence changes upon addition of Na+ in the presence of various Mg2+ concentrations were similar and could be fitted with a Hill function. The half-saturating concentrations and Hill coefficients determined were almost identical. As RH421 responds to binding of a Na+ ion to the third neutral site whereas FITC monitors conformational changes in the ATP-binding site or its environment, this result implies that electrogenic binding of the third Na+ ion is the trigger for a structural rearrangement of the ATP-binding moiety. This enables enzyme phosphorylation, which is accompanied by a fast occlusion of the Na+ ions and followed by the conformational transition E1/E2 of the protein. The coordinated action both at the ion and the nucleotide binding sites allows for the first time a detailed formulation of the mechanism of enzyme phosphorylation that occurs only when three Na+ ions are bound. Received: 8 October 1998/Revised: 29 December 1998  相似文献   

7.
A fluorescence method was adapted to investigate active ion transport in membrane preparations of the SR-Ca-ATPase. The styryl dye RH421 previously used to investigate the Na,K-ATPase was replaced by an analogue, 2BITC, to obtain optimized fluorescence changes upon substrate-induced partial reactions. Assuming changes of the local electric field to be the source of fluorescence changes that are produced by uptake/release or by movement of ions inside the protein, 2BITC allowed the determination of electrogenic partial reactions in the pump cycle. It was found that Ca2+ binding on the cytoplasmic and on the lumenal side of the pump is electrogenic while phosphorylation and conformational transition showed only minor electrogenicity. Ca2+ equilibrium titration experiments at pH 7.2 in the two major conformations of the protein indicated cooperative binding of two Ca2+ ions in state E1 with an apparent half-saturation concentration, K M of 600 nm. In state P-E2 two K M values, 5 μm and 2.2 mM, were determined and are in fair agreement with published data. From Ca2+ titrations in buffers with various pH and from pH titrations in P-E2, it could be demonstrated that H+ binding is electrogenic and that Ca2+ and H+ compete for the same binding site(s). Tharpsigargin-induced inhibition of the Ca-ATPase led to a state with a specific fluorescence level comparable to that of state E1 with unoccupied ion sites, independent of the buffer composition. Received: 21 September 1998/Revised: 18 December 1998  相似文献   

8.
Functional properties of the α1β1 GABAA receptor changes in a subunit-specific manner when a threonine residue in the M2 region at the 12′ position was mutated to glutamine. The rate and extent of desensitization increased in all mutants but the rate of activation was faster in the β1 mutants. A negligible plateau current and abolition of potentiation by pentobarbitone of the GABA-activated current depended on the Thr 12′ Gln mutation being present in the β1 subunit. The Hill coefficient of the peak current response to GABA was reduced to less than one also in a β1 subunit-specific manner. It was concluded that the β1 subunit dominated conformational changes activated by GABA. Received: 18 July 1996/Revised: 30 September 1996  相似文献   

9.
Dephosphorylation of Ca2+ channels by the Ca2+-activated phosphatase 2B (calcineurin) has been previously suggested as a mechanism of Ca2+-dependent inactivation of Ca2+ current in rat pituitary tumor (GH3) cells. Although recent evidence favors an inactivation mechanism involving direct binding of Ca2+ to the channel protein, the alternative ``calcineurin hypothesis' has not been critically tested using the specific calcineurin inhibitors cyclosporine A (CsA) or FK506 in GH3 cells. To determine if calcineurin plays a part in the voltage- and/or Ca2+-dependent components of dihydropyridine-sensitive Ca2+ current decay, we rapidly altered the intracellular Ca2+ buffering capacity of GH3 cells by flash photolysis of DM-nitrophen, a high affinity Ca2+ chelator. Flash photolysis induced a highly reproducible increase in the extent of Ca2+ current inactivation in a two-pulse voltage protocol with Ca2+ as the charge carrier, but had no effect when Ba2+ was substituted for Ca2+. Despite confirmation of the abundance of calcineurin in the GH3 cells by biochemical assays, acute application of CsA or FK506 after photolysis had no effect on Ca2+-dependent inactivation of Ca2+ current, even when excess cyclophilin or FK binding protein were included in the internal solution. Prolonged preincubation of the cells with FK506 or CsA did not inhibit Ca2+-dependent inactivation. Similarly, blocking calmodulin activation with calmidazolium or blocking calcineurin with fenvalerate did not influence the extent of Ca2+-dependent inactivation after photolysis. The results provide strong evidence against Ca2+-dependent dephosphorylation as the mechanism of Ca2+ current inactivation in GH3 cells, but support the alternative idea that Ca2+-dependent inactivation reflects a direct effect of intracellular Ca2+ on channel gating. Received: 12 August 1996/Revised: 21 October 1996  相似文献   

