Transient Voltage-Dependent Potassium Currents Are Reduced in NTS Neurons Isolated From Renal Wrap Hypertensive Rats

2005 ◽  
Vol 94 (6) ◽  
pp. 3849-3859 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergei Belugin ◽  
Steve Mifflin

Whole cell patch-clamp measurements were made in neurons enzymatically dispersed from the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) to determine if alterations occur in voltage-dependent potassium channels from rats made hypertensive (HT) by unilateral nephrectomy/renal wrap for 4 wk. Some rats had the fluorescent tracer DiA applied to the aortic nerve before the experiment to identify NTS neurons receiving monosynaptic baroreceptor afferent inputs. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) was greater in 4-wk HT (165 ± 5 mmHg, n = 26, P < 0.001) rats compared with normotensive (NT) rats (109 ± 3 mmHg measured in 10 of 69 rats). Transient outward currents (TOCs) were observed in 67–82% of NTS neurons from NT and HT rats. At activation voltages from −10 to +10 mV, TOCs were significantly less in HT neurons compared with those observed in NT neurons ( P < 0.001). There were no differences in the voltage-dependent activation kinetics, the voltage dependence of steady-state inactivation, and the rise and decay time constants of the TOCs comparing neurons isolated from NT and HT rats. The 4-aminopyridine–sensitive component of the TOC was significantly less in neurons from HT compared with NT rats ( P < 0.001), whereas steady-state outward currents, whether or not sensitive to 4-aminopyridine or tetraethylammonium, were not different. Delayed excitation, studied under current clamp, was observed in 60–80% of NTS neurons from NT and HT rats and was not different comparing neurons from NT and HT rats. However, examination of the subset of NTS neurons exhibiting somatic DiA fluorescence revealed that DiA-labeled neurons from HT rats had a significantly shorter duration delayed excitation ( n = 8 cells, P = 0.022) than DiA-labeled neurons from NT rats ( n = 7 cells). Neurons with delayed excitation from HT rats had a significantly broader first action potential (AP) and a slower maximal downstroke velocity of repolarization compared with NT neurons with delayed excitation ( P = 0.016 and P = 0.014, respectively). The number of APs in the first 200 ms of a sustained depolarization was greater in HT than NT neurons ( P = 0.012). These results suggest that HT of 4-wk duration reduces TOCs in NTS neurons, and this contributes to reduced delayed excitation and increased AP responses to depolarizing inputs. Such changes could alter baroreflex function in hypertension.

1989 ◽  
Vol 94 (5) ◽  
pp. 937-951 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Cota ◽  
E Stefani

Inactivation of slow Ca2+ channels was studied in intact twitch skeletal muscle fibers of the frog by using the three-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique. Hypertonic sucrose solutions were used to abolish contraction. The rate constant of decay of the slow Ca2+ current (ICa) remained practically unchanged when the recording solution containing 10 mM Ca2+ was replaced by a Ca2+-buffered solution (126 mM Ca-maleate). The rate constant of decay of ICa monotonically increased with depolarization although the corresponding time integral of ICa followed a bell-shaped function. The replacement of Ca2+ by Ba2+ did not result in a slowing of the rate of decay of the inward current nor did it reduce the degree of steady-state inactivation. The voltage dependence of the steady-state inactivation curve was steeper in the presence of Ba2+. In two-pulse experiments with large conditioning depolarizations ICa inactivation remained unchanged although Ca2+ influx during the prepulse greatly decreased. Dantrolene (12 microM) increased mechanical threshold at all pulse durations tested, the effect being more prominent for short pulses. Dantrolene did not significantly modify ICa decay and the voltage dependence of inactivation. These results indicate that in intact muscle fibers Ca2+ channels inactivate in a voltage-dependent manner through a mechanism that does not require Ca2+ entry into the cell.


