Ryanodine Receptor Permeation and Gating
Open Access
- 1 July 1999
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 114 (1) , 159-162
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.114.1.159
Abstract
Inactivation of delayed rectifier K conductance (gK) was studied in squid giant axons and in the somata of giant fiber lobe (GFL) neurons. Axon measurements were made with an axial wire voltage clamp by pulsing to VK (∼−10 mV in 50–70 mM external K) for a variable time and then assaying available gK with a strong, brief test pulse. GFL cells were studied with whole-cell patch clamp using the same prepulse procedure as well as with long depolarizations. Under our experimental conditions (12–18°C, 4 mM internal MgATP) a large fraction of gK inactivates within 250 ms at −10 mV in both cell bodies and axons, although inactivation tends to be more complete in cell bodies. Inactivation in both preparations shows two kinetic components. The faster component is more temperature-sensitive and becomes very prominent above 12°C. Contribution of the fast component to inactivation shows a similar voltage dependence to that of gK, suggesting a strong coupling of this inactivation path to the open state. Omission of internal MgATP or application of internal protease reduces the amount of fast inactivation. High external K decreases the amount of rapidly inactivating IK but does not greatly alter inactivation kinetics. Neither external nor internal tetraethylammonium has a marked effect on inactivation kinetics. Squid delayed rectifier K channels in GFL cell bodies and giant axons thus share complex fast inactivation properties that do not closely resemble those associated with either C-type or N-type inactivation of cloned Kv1 channels studied in heterologous expression systems.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ca2+ Sparks in Frog Skeletal Muscle: Generation by One, Some, or Many SR Ca2+ Release Channels?The Journal of general physiology, 1999
- Unitary Ca2+ Current through Cardiac Ryanodine Receptor Channels under Quasi-Physiological Ionic ConditionsThe Journal of general physiology, 1999
- Imperatoxin A Induces Subconductance States in Ca2+ Release Channels (Ryanodine Receptors) of Cardiac and Skeletal MuscleThe Journal of general physiology, 1998
- Factors shaping the confocal image of the calcium spark in cardiac muscle cellsBiophysical Journal, 1996
- A minimal gating model for the cardiac calcium release channelBiophysical Journal, 1996
- Molecular architecture of membranes involved in excitation-contraction coupling of cardiac muscle.The Journal of cell biology, 1995
- Calcium Sparks: Elementary Events Underlying Excitation-Contraction Coupling in Heart MuscleScience, 1993
- Cation conduction in the calcium release channel of the cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum under physiological and pathophysiological conditionsCardiovascular Research, 1993
- The relationship between Q gamma and Ca release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum in skeletal muscle.The Journal of general physiology, 1991
- Model of calcium movements during activation in the sarcomere of frog skeletal muscleBiophysical Journal, 1984