10.
Nickel ions have been reported to exhibit differential effects on distinct subtypes of voltage-activated calcium channels. To more precisely determine the effects of nickel, we have investigated the action of nickel on four classes of cloned neuronal calcium channels (α1A, α1B, α1C, and α1E) transiently expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Nickel caused two major effects: (i) block detected as a reduction of the maximum slope conductance and (ii) a shift in the current-voltage relation towards more depolarized potentials which was paralleled by a decrease in the slope of the activation-curve. Block followed 1:1 kinetics and was most pronounced for α1C, followed by α1E > α1A > α1B channels. In contrast, the change in activation-gating was most dramatic with α1E, with the remaining channel subtypes significantly less affected. The current-voltage shift was well described by a simple model in which nickel binding to a saturable site resulted in altered gating behavior. The affinity for both the blocking site and the putative gating site were reduced with increasing concentration of external permeant ion. Replacement of barium with calcium reduced both the degree of nickel block and the maximal effect on gating for α1A channels, but increased the nickel blocking affinity for α1E channels. The coexpression of Ca channel β subunits was found to differentially influence nickel effects on α1A, as coexpression with β2a or with β4 resulted in larger current-voltage shifts than those observed in the presence of β1b, while elimination of the β subunit almost completely abolished the gating shifts. In contrast, block was similar for the three β subunits tested, while complete removal of the β subunit resulted in an increase in blocking affinity. Our data suggest that the effect of nickel on calcium channels is complex, cannot be described by a single site of action, and differs qualitatively and quantitatively among individual subtypes and subunit combinations. Received: 12 October 1995/Revised: 17 January 1996  相似文献   

11.
SqKv1A is a cDNA that encodes a Kv1 (Shaker-type) α-subunit expressed only in the giant axon and the parental giant fiber lobe (GFL) neurons of the squid stellate ganglion. We incorporated SqKv1A into a recombinant baculovirus for expression in the insect Sf9 cell line. Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings reveal that very few cells display functional potassium current (I K) if cultured at the standard postinfection temperature of 27°C. At 18°C, less SqKv1A protein is produced than at 27°C, but cells with I K currents are much more numerous and can survive for at least 20 days postinfection (vs. ∼5 days at 27°C). Activation and deactivation kinetics of SqKv1A in Sf9 cells are slower (∼3- and 10-fold, respectively) than those of native channels in GFL neurons, but have similar voltage dependencies. The two cell types show only subtle differences in steady-state voltage-dependence of conductance and inactivation. Rates of I K inactivation in 20 mm external K are identical in the two cell types, but the sensitivity of inactivation to external tetraethylammonium (TEA) and K ions differ: inactivation of SqKv1A in Sf9 cells is slowed by external TEA and K ions, whereas inactivation of GFL I K is largely insensitive. Functional differences are discussed in terms of factors that may be specific to cell-type, including the presence of presently unidentified Kv1 subunits in GFL neurons that might form heteromultimers with SqKv1A.  相似文献   

