These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Three potassium channels in rat posterior pituitary nerve terminals.
    Author: Bielefeldt K, Rotter JL, Jackson MB.
    Journal: J Physiol; 1992 Dec; 458():41-67. PubMed ID: 1302271.
    Abstract:
    1. The patch clamp technique was used to investigate the K+ channels in the membranes of nerve terminals in thin slices prepared from the rat posterior pituitary. 2. Depolarization of the membrane produced a high density of K+ current. With a holding potential of -80 mV, test pulses to +50 mV activated a K+ current which was inactivated by 65% within 200 ms. Hyperpolarizing prepulses enhanced the transient K+ current, with half-maximal enhancement at -87 mV. Depolarizing prepulses reduced or eliminated the transient K+ current. 3. In cell-attached patches formed with pipettes containing 130 mM KCl, three types of K+ channel could be distinguished on the basis of single-channel properties. One channel had a conductance of 33 pS and was inactivated with a time constant of 18 ms. A second channel had a conductance of 134 pS and was inactivated with a time constant of 71 ms. A third channel had a conductance of 27 pS, was activated relatively slowly with a time constant of 65 ms, and was not inactivated during test pulses of up to one second in duration. 4. Inactivation of the whole-cell K+ current was a biphasic process with two exponential components. The fast component had a time constant of 22 ms (at +50 mV), corresponding well with the time constant of decay of average current in cell-attached patches containing only the rapidly inactivating K+ channel. The slow component of inactivation had a time constant of 104 ms (at +50 mV), which was similar to but slightly slower than the time constant of decay of the average current in cell-attached patches containing only the slowly inactivating K+ channel. Inactivation of the slow transient K+ current became more rapid with increasing depolarization. 5. The low-conductance rapidly inactivating K+ channel had a lower voltage threshold for activation than the other two K+ channels. 6. Both inactivating K+ channels were enhanced in a similar manner by prior hyperpolarization. There was no difference with regard to voltage mid-point or steepness. 7. The large-conductance slowly inactivating K+ channel was activated by Ca2+ at the inner membrane surface. The resting intracellular Ca2+ was sufficiently high to produce significant activation of this channel without depolarization-induced Ca2+ entry. 8. Removal of Ca2+ from the bathing solution produced a -10 mV shift in the voltage dependence of enhancement of both transient K+ currents by prior hyperpolarization. This could be explained as a surface charge effect.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]