A large conductance K(+)-selective channel of guinea pig villus enterocytes is Ca2+ independent

Abstract
The presence of K(+)-selective channels has been probed in enterocytes isolated from guinea pig small intestinal villi by the patch-clamp technique. A channel with a single-channel conductance of approximately 130 pS was observed in excised inside-out patches bathed in symmetrical K+. A change in the K+ concentration in the intracellular aspect of the membrane altered the current-voltage relationship as expected from the constant-field equation when it is assumed that K+ is the only permeant ion. A change in Cl- concentration was without effect. Neither the activity of the channel nor its conductance was altered by addition of ATP or Ba2+ to the intracellular side of the patches. Changes in the free Ca2+ concentration were also without effect. The channel's open probability showed no voltage dependence and appeared only occasionally active in cell-attached patches where it had a linear current-voltage relation. The K+ channel described, which cannot be readily classified in any of the known classes of K+ channels, might provide an exit pathway for K+ recycling in guinea pig villus enterocytes.

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