12.
The structural determinants of mibefradil inhibition were analyzed using wild-type and inactivation-modified CaV1.2 (α1C) and CaV2.3 (α1E) channels. Mibefradil inhibition of peak Ba2+ currents was dose- and voltage-dependent. An increase of holding potentials from −80 to −100 mV significantly shifted dose-response curves toward higher mibefradil concentrations, namely from a concentration of 108 ± 21 μm (n= 7) to 288 ± 17 μm (n= 3) for inhibition of half of the Cav1.2 currents (IC 50) and from IC 50= 8 ± 2 μm (n= 9) to 33 ± 7 μm (n= 4) for CaV2.3 currents. In the presence of mibefradil, CaV1.2 and CaV2.3 experienced significant use-dependent inhibition (0.1 to 1 Hz) and slower recovery from inactivation suggesting mibefradil could promote transition(s) to an absorbing inactivated state. In order to investigate the relationship between inactivation and drug sensitivity, mibefradil inhibition was studied in inactivation-altered CaV1.2 and CaV2.3 mutants. Mibefradil significantly delayed the onset of channel recovery from inactivation in CEEE (Repeat I + part of the I–II linker from CaV1.2 in the CaV2.3 host channel), in EC(AID)EEE (part of the I–II linker from CaV1.2 in the CaV2.3 host channel) as well as in CaV1.2 E462R, and CaV2.3 R378E (point mutation in the β-subunit binding motif) channels. Mibefradil inhibited the faster inactivating chimera EC(IS1-6)EEE with an IC 50= 7 ± 1 μm (n= 3), whereas the slower inactivating chimeras EC(AID)EEE and CEEE were, respectively, inhibited with IC 50= 41 ± 5 μm (n= 4) and IC 50= 68 ± 9 μm (n= 5). Dose-response curves were superimposable for the faster EC(IS1-6)EEE and CaV2.3, whereas intermediate-inactivating channel kinetics (CEEE, CaV1.2 E462R, and CaV1.2 E462K) were inhibited by similar concentrations of mibefradil with IC 50≈ 55–75 μm. The slower CaV1.2 wild-type and CaV1.2 Q473K channels responded to higher doses of mibefradil with IC 50≈ 100–120 μm. Mibefradil was also found to significantly speed up the inactivation kinetics of slower channels (CaV1.2, CEEE) with little effect on the inactivation kinetics of faster-inactivating channels (CaV2.3). A open-channel block model for mibefradil interaction with high-voltage-activated Ca2+ channels is discussed and shown to qualitatively account for our observations. Hence, our data agree reasonably well with a ``receptor guarded mechanism' where fast inactivation kinetics efficiently trap mibefradil into the channel. Received: 14 March 2001/Revised: 25 June 2001  相似文献   

13.
The conserved leucine residues at the 9′ positions in the M2 segments of α1 (L264) and β1 (L259) subunits of the human GABAA receptor were replaced with threonine. Normal or mutant α1 subunits were co-expressed with normal or mutant β1 subunits in Sf9 cells using the baculovirus/Sf9 expression system. Cells in which one or both subunits were mutated had a higher ``resting' chloride conductance than cells expressing wild-type α1β1 receptors. This chloride conductance was blocked by 10 mm penicillin, a recognized blocker of GABAA channels, but not by bicuculline (100 μm) or picrotoxin (100 μm) which normally inhibit the chloride current activated by GABA: nor was it potentiated by pentobarbitone (100 μm). In cells expressing wild-type β1 with mutated α1 subunits, an additional chloride current could be elicited by GABA but the rise time and decay were slower than for wild-type α1β1 receptors. In cells expressing mutated β1 subunits with wild-type or mutated α1 subunits (αβ(L9′T) and α(L9′T)β(L9′T)), no response to GABA could be elicited: this was not due to an absence of GABAA receptors in the plasmalemma because the cells bound [3H]-muscimol. It was concluded that in GABAA channels containing the L9′T mutation in the β1 subunit, GABA-binding does not cause opening of channels, and that the L9′T mutation in either or both subunits gives an open-channel state of the GABAA receptor in the absence of ligand. Received: 17 April 1996/Revised: 5 July 1996  相似文献   

14.
Membrane-active toxins from snake venom have been used previously to study protein-lipid interactions and to probe the physical and biochemical states of biomembranes. To extend these studies, we have isolated from Naja naja kaowthia (cobra) venom a cytotoxin free of detectable phospholipase A2 (PLA2). The amino acid composition, pI (10.2), and net charge of the cytotoxin compares well with membrane-active toxins isolated from venoms of other cobras. The cytotoxin, shown by a spin label method, associates with PLA2 in buffers at pH values between 7.0 and 5.0, but not at pH 4.0. It is suggested that cytotoxin and PLA2 (pI close to 4.8) associate electrostatically in the native venom. The effect of the cytotoxin on model phospholipid membranes was studied by EPR of spin probes in oriented lipid multilayers and 1H-NMR of sonicated liposomes. The cytotoxin did not significantly affect the packing of lipids in pure phosphatidylcholine (PC) membranes and in PC membranes containing 10 mol% phosphatidic acid (PA) or cardiolipin (CL). However, the cytotoxin induced an increase in membrane permeability and formation of nonbilayer structures in PC membranes containing 40 mol% of PA or CL. The purified cytotoxin was cytocidal to Jurkat cells, but had little effect on normal human lymphocytes. However, both Jurkat cells and normal lymphocytes were killed equivalently when treated with 10−9 m PLA2 and 10−5 m cytotoxin in combination. From its effect on model membranes and Jurkat cells, it is suggested that purified cytotoxin preferentially targets and disrupts membranes that are rich in acidic phospholipids on the extracellular side of the plasma membrane. Received: 20 March 1996/Revised: 25 September 1996  相似文献   