1993 ◽  
Vol 101 (4) ◽  
pp. 571-601 ◽  
Author(s):  
D L Campbell ◽  
R L Rasmusson ◽  
Y Qu ◽  
H C Strauss

Enzymatically isolated myocytes from ferret right ventricles (12-16 wk, male) were studied using the whole cell patch clamp technique. The macroscopic properties of a transient outward K+ current I(to) were quantified. I(to) is selective for K+, with a PNa/PK of 0.082. Activation of I(to) is a voltage-dependent process, with both activation and inactivation being independent of Na+ or Ca2+ influx. Steady-state inactivation is well described by a single Boltzmann relationship (V1/2 = -13.5 mV; k = 5.6 mV). Substantial inactivation can occur during a subthreshold depolarization without any measurable macroscopic current. Both development of and recovery from inactivation are well described by single exponential processes. Ensemble averages of single I(to) channel currents recorded in cell-attached patches reproduce macroscopic I(to) and indicate that inactivation is complete at depolarized potentials. The overall inactivation/recovery time constant curve has a bell-shaped potential dependence that peaks between -10 and -20 mV, with time constants (22 degrees C) ranging from 23 ms (-90 mV) to 304 ms (-10 mV). Steady-state activation displays a sigmoidal dependence on membrane potential, with a net aggregate half-activation potential of +22.5 mV. Activation kinetics (0 to +70 mV, 22 degrees C) are rapid, with I(to) peaking in approximately 5-15 ms at +50 mV. Experiments conducted at reduced temperatures (12 degrees C) demonstrate that activation occurs with a time delay. A nonlinear least-squares analysis indicates that three closed kinetic states are necessary and sufficient to model activation. Derived time constants of activation (22 degrees C) ranged from 10 ms (+10 mV) to 2 ms (+70 mV). Within the framework of Hodgkin-Huxley formalism, Ito gating can be described using an a3i formulation.


1998 ◽  
Vol 275 (6) ◽  
pp. H2016-H2024 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toshihisa Nagatomo ◽  
Zheng Fan ◽  
Bin Ye ◽  
Gayle S. Tonkovich ◽  
Craig T. January ◽  
...  

Na+current ( I Na) through wild-type human heart Na+channels (hH1) is important for normal cardiac excitability and conduction, and it participates in the control of repolarization and refractoriness. I Na kinetics depend strongly on temperature, but I Na for hH1 has been studied previously only at room temperature. We characterized early I Na (the peak and initial decay) and late I Na of the wild-type hH1 channel and a mutant channel (ΔKPQ) associated with congenital long Q-T syndrome. Channels were stably transfected in HEK-293 cells and studied at 23 and 33°C using whole cell patch clamp. Activation and inactivation kinetics for early I Na were twofold faster at higher temperature for both channels and shifted activation and steady-state inactivation in the positive direction, especially for ΔKPQ. For early I Na (<24 ms), ΔKPQ decayed faster than the wild type for voltages negative to −20 mV but slower for more positive voltages, suggesting a reduced voltage dependence of fast inactivation. Late I Na at 240 ms was significantly greater for ΔKPQ than for the wild type at both temperatures. The majority of late I Na for ΔKPQ was not persistent; rather, it decayed slowly, and this late component exhibited slower recovery from inactivation compared with peak I Na. Additional kinetic changes for early and peak I Na for ΔKPQ compared with the wild type at both temperatures were 1) reduced voltage dependence of steady-state inactivation with no difference in midpoint, 2) positive shift for activation kinetics, and 3) more rapid recovery from inactivation. This study represents the first description of human Na+ channel kinetics near physiological temperature and also demonstrates complex gating changes in the ΔKPQ that are present at 33°C and that may underlie the electrophysiological and clinical phenotype of congenital long Q-T Na+ channel syndromes.


