Inactivation of A currents and A channels on rat nodose neurons in culture.
Open Access
- 1 November 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 94 (5) , 881-910
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.94.5.881
Abstract
Cultured sensory neurons from nodose ganglia were investigated with whole-cell patch-clamp techniques and single-channel recordings to characterize the A current. Membrane depolarization from -40 mV holding potential activated the delayed rectifier current (IK) at potentials positive to -30 mV; this current had a sigmoidal time course and showed little or no inactivation. In most neurons, the A current was completely inactivated at the -40 mV holding potential and required hyperpolarization to remove the inactivation; the A current was isolated by subtracting the IK evoked by depolarizations from -40 mV from the total outward current evoked by depolarizations from -90 mV. The decay of the A current on several neurons had complex kinetics and was fit by the sum of three exponentials whose time constants were 10-40 ms, 100-350 ms, and 1-3 s. At the single-channel level we found that one class of channel underlies the A current. The conductance of A channels varied with the square root of the external K concentration: it was 22 pS when exposed to 5.4 mM K externally, the increased to 40 pS when exposed to 140 mM K externally. A channels activated rapidly upon depolarization and the latency to first opening decreased with depolarization. The open time distributions followed a single exponential and the mean open time increased with depolarization. A channels inactivate in three different modes: some A channels inactivated with little reopening and gave rise to ensemble averages that decayed in 10-40 ms; other A channels opened and closed three to four times before inactivating and gave rise to ensemble averages that decayed in 100-350 ms; still other A channels opened and closed several hundred times and required seconds to inactivate. Channels gating in all three modes contributed to the macroscopic A current from the whole cell, but their relative contribution differed among neurons. In addition, A channels could go directly from the closed, or resting, state to the inactivated state without opening, and the probability for channels inactivating in this way was greater at less depolarized voltages. In addition, a few A channels appeared to go reversibly from a mode where inactivation occurred rapidly to a slow mode of inactivation.This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Statistical properties of single sodium channels.The Journal of general physiology, 1984
- Synapse formation among developing sensory neurones from rat nodose ganglia grown in tissue culture.The Journal of Physiology, 1984
- Rat hippocampal neurons in culture: potassium conductancesJournal of Neurophysiology, 1984
- Conductance properties of single inwardly rectifying potassium channels in ventricular cells from guinea‐pig heart.The Journal of Physiology, 1984
- A reinterpretation of mammalian sodium channel gating based on single channel recordingNature, 1983
- Blocking kinetics of the anomalous potassium rectifier of tunicate egg studied by single channel recordingThe Journal of Physiology, 1982
- Electrophysiological studies of new-born rat nodose neurones in cell culture.The Journal of Physiology, 1982
- Effect of N-bromoacetamide on single sodium channel currents in excised membrane patches.The Journal of general physiology, 1982
- Improved patch-clamp techniques for high-resolution current recording from cells and cell-free membrane patchesPflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology, 1981
- Inactivation kinetics and steady‐state current noise in the anomalous rectifier of tunicate egg cell membranes.The Journal of Physiology, 1978