scholarly journals Acetylcholine-induced current in perfused rat myoballs.

1980 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. 297-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Horn ◽  
M S Brodwick

Spherical "myoballs" were grown under tissue culture conditions from striated muscle of neonatal rat thighs. The myoballs were examined electrophysiologically with a suction pipette which was used to pass current and perfuse internally. A microelectrode was used to record membrane potential. Experiments were performed with approximately symmetrical (intracellular and extracellular) sodium aspartate solutions. The resting potential, acetylcholine (ACh) reversal potential, and sodium channel reversal potential were all approximately 0 mV. ACh-induced currents were examined by use of both voltage jumps and voltage ramps in the presence of iontophoretically applied agonist. The voltage-jump relaxations had a single exponential time-course. The time constant, tau, was exponentially related to membrane potential, increasing e-fold for 81 mV hyperpolarization. The equilibrium current-voltage relationship was also approximately exponential, from -120 to +81 mV, increasing e-fold for 104 mV hyperpolarization. The data are consistent with a first-order gating process in which the channel opening rate constant is slightly voltage dependent. The instantaneous current-voltage relationship was sublinear in the hyperpolarizing direction. Several models are discussed which can account for the nonlinearity. Evidence is presented that the "selectivity filter" for the ACh channel is located near the intracellular membrane surface.

1997 ◽  
Vol 77 (1) ◽  
pp. 221-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anita Lüthi ◽  
Beat H. Gähwiler ◽  
Urs Gerber

Lüthi, Anita, Beat H. Gähwiler, and Urs Gerber. 1 S,3 R-ACPD induces a region of negative slope conductance in the steady-state current-voltage relationship of hippocampal pyramidal cells. J. Neurophysiol. 77: 221–228, 1997. Synaptic responses mediated by metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) display a marked voltage-dependent increase in amplitude when neurons are moderately depolarized beyond membrane potential. We have investigated the basis for this apparent nonlinear behavior by activatingmGluRs with 1 S,3 R-1-aminocyclopentane-1,3-dicarboxylate(1 S,3 R-ACPD; 10 μM) in CA3 pyramidal cells from rat hippocampal slice cultures with the use of the single-electrode voltage-clamp technique. Under control conditions, cells depolarized from resting potential by 10–20 mV responded with delayed outwardly rectifying currents due to activation of voltage- and Ca2+-dependent K+ conductances. In contrast, in the continuous presence of 1 S,3 R-ACPD, small depolarizations (10–20 mV) induced a delayed inward current. The steady-state current-voltage relationship for this response displayed a region of negative slope conductance at potentials between −55 and −40 mV. The reversal potential of the corresponding 1 S,3 R-ACPD-sensitive tail currents (−93.0 ± 2.2 mV, mean ± SE) was close to the potassium reversal potential, consistent with an mGluR-mediated suppression of K+ current. When external K+ concentration was increased to 8 mM, there was a positive shift in reversal potential to −76.9 ± 5.1 mV. The depolarization-induced inward current in the presence of 1 S,3 R-ACPD was blocked by Ba2+ (1 mM). The response was not dependent on changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration and was insensitive to bath-applied Cs+ (1 mM), ruling out a contribution of Ca2+-dependent currents or the inward rectifier I Q. Furthermore, the effect of 1 S,3 R-ACPD was not mimicked by inhibiting afterhyperpolarizing current and M current with low-Ca2+ saline (0.5 mM Ca2+, 10 mM Mg2+) containing 10 mM tetraethylammonium chloride. A comparison of the responses induced by 1 S,3 R-ACPD and N-methyl-d-aspartate showed that both induce an inward current with small depolarizations from resting potential but with different kinetics and Mg2+ sensitivity. These results indicate that the suppression of K+ currents in response to activation of mGluRs is markedly voltage dependent, increasing at depolarized potentials and decreasing at hyperpolarized potentials. The negative slope conductance at membrane voltages positive to resting potential may underlie the amplification of mGluR-mediated responses when the membrane potential approaches action potential threshold.