1999 ◽  
Vol 91 (5) ◽  
pp. 1481-1481 ◽  
Author(s):  
Larry E. Wagner ◽  
Michael Eaton ◽  
Salas S. Sabnis ◽  
Kevin J. Gingrich

Background The opioid meperidine induces spinal anesthesia and blocks nerve action potentials, suggesting it is a local anesthetic. However, whether it produces effective clinical local anesthesia in peripheral nerves remains unclear. Classification as a local anesthetic requires clinical local anesthesia but also blockade of voltage-dependent Na+ channels with characteristic features (tonic and phasic blockade and a negative shift in the voltage-dependence of steady-state inactivation) involving an intrapore receptor. The authors tested for these molecular pharmacologic features to explore whether meperidine is a local anesthetic. Methods The authors studied rat skeletal muscle mu1 (RSkM1) voltage-dependent Na+ channels or a mutant form heterologously coexpressed with rat brain Na+ channel accessory beta1, subunit in Xenopus oocytes. Polymerase chain reaction was used for mutagenesis, and mutations were confirmed by sequencing. Na+ currents were measured using a two-microelectrode voltage clamp. Meperidine and the commonly used local anesthetic lidocaine were applied to oocytes in saline solution at room temperature. Results Meperidine and lidocaine produced tonic current inhibition with comparable concentration dependence. Meperidine caused phasic current inhibition in which the concentration-response relationship was shifted to fivefold greater concentration relative to lidocaine. Meperidine and lidocaine negatively shifted the voltage dependence of steady-state inactivation. Mutation of a putative local anesthetic receptor reduced phasic inhibition by meperidine and lidocaine and tonic inhibition by lidocaine, but not meperidine tonic inhibition. Conclusions Meperidine blocks Na+ channels with molecular pharmacologic features of a local anesthetic. The findings support classification of meperidine as a local anesthetic but with less overall potency than lidocaine.


1998 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 727-742 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oscar Sacchi ◽  
Maria Lisa Rossi ◽  
Rita Canella ◽  
Riccardo Fesce

Sacchi, Oscar, Maria Lisa Rossi, Rita Canella, and Riccardo Fesce. Synaptic current at the rat ganglionic synapse and its interactions with the neuronal voltage-dependent currents. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 727–742, 1998. The membrane current activated by fast nicotinic excitation of intact and mature rat sympathetic neurons was studied at 37°C, by using the two-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique. The excitatory postsynaptic current (EPSC) was modeled as the difference between two exponentials. A fast time constant (τ2; mean value 0.57 ms), which proves to be virtually voltage-independent, governs the current rise phase and a longer time constant (τ1; range 5.2–6.8 ms in 2 mM Ca2+) describes the current decay and shows a small negative voltage dependence. A mean peak synaptic conductance of 0.58 μS per neuron is measured after activation of the whole presynaptic input in 5 mM Ca2+ external solution (0.40 μS in 2 mM Ca2+). The miniature EPSCs also rise and decay with exponential time constants very similar to those of the compound EPSC recorded at the same voltage. A mean peak conductance of 4.04 nS is estimated for the unitary event. Deconvolution procedures were employed to decompose evoked macrocurrents. It is shown that under appropriate conditions the duration of the driving function describing quantal secretion can be reduced to <1 ms. The shape of the EPSC is accurately mimicked by a complete mathematical model of the sympathetic neuron incorporating the kinetic properties of five different voltage-dependent current types, which were characterized in a previous work. We show that I A channels are opened by depolarizing voltage steps or by synaptic potentials in the subthreshold voltage range, provided that the starting holding voltage is sufficiently negative to remove I A steady-state inactivation (less than −50 mV) and the voltage trajectories are sufficiently large to enter the I A activation range (greater than −65 mV). Under current-clamp conditions, this gives rise to an additional fast component in the early phase of membrane repolarization—in response to voltage pulses—and to a consistent distortion of the excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) time course around its peak—in response to the synaptic signal. When the stimulation initiates an action potential, I A is shown to significantly increase the synaptic threshold conductance (up to a factor of 2 when I A is fully deinactivated), compared with that required when I A is omitted. The voltage dependence of this effect is consistent with the I A steady-state inactivation curve. It is concluded that I A, in addition to speeding up the spike repolarization process, also shunts the excitatory drive and delays or prevents the firing of the neuron action potential.