15.
The aim of this study is to evaluate directly, using a reduced experimental system, the nature of interactions between voltage-gated potassium channels and the resting membrane potential. Xenopus oocytes were injected with various concentrations of cRNA coding for a delayed-rectifier potassium channel Shaker-IR. The effects of the density and kinetics of the expressed channels on resting membrane potential is explored in isolated (``inside-out') patches. The channel density is given in terms of maximal conductance (G max), measured from the maximal slope of the I-V curve under voltage clamp conditions. The capacitance of the experimental setup is approximately 1 pF. At high channel densities (G max > 10 pA/mV) the mean membrane potential is stabilized at approximately −60 mV. This resting membrane potential is more than 35 mV positive to the reversal potential for potassium ions under the same experimental conditions. Analyses of voltage clamp experiments indicate that at high channel densities the mean membrane potential is determined by the rates of channel activation and deactivation, but is not affected by the rates involved in the process of slow (C-type) inactivation. In contrast, at lower channel densities membrane potential is very unstable, and its mean value and amplitude of fluctuations are strongly affected by the process of slow (C-type) inactivation. Received: 21 March 1996/Revised: 6 August 1996  相似文献   

16.
Opening of ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channels by the uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation, 2,4 dinitrophenol (DNP), has been assumed to be secondary to metabolic inhibition and reduced intracellular ATP levels. Herein, we present data which show that DNP (200 μm) can induce opening of cardiac KATP channels, under whole-cell and inside-out conditions, despite millimolar concentrations of ATP (1–2.5 mm). DNP-induced currents had a single channel conductance (71 pS), inward rectification, reversal potential, and intraburst kinetic properties (open time constant, τopen: 4.8 msec; fast closed time constant, τclosed(f): 0.33 msec) characteristic of KATP channels suggesting that DNP did not affect the pore region of the channel, but may have altered the functional coupling of the ATP-dependent channel gating. A DNP analogue, with the pH-titrable hydroxyl replaced by a methyl group, could not open KATP channels. The pH-dependence of the effect of DNP on channel opening under whole-cell, cell-attached, and inside-out conditions suggested that transfer of protonated DNP across the sarcolemma is essential for activation of KATP channels in the presence of ATP. We conclude that the use of DNP for metabolic stress-induced KATP channel opening should be reevaluated. Received: 10 September 1996/Revised: 27 December 1996  相似文献   

17.
Thermal stability of plasma membrane Ca2+ pump was systematically studied in three micellar systems of different composition, and related with the interactions amphiphile-protein measured by fluorescence resonance energy transfer. Thermal denaturation was characterized as an irreversible process that is well described by a first order kinetic with an activation energy of 222 ± 12 kJ/mol in the range 33–45°C. Upon increasing the mole fraction of phospholipid in the mixed micelles where the Ca2+ pump was reconstituted, the kinetic coefficient for the inactivation process diminished until it reached a constant value, different for each phospholipid species. We propose a model in which thermal stability of the pump depends on the composition of the amphiphile monolayer directly in contact with the transmembrane protein surface. Application of this model shows that the maximal pump stability is attained when 80% of this surface is covered by phospholipids. This analysis provides an indirect measure of the relative affinity phospholipid/detergent for the hydrophobic transmembrane surface of the protein (K LD ) showing that those phospholipids with higher affinity provide greater stability to the Ca2+ pump. We developed a method for directly measure K LD by using fluorescence resonance energy transfer from the membrane protein tryptophan residues to a pyrene-labeled phospholipid. K LD values obtained by this procedure agree with those obtained from the model, providing a strong evidence to support its validity. Received: 5 August 1999/Revised: 20 October 1999  相似文献   