1990 ◽  
Vol 151 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
JONATHAN A. DAVID ◽  
DAVID B. SATTELLE

The ionic basis of the resting potential and of the response to acetylcholine (ACh) has been investigated in the cell body membrane of the fast coxal depressor motor neurone in the metathoracic ganglion of the cockroach Periplaneta americana. By means of ion-sensitive microelectrodes, intracellular concentrations of three ion species were estimated (mmoll−1): [K+]i, 1443; [Na+]i, 9±1; [Cl−], 7±1. The resting potential of continuously superfused cells was −75.6±1.9mV at 22° C. A change in resting potential of 42.0±2.5mV accompanied a decade change in [K+]o. Experiments with (10−4moll−1) ouabain, Na+ injection, low temperature (10°C) and non-superfused cells indicated the presence of an electrogenic sodium pump. Under current-clamp, the cell body membrane was depolarized by sequentially applied, ionophoretic pulses (500ms duration) of ACh. Under voltage-clamp, such doses of ACh resulted in an inward current which was abolished in low-Na+ saline. Ion-sensitive electrodes revealed an increase in [Na+]i but no change in [Cl−1]j in response to externally applied ACh. The ACh-induced current-voltage relationship was shifted in a negative direction by low-K+ saline. The AChinduced inward current was usually followed by a delayed outward current which reversed at Ek. Low-K+ saline had the same effect on this outward component as depolarizing the membrane. This suggests that the outward current component is carried by K+. The ACh-induced inward current and the delayed outward current were potentiated either when [Ca2+]i was lowered by injecting the calcium chelator BAPTA or by exposure of the cell to low-Ca2+ saline. High-Ca2+ saline reduced the inward component of the response and produced a negative shift in the AChinduced current-voltage relationship. The amplitude of the delayed outward


1991 ◽  
Vol 260 (5) ◽  
pp. C900-C909 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. M. Bers ◽  
L. V. Hryshko ◽  
S. M. Harrison ◽  
D. D. Dawson

Extracellular Ca (Cao) depletions that occur during cardiac muscle contractions are indicative of net Ca entry. Buffering Cao concentration ([Ca]o) with citrate can limit the magnitude of these Cao depletions [e.g., Shattock and Bers. Am. J. Physiol. 256 (Cell Physiol. 25): C813-C822, 1989] which theoretically would allow more Ca entry and consequently greater force at the same free [Ca]o. However, Shimoni and Ginsburg [Am. J. Physiol. 252 (Cell Physiol. 21): C248-C252, 1987] have shown that citrate inhibits cardiac contractions and suggested that this was due to its Ca-buffering action (i.e., dissipating a local elevation of [Ca] at the outer sarcolemmal surface and thereby decreasing Ca influx). To examine the effects of Ca buffering per se, we compared the effects of four low-affinity Ca buffers [citrate, nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA), dipicolinic acid (DPA), and acetamidoiminodiacetic acid (ADA)] on several cardiac preparations. In Mg-free medium with 2 mM free Ca (measured using murexide), citrate, DPA, and ADA (10 mM) decreased the force of twitch contractions in rabbit ventricle to 76 +/- 2, 60 +/- 2, and 85 +/- 2%, respectively, but 10 mM NTA increased force slightly to 105 +/- 2%. No simple correlation was observed between the Ca affinity of the buffer and its effect on tension. These effects were not due to changes in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca loading because rapid cooling contractures were not affected and similar results were observed in the presence of caffeine or ryanodine. The depressant effects of citrate and ADA on tension were greater at pH 5.5-6 and ADA had no effect at pH 8.5. Thus the depressant effect is stronger with more protonated forms of citrate and ADA, which are also poorer Ca buffers. Citrate (but not NTA) decreased Ca current in whole cell voltage clamp and shifted the current-voltage relationship and reversal potential to more negative potentials. Citrate decreased Ca current more effectively at higher citrate and lower Ca concentrations. We conclude that citrate (and some other weak Ca buffers) may directly decrease Ca current and contraction in a manner independent of Ca buffering ability.