2007 ◽  
Vol 292 (3) ◽  
pp. C1078-C1086 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haiyan Chen ◽  
Erika S. Piedras-Rentería

Spinocerebellar ataxia type 6 (SCA6) is a neurodegenerative disease of the cerebellum and inferior olives characterized by a late-onset cerebellar ataxia and selective loss of Purkinje neurons ( 15 , 16 ). SCA6 arises from an expansion of the polyglutamine tract located in exon 47 of the α1A (P/Q-type calcium channel) gene from a nonpathogenic size of 4 to 18 glutamines (CAG4–18) to CAG19–33 in SCA6. The molecular basis of SCA6 is poorly understood. To date, the biophysical properties studied in heterologous systems support both a gain and a loss of channel function in SCA6. We studied the behavior of the human α1A isoform, previously found to elicit a gain of function in disease ( 41 ), focusing on properties in which the COOH terminus of the channel is critical for function: we analyzed the current properties in the presence of β4- and β2a-subunits (both known to interact with the α1A COOH terminus), current kinetics of activation and inactivation, calcium-dependent inactivation and facilitation, voltage-dependent inactivation, frequency dependence, and steady-state activation and inactivation properties. We found that SCA6 channels have decreased activity-dependent inactivation and a depolarizing shift (+6 mV) in steady-state inactivation properties consistent with a gain of function.


1993 ◽  
Vol 264 (2) ◽  
pp. H470-H478 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Quayle ◽  
J. G. McCarron ◽  
J. R. Asbury ◽  
M. T. Nelson

Unitary currents through single calcium channels were measured from cell-attached patches on smooth muscle cells isolated from resistance-sized branches of posterior cerebral arteries from Wistar-Kyoto normotensive rats. Barium (80 and 10 mM) was used as the charge carrier, with and without the dihydropyridine calcium channel agonist BAY R 5417. Unitary currents decreased on membrane depolarization, with a slope conductance of 19.4 pS (80 mM barium). Channel open-state probability (Po) was steeply voltage dependent. Peak Po during test pulses from -70 mV increased e-fold per 4.5-mV depolarization. Mean peak Po at potentials positive to +10 mV was 0.44. Po at steady membrane potentials was also steeply voltage dependent, changing e-fold per 4.5 mV in the absence of inactivation. Steady-state Po at positive potentials was substantially lower than peak Po elicited by test pulses, suggesting that steady-state inactivation can reduce Po by as much as 10-fold. Membrane depolarization decreased the longest mean closed time but had little effect on the mean open time of single calcium channels measured during steady-state recordings. Lowering the external barium concentration from 80 to 10 mM reduced the single channel conductance to 12.4 pS and shifted the relationship between steady-state Po and membrane potential by about -30 mV. BAY R 5417 also shifted this relationship by about -15 mV.


1992 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Mynlieff ◽  
K. G. Beam

1. Calcium channel currents were measured with the whole-cell patch clamp technique in cultured, identified mouse motoneurons. Three components of current were operationally defined on the basis of voltage dependence, kinetics, and pharmacology. 2. Test potentials to -50 mV or greater (10 mM external Ca2+) elicited a low-voltage activated T-type current that was transient (decaying to baseline in less than 200 ms) and had a relatively slow time to peak (20-50 ms). A 1-s prepulse to -45 mV produced approximately half-maximal inactivation of this T current. 3. Two high-voltage activated (HVA) components of current (1 transient and 1 sustained) were activated by test potentials to -20 mV or greater (10 mM external Ca2+). A 1-s prepulse to -35 mV produced approximately half-maximal inactivation of the transient component without affecting the sustained component. 4. When Ba2+ was substituted for Ca2+ as the charge carrier, activation of the HVA components was shifted in the hyperpolarizing direction, and the relative amplitude of the transient HVA component was reduced. 5. Amiloride (1-2 mM) caused a reversible, partial block of the T current without affecting the HVA components. 6. The dihydropyridine agonist isopropyl 4-(2,1,3-benzoxadiazol-4-yl)-1,4-dihydro-2,6-dimethyl-5-nitro-3- pyridine-carboxylate [(+)-SDZ 202-791, 100 nM-1 microM)] shifted the activation of the sustained component of HVA current to more negative potentials and increased its maximal amplitude. Additionally, (+)-SDZ 202-791 caused the appearance of a slowed component of tail current.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