18.
We here report on studies on the frog skin epithelium to identify the nature of its excretory H+ pump by comparing transport studies, using inhibitors highly specific for V-ATPases, with results from immunocytochemistry using V-ATPase-directed antibodies. Bafilomycin A1 (10 μm) blocked H+ excretion (69 ± 8% inhibition) and therefore Na+ absorption (61 ± 17% inhibition after 60 min application, n= 6) in open-circuited skins bathed on their apical side with a 1 mm Na2SO4 solution, ``low-Na+ conditions' under which H+ and Na+ fluxes are coupled 1:1. The electrogenic outward H+ current measured in absence of Na+ transport (in the presence of 50 μm amiloride) was also blocked by 10 μm bafilomycin A1 or 5 μm concanamycin A. In contrast, no effects were found on the large and dominant Na+ transport (short-circuit current), which develops with apical solutions containing 115 mm Na+ (``high-Na+ conditions'), demonstrating a specific action on H+ transport. In immunocytochemistry, V-ATPase-like immunoreactivity to the monoclonal antibody E11 directed to the 31-kDa subunit E of the bovine renal V-ATPase was localized only in mitochondria-rich cells (i) in their apical region which corresponds to apical plasma membrane infoldings, and (ii) intracellularly in their neck region and apically around the nucleus. In membrane extracts of the isolated frog skin epithelium, the selectivity of the antibody binding was tested with immunoblots. The antibody labeled exclusively a band of about 31 kDa, very likely the corresponding subunit E of the frog V-ATPase. Our investigations now deliver conclusive evidence that H+ excretion is mediated by a V-ATPase being the electrogenic H+ pump in frog skin. Received: 21 May 1996/Revised: 24 December 1996  相似文献   

19.
A K+ channel with a main conductance of 29 pS was recorded after the incorporation of coronary artery membrane vesicles into lipid bilayers. This channel was identified as an ATP-sensitive K+ channel (KATP) because its activity was diminished by the internal application of 50–250 μm ATP-Na2. Moreover, it was opened when 10–50 μm pinacidil was externally applied. Single-channel records revealed the existence of several (sub)conductance states. At 0 mV and with a 5/250 KCl gradient, the main conductance of the KATP channel was 29 pS. The other (sub)conductance states were less frequent and had discrete values of 12, 17 and 22 pS. Pinacidil stabilized the channel open state primarily in the 29 pS conductance level; whereas ATP inhibited all the conductance levels. In general, KATP channels were characterized by brief openings followed by long closings (open probability, P o ≈ 0.02); only occasionally (3 out of 12 experiments) did the KATP channels have a high open probability (P o ≥ 0.7). Channel activity could be increased or rescued by adding 2.5–10 mm UDP-TRIS and 0.5–2 mm MgCl2 to the internal side of the channel. Received: 7 November 1995/Revised: 10 June 1996  相似文献   

20.
The THP-1 human monocytic leukemia cell line is a useful model of macrophage differentiation. Patch clamp methods were used to identify five types of ion channels in undifferentiated THP-1 monocytes. (i) Delayed rectifier K+ current, I DR, was activated by depolarization to potentials positive to −50 mV, inactivated with a time constant of several hundred msec, and recovered from inactivation with a time constant ∼21 sec. I DR was inhibited by 4-aminopyridine (4-AP), tetraethylammonium (TEA+), and potently by charybdotoxin (ChTX). (ii) Ca-activated K+ current (I SK) dominated whole-cell currents in cells studied with 3–10 μm [Ca2+] i . I SK was at most weakly voltage-dependent, with reduced conductance at large positive potentials, and was inhibited by ChTX and weakly by TEA+, Cs+, and Ba2+, but not 4-AP or apamin. Block by Cs+ and Ba2+ was enhanced by hyperpolarization. (iii) Nonselective cation current, I cat, appeared at voltages above +20 mV. Little time-dependence was observed, and a panel of channel blockers was without effect. (iv) Chloride current, I Cl, was present early in experiments, but disappeared with time. (v) Voltage-activated H+ selective current is described in detail in a companion paper (DeCoursey & Cherny, 1996. J. Membrane Biol. 152:2). The ion channels in THP-1 cells are compared with channels described in other macrophage-related cells. Profound changes in ion channel expression that occur during differentiation of THP-1 cells are described in a companion paper (DeCoursey et al., 1996. J. Membrane Biol. 152:2). Received: 19 September 1995/Revised: 14 March 1996  相似文献   

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