2013 ◽  
Vol 304 (8) ◽  
pp. C748-C759 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takahiro Shimizu ◽  
Takahiro Iehara ◽  
Kaori Sato ◽  
Takuto Fujii ◽  
Hideki Sakai ◽  
...  

TMEM16 (transmembrane protein 16) proteins, which possess eight putative transmembrane domains with intracellular NH2- and COOH-terminal tails, are thought to comprise a Cl− channel family. The function of TMEM16F, a member of the TMEM16 family, has been greatly controversial. In the present study, we performed whole cell patch-clamp recordings to investigate the function of human TMEM16F. In TMEM16F-transfected HEK293T cells but not TMEM16K- and mock-transfected cells, activation of membrane currents with strong outward rectification was found to be induced by application of a Ca2+ ionophore, ionomycin, or by an increase in the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration. The free Ca2+ concentration for half-maximal activation of TMEM16F currents was 9.6 μM, which is distinctly higher than that for TMEM16A/B currents. The outwardly rectifying current-voltage relationship for TMEM16F currents was not changed by an increase in the intracellular Ca2+ level, in contrast to TMEM16A/B currents. The Ca2+-activated TMEM16F currents were anion selective, because replacing Cl− with aspartate− in the bathing solution without changing cation concentrations caused a positive shift of the reversal potential. The anion selectivity sequence of the TMEM16F channel was I− > Br− > Cl− > F− > aspartate−. Niflumic acid, a Ca2+-activated Cl− channel blocker, inhibited the TMEM16F-dependent Cl− currents. Neither overexpression nor knockdown of TMEM16F affected volume-sensitive outwardly rectifying Cl− channel (VSOR) currents activated by osmotic swelling or apoptotic stimulation. These results demonstrate that human TMEM16F is an essential component of a Ca2+-activated Cl− channel with a Ca2+ sensitivity that is distinct from that of TMEM16A/B and that it is not related to VSOR activity.


1998 ◽  
Vol 201 (20) ◽  
pp. 2833-2842 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Sakurai ◽  
A Mori ◽  
H Yamagishi

Neuromuscular transmission between the cardiac ganglion (CG) and the myocardium was examined in the adult heart of the isopod crustacean Ligia exotica. Intracellular injection of neurobiotin into the CG neurones revealed that all six CG neurones send their axons onto the cardiac muscle, where they form axon terminals bearing varicosities. All the CG neurones and their processes exhibited glutamate-like immunoreactivity. The cardiac muscle showed depolarizing membrane potential responses to glutamate applied focally to sites close to axon terminals bearing varicosities. Both the glutamate-induced response and the excitatory junctional potential (EJP) showed desensitization in response to the repeated application of glutamate. Under voltage-clamp conditions, the cardiac muscle produced inward current responses to focally applied glutamate. The reversal potential for the glutamate-induced current estimated from extrapolation of the linear current/voltage relationship was similar to that of the excitatory junctional current evoked by ganglionic nerve stimulation. Both the glutamate-induced response and the EJP were blocked by a glutamate-specific antagonist, Joro spider toxin. These results led us to conclude that the CG neurones of Ligia exotica are glutamatergic motoneurones.


1986 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Hals ◽  
B. N. Christensen ◽  
T. O'Dell ◽  
M. Christensen ◽  
R. Shingai

