scholarly journals Characteristics of single large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels and their regulation of action potentials and excitability in parasympathetic cardiac motoneurons in the nucleus ambiguus

2014 ◽  
Vol 306 (2) ◽  
pp. C152-C166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Lin ◽  
Jeff T. Hatcher ◽  
Robert D. Wurster ◽  
Qin-Hui Chen ◽  
Zixi (Jack) Cheng

Large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels (BK) regulate action potential (AP) properties and excitability in many central neurons. However, the properties and functional roles of BK channels in parasympathetic cardiac motoneurons (PCMNs) in the nucleus ambiguus (NA) have not yet been well characterized. In this study, the tracer X-rhodamine-5 (and 6)-isothiocyanate (XRITC) was injected into the pericardial sac to retrogradely label PCMNs in FVB mice at postnatal 7–9 days. Two days later, XRITC-labeled PCMNs in brain stem slices were identified. Using excised patch single-channel recordings, we identified voltage-gated and Ca2+-dependent BK channels in PCMNs. The majority of BK channels exhibited persistent channel opening during voltage holding. These BK channels had a conductance of 237 pS and a 50% opening probability at +27.9 mV, the channel open time constant was 3.37 ms at +20 mV, and dwell time increased exponentially as the membrane potential depolarized. At the +20-mV holding potential, the [Ca2+]50 was 15.2 μM with a P0.5 of 0.4. Occasionally, some BK channels showed a transient channel opening and fast inactivation. Using whole cell voltage clamp, we found that BK channel mediated outward currents and afterhyperpolarization currents ( IAHP). Using whole cell current clamp, we found that application of BK channel blocker iberiotoxin (IBTX) increased spike half-width and suppressed fast afterhyperpolarization (fAHP) amplitude following single APs. In addition, IBTX application increased spike half-width and reduced the spike frequency-dependent AP broadening in trains and spike frequency adaption (SFA). Furthermore, BK channel blockade decreased spike frequency. Collectively, these results demonstrate that PCMNs have BK channels that significantly regulate AP repolarization, fAHP, SFA, and spike frequency. We conclude that activation of BK channels underlies one of the mechanisms for facilitation of PCMN excitability.

2011 ◽  
Vol 300 (5) ◽  
pp. R1070-R1078 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Lin ◽  
Jeff T. Hatcher ◽  
Qing-Hui Chen ◽  
Robert D. Wurster ◽  
Lihua Li ◽  
...  

Previously, we demonstrated that maternal diabetes reduced the excitability and increased small-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (SK) currents of parasympathetic cardiac motoneurons (PCMNs) in the nucleus ambiguus (NA). In addition, blockade of SK channels with apamin completely abolished this reduction. In the present study, we examined whether maternal diabetes affects large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channels and whether BK channels contribute to the attenuation of PCMN excitability observed in neonates of diabetic mothers. Neonatal mice from OVE26 diabetic mothers (NMDM) and normal FVB mothers (control) were used. The pericardial sac of neonatal mice at postnatal days 7–9 was injected with the tracer X-rhodamine-5 (and 6)-isothiocyanate 2 days prior to the experiment to retrogradely label PCMNs in the NA. Whole cell current- and voltage-clamps were used to measure spike frequency, action potential (AP) repolarization (half-width), afterhyperpolarization potential (AHP), transient outward currents, and afterhyperpolarization currents ( IAHP). In whole cell voltage clamp mode, we confirmed that maternal diabetes increased transient outward currents and IAHP compared with normal cells. Using BK channel blockers charybdotoxin (CTx) and paxilline, we found that maternal diabetes increased CTx- and paxilline-sensitive transient outward currents but did not change CTx- and paxilline-sensitive IAHP. In whole cell current-clamp mode, we confirmed that maternal diabetes increased AP half-width and AHP, and reduced excitability of PCMNs. Furthermore, we found that after blockade of BK channels with CTx or paxilline, maternal diabetes induced a greater increase of AP half-width but similarly decreased fast AHP without affecting medium AHP. Finally, blockade of BK channels decreased spike frequency in response to current injection in both control and NMDM without reducing the difference of spike frequency between the two groups. Therefore, we conclude that although BK transient outward currents, which may alter AP repolarization, are increased in NMDM, BK channels do not directly contribute to maternal diabetes-induced attenuation of PCMN excitability. In contrast, based on evidence from our previous and present studies, reduction of PCMN excitability in neonates of diabetic mothers is largely dependent on altered SK current associated with maternal diabetes.