1980 ◽  
Vol 88 (1) ◽  
pp. 293-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
YOUKO SATOW ◽  
CHING KUNG

Late K-outward currents upon membrane depolarization were recorded in Paramecium tetraurelia under a voltage clamp. A Ca-induced K-outward component is demonstrated by subtracting the value of the outward current in a pawn A mutant lacking functional Ca-channels (pwA500). The Ca-induced K-outward current activates slowly, reaching a peak after 100 to 1000 ms. The current then remains steady or reaches the steady state after a decline of several seconds. EGTA2- injection experiments show that the Ca-induced K-outward current is dependent on the internal Ca2+ concentration. The current is shown to depend on the voltage-dependent Ca conductance, by study of the leaky pawn A mutant (pwA132), which has a lowered Ca conductance as well as a lowered Ca-induced K-current. The Ca-induced GK is thus indirectly dependent on the voltage. The maximal GK is about 40 nmho/cell at + 7 mV in 4 mM-K+. The Ca-induced K current is sustained throughout the prolonged depolarization and the prolonged ciliary reversal.


2007 ◽  
Vol 293 (2) ◽  
pp. C783-C789 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Rosker ◽  
Birgit Lohberger ◽  
Doris Hofer ◽  
Bibiane Steinecker ◽  
Stefan Quasthoff ◽  
...  

The blocking efficacy of 4,9-anhydro-TTX (4,9-ah-TTX) and TTX on several isoforms of voltage-dependent sodium channels, expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes, was tested (Nav1.2, Nav1.3, Nav1.4, Nav1.5, Nav1.6, Nav1.7, and Nav1.8). Generally, TTX was 40–231 times more effective, when compared with 4,9-ah-TTX, on a given isoform. An exception was Nav1.6, where 4,9-ah-TTX in nanomole per liter concentrations sufficed to result in substantial block, indicating that 4,9-ah-TTX acts specifically at this peculiar isoform. The IC50 values for TTX/4,9-ah-TTX were as follows (in nmol/l): 7.8 ± 1.3/1,260 ± 121 (Nav1.2), 2.8 ± 2.3/341 ± 36 (Nav1.3), 4.5 ± 1.0/988 ± 62 (Nav1.4), 1,970 ± 565/78,500 ± 11,600 (Nav1.5), 3.8 ± 1.5/7.8 ± 2.3 (Nav1.6), 5.5 ± 1.4/1,270 ± 251 (Nav1.7), and 1,330 ± 459/>30,000 (Nav1.8). Analysis of approximal half-maximal doses of both compounds revealed minor effects on voltage-dependent activation only, whereas steady-state inactivation was shifted to more negative potentials by both TTX and 4,9-ah-TTX in the case of the Nav1.6 subunit, but not in the case of other TTX-sensitive ones. TTX shifted steady-state inactivation also to more negative potentials in case of the TTX-insensitive Nav1.5 subunit, where it also exerted profound effects on the time course of recovery from inactivation. Isoform-specific interaction of toxins with ion channels is frequently observed in the case of proteinaceous toxins. Although the sensitivity of Nav1.1 to 4,9-ah-TTX is not known, here we report evidence on a highly isoform-specific TTX analog that may well turn out to be an invaluable tool in research for the identification of Nav1.6-mediated function, but also for therapeutic intervention.


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