Horizontal cells isolated from the catfish retina were exposed to radiolabeled glutamate, glycine, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), and sucrose to determine if the enzymatic dissociation procedure altered the high-affinity uptake mechanism for GABA and generally reduced membrane selectivity. As in the intact retina, isolated cells could transport GABA but not the other substances. The horizontal cells were voltage clamped using a single low-resistance patch-type electrode. The acidic amino acid L-glutamate, and its analogues kainate and quisqualate, were applied to the cell by pressure ejection from a nearby pipette. All three agonists produced inward currents that reversed near O mV. Quisqualate produced a current with a similar time course as glutamate, but the time course of the response to kainate was faster. The agonists N-methyl-D-aspartate and L-aspartate had little effect on the membrane conductance. The current-to-voltage (I-V) relationship for all three agonists was nonlinear when the membrane potential was hyperpolarized. The nonlinearity was, at least in part, a result of the decreased response to the three agonists. Removal of Mg did not alter this nonlinear relationship. When the inward potassium rectifier was blocked with 100 microM Ba, the response to glutamate was increased compared with the control experiment before block by barium; however, the I-V relationship was still highly nonlinear. Thus glutamate block of the inward potassium current cannot account entirely for the nonlinear I-V. The increase in membrane permeability to specific ions in the presence of an agonist was determined by ion substitution experiments and measuring the shift in the reversal potential. The three agonists appear to increase the membrane permeability to cations but not to anions. The amino acid antagonists cis-2,3-piperidine dicarboxylic acid (PDA) and D-glutamyl glycine (DGG) were bath applied to test their ability to block the depolarizing effects of glutamate. DGG had no measureable effect at 100 microM concentration, whereas PDA reversibly reduced the glutamate response at 1 mM concentration although block was incomplete. Isolated horizontal cells responded to bath-applied glutamate in concentrations of 10-500 microM. In concentrations of glutamate greater than 50 microM, when the membrane potential was held at the resting potential, the inward current reached a maximum followed by a decrease to a steady-state level. This apparent time-dependent desensitization at high agonist concentrations was at least partially removed when Mg was removed from the bathing solution.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


1998 ◽  
Vol 79 (3) ◽  
pp. 1230-1238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Schweitzer ◽  
Samuel G. Madamba ◽  
George R. Siggins

Schweitzer, Paul, Samuel G. Madamba, and George R. Siggins. Somatostatin increases a voltage-insensitive K+ conductance in rat CA1 hippocampal neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 1230–1238, 1998. Somatostatin (SST) is a neuropeptide involved in several central processes. In hippocampus, SST hyperpolarizes CA1 pyramidal neurons and augments the K+ M current ( I M). However, the limited involvement of I M at resting potential in these cells suggests that the peptide also may modulate another channel to hyperpolarize hippocampal pyramidal neurons (HPNs). We studied the effect of SST on noninactivating conductances of rat CA1 HPNs in a slice preparation. Using MK886, a specific inhibitor of the enzymatic pathway that leads to the augmentation of I M by SST, we have uncovered and characterized a second conductance activated by the peptide. SST did not affect I M when applied with MK886 or the amplitudes of the slow Ca2+-dependent K+ afterhyperpolarization-current and the cationic Q current but still caused an outward current, indicating that SST acts upon another conductance. In the presence of MK886, SST elicited an outward current that reversed around −100 mV and that displayed a linear current-voltage relationship. Reversal potentials obtained in different external K+ concentrations are consistent with a conductance carried solely by K+ ions. The slope of the current-voltage relationship increased proportionately with the extracellular K+ concentration and remained linear. This suggests that SST opens a voltage-insensitive leak current ( I K(L)) in HPNs not an inwardly rectifying K+ current as reported in other neuron types. A low concentration of extracellular Ba2+ (150 μM) only slightly decreased the SST-induced effect in a voltage-independent manner, whereas a high concentration of Ba2+ (2 mM) completely blocked it. Extracellular Cs+ (2 mM) did not affect the outward SST current but inhibited the inward component. We conclude that SST inhibits HPNs by activating two different K+ conductances: the voltage-insensitive I K(L) and the voltage-dependent I M. The hyperpolarizing effect of SST at resting membrane potential appears to be mainly carried by I K(L), whereas I M dominates at slightly depolarized potentials.


