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Pressure dependence of the potassium currents of squid giant axon
Authors:F Conti  R Fioravanti  J R Segal  W Stühmer
Institution:(1) Instituto di Cibernetica e Biofisica, CNR, Camogli, Italy;(2) Present address: Biophysics Laboratory, Veterans Administration Medical Center, 10010 New York, NY;(3) Present address: Department of Physics, Technical University of Munich, 8046 Garching b Munich, F.R.G.
Abstract:Summary The effect of pressure upon the delayed, K, voltage-clamp currents of giant axons from the squidLoligo vulgaris was studied in axons treated with 300nm TTX to block the early, Na, currents. The effect of TTX remained unaltered by pressure. The major change produced by pressures up to 62 MPa is a slowing down of the rising phase of the K currents by a time scaling factor which depends on pressure according to an apparent activation volume, DeltaVmnplus, of 31 cm3/mole at 15°C; DeltaVmnplus increased to about 42 cm3/mole at 5°C.Pressure slightly increased the magnitude, but did not produce any obvious major change in the voltage dependence, of the steady-state K conductance estimated from the current jump at the end of step depolarizations of small amplitude (to membrane potentials,E, lE20 mV) and relatively short duration. At higher depolarizations, pressure produced a more substantial increase of the late membrane conductance, associated with an apparent enhancement of a slow component of the K conductance which could not be described within the framework of the Hodgkin-Huxley (HH)n 4 kinetic scheme.The apparent DeltaVmnplus values that characterize the pressure dependence of the early component of the K conductance are very close to those that describe the effect of pressure on Na activation kinetics, and it is conceivable that they are related to activation volumes involved in the isomerization of the normal K channels. The enhancement of the slow component of membrane conductance by pressure implies either a large increase in the conductance of the ionic channels that are responsible for it or a strong relative hastening of their turn-on kinetics.
Keywords:axon  hydrostatic pressure  K currents  kinetics  activation volume
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