1989 ◽  
Vol 256 (6) ◽  
pp. C1277-C1282 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. M. Sims ◽  
S. J. Dixon

Membrane properties of freshly isolated rat osteoclasts were studied using the whole cell patch-clamp recording technique. The membrane potential could switch between two stable levels, approximately -70 and -15 mV. Voltage-clamp studies indicated that osteoclasts exhibited marked inward rectification, with hyperpolarizing voltage commands from -70 mV activating large inward currents. No voltage-dependent currents were observed in response to depolarization. An increase in external K+ concentration shifted the current-voltage relationship positive in a manner predicted for K+ current. Furthermore, barium and cesium reversibly suppressed the inward current. Thus the dominant current evident in osteoclasts was inwardly rectifying K+ current, resembling that found in a number of cell types, including cardiac and skeletal muscle and oocytes. The current-voltage relationship of osteoclasts was "N-shaped" and could intersect the zero-current level at three potentials, accounting for two stable membrane potentials. Switching of membrane potential between these two levels may regulate a number of the cellular processes involved in bone resorption.


1991 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-74
Author(s):  
Lawrence H. Pinto ◽  
Akimichi Kaneko

AbstractTotal RNA was purified from freshly isolated retinas of adult carp and injected into oocytes of Xenopus laevis (stage 5–6). Two to six days after injection, depolarizing voltage-clamp steps evoked a slowly activated outward currents as large as 3 μA. This current inactivated slowly with a single time constant (τ= 3.1 ± 0.24 S.E.M., for Vm= +30 mV). The current was inhibited by tetraethylammonium (3.8 mM for half-maximal inhibition). In the presence of Co2+ (1 mM) or barium methanesulfonate (40 mM), the current-voltage relationship shifted to slightly more depolarized values (5–10 mV); the maximal value of the current that was sensitive to Co2+ or Ba2+ treatments was only a small fraction (about 10%) of the TEA-sensitive current, and its current-voltage relationship was similar to that for uninjected oocytes. The reversal potential of the membrane current was studied with [K+]0 of 1–77 mM. For [K+]0 > 20 mM, the reversal potential changed with a slope of 63 mV (±;2 mV S.E.M.) per 10-fold change in [K+]0. The conductance was induced half-maximally at 17 mV (±;0.9 mV s.e.m.). The depolarization required for an e−fold increase in conductance was 13 mV (±;0.6 mV s.e.m.). From these results, we conclude that the injection of total RNA from carp retinas induces the formation of a membrane K+ channel in Xenopus oocytes. The channel formed has many of properties reported for the maintained outward current of goldfish horizontal and bipolar cells.


1996 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 1049-1057 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chengbiao Lu ◽  
Douglas G. McMahon

AbstractTo further characterize the properties of retinal horizontal cell electrical synapses, we have studied the gating characteristics of gap junctions between cone-driven horizontal cells from the hybrid striped bass retina using double whole-cell voltage-clamp techniques. In a total of 105 cell pairs, the macroscopic conductance ranged from 0.4–100 nS with most cell pairs exhibiting junctional conductances between 10 and 30 nS. The junctional current-voltage relationship showed that peak or instantaneous currents (Iinst) were linear within the Vj range of ±100 mV and that steady-state junctional currents (Iss) exhibited rectification with increasing voltage beginning around ±30–40 mV Vj. The normalized junctional current-voltage relationship was well fit by a two-state Boltzmann distribution, with an effective gating charge of 1.9 charges/channel, a half-maximal voltage of approximately ±55 mV, and a normalized residual conductance of 0.28. The decay of junctional current followed a single exponential time course with the time constant decreasing with increasing Vj. Recovery of junctional current from voltage-dependent inactivation takes about 1 s following a pulse of 80 mV, and is about five times slower than the inactivation time course at the same Vj. Single-channel analysis showed that the unitary conductance of junctional channels is 50–70 pS. The overall open probability decreased in a voltage-dependent manner. Both the mean channel open time and the frequency of channel opening decreased, while the channel closure time increased. The ratio of closed time/total recording time significantly increased as Vj increased. Increased Vj reduced the number of events at all levels and shifted the unitary conductance to a lower level. Kinetic analysis of channel open duration showed that the distribution of channel open times was best fit by two exponentials and increased Vj significantly reduced the slower time constant. These results indicate that bass retina horizontal cells exhibit voltage-dependent inactivation of macroscopic junctional current. The inactivation occurs at the single-channel level mainly by increasing the rate of closure of voltage-sensitive channels.


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