2000 ◽  
Vol 278 (6) ◽  
pp. H1883-H1890 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna K. Brzezinska ◽  
Debebe Gebremedhin ◽  
William M. Chilian ◽  
Balaraman Kalyanaraman ◽  
Stephen J. Elliott

Peroxynitrite (ONOO−) is a contractile agonist of rat middle cerebral arteries. To determine the mechanism responsible for this component of ONOO−bioactivity, the present study examined the effect of ONOO− on ionic current and channel activity in rat cerebral arteries. Whole cell recordings of voltage-clamped cells were made under conditions designed to optimize K+ current. The effects of iberiotoxin, a selective inhibitor of large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channels, and ONOO− (10–100 μM) were determined. At a pipette potential of +50 mV, ONOO− inhibited 39% of iberiotoxin-sensitive current. ONOO− was selective for iberiotoxin-sensitive current, whereas decomposed ONOO− had no effect. In excised, inside-out membrane patches, channel activity was recorded using symmetrical K+solutions. Unitary currents were sensitive to increases in internal Ca2+ concentration, consistent with activity due to BK channels. Internal ONOO− dose dependently inhibited channel activity by decreasing open probability and mean open times. The inhibitory effect of ONOO− could be overcome by reduced glutathione. Glutathione, added after ONOO−, restored whole cell current amplitude to control levels and reverted single-channel gating to control behavior. The inhibitory effect of ONOO− on membrane K+ current is consistent with its contractile effects in isolated cerebral arteries and single myocytes. Taken together, our data suggest that ONOO− has the potential to alter cerebral vascular tone by inhibiting BK channel activity.


2016 ◽  
Vol 311 (6) ◽  
pp. F1253-F1259 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kiril L. Hristov ◽  
Shankar P. Parajuli ◽  
Aaron Provence ◽  
Georgi V. Petkov

In addition to improving sexual function, testosterone has been reported to have beneficial effects in ameliorating lower urinary tract symptoms by increasing bladder capacity and compliance, while decreasing bladder pressure. However, the cellular mechanisms by which testosterone regulates detrusor smooth muscle (DSM) excitability have not been elucidated. Here, we used amphotericin-B perforated whole cell patch-clamp and single channel recordings on inside-out excised membrane patches to investigate the regulatory role of testosterone in guinea pig DSM excitability. Testosterone (100 nM) significantly increased the depolarization-induced whole cell outward currents in DSM cells. The selective pharmacological inhibition of the large-conductance voltage- and Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channels with paxilline (1 μM) completely abolished this stimulatory effect of testosterone, suggesting a mechanism involving BK channels. At a holding potential of −20 mV, DSM cells exhibited transient BK currents (TBKCs). Testosterone (100 nM) significantly increased TBKC activity in DSM cells. In current-clamp mode, testosterone (100 nM) significantly hyperpolarized the DSM cell resting membrane potential and increased spontaneous transient hyperpolarizations. Testosterone (100 nM) rapidly increased the single BK channel open probability in inside-out excised membrane patches from DSM cells, clearly suggesting a direct BK channel activation via a nongenomic mechanism. Live-cell Ca2+ imaging showed that testosterone (100 nM) caused a decrease in global intracellular Ca2+ concentration, consistent with testosterone-induced membrane hyperpolarization. In conclusion, the data provide compelling mechanistic evidence that under physiological conditions, testosterone at nanomolar concentrations directly activates BK channels in DSM cells, independent from genomic testosterone receptors, and thus regulates DSM excitability.


2016 ◽  
Vol 148 (5) ◽  
pp. 419-440 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guruprasad Kuntamallappanavar ◽  
Alex M. Dopico

In most mammalian tissues, Ca2+i/voltage-gated, large conductance K+ (BK) channels consist of channel-forming slo1 and auxiliary (β1–β4) subunits. When Ca2+i (3–20 µM) reaches the vicinity of BK channels and increases their activity at physiological voltages, β1- and β4-containing BK channels are, respectively, inhibited and potentiated by intoxicating levels of ethanol (50 mM). Previous studies using different slo1s, lipid environments, and Ca2+i concentrations—all determinants of the BK response to ethanol—made it impossible to determine the specific contribution of β subunits to ethanol action on BK activity. Furthermore, these studies measured ethanol action on ionic current under a limited range of stimuli, rendering no information on the gating processes targeted by alcohol and their regulation by βs. Here, we used identical experimental conditions to obtain single-channel and macroscopic currents of the same slo1 channel (“cbv1” from rat cerebral artery myocytes) in the presence and absence of 50 mM ethanol. First, we assessed the role five different β subunits (1,2,2-IR, 3-variant d, and 4) in ethanol action on channel function. Thus, two phenotypes were identified: (1) ethanol potentiated cbv1-, cbv1+β3-, and cbv1+β4-mediated currents at low Ca2+i while inhibiting current at high Ca2+i, the potentiation–inhibition crossover occurring at 20 µM Ca2+i; (2) for cbv1+β1, cbv1+wt β2, and cbv1+β2-IR, this crossover was shifted to ∼3 µM Ca2+i. Second, applying Horrigan–Aldrich gating analysis on both phenotypes, we show that ethanol fails to modify intrinsic gating and the voltage-dependent parameters under examination. For cbv1, however, ethanol (a) drastically increases the channel’s apparent Ca2+ affinity (nine-times decrease in Kd) and (b) very mildly decreases allosteric coupling between Ca2+ binding and channel opening (C). The decreased Kd leads to increased channel activity. For cbv1+β1, ethanol (a) also decreases Kd, yet this decrease (two times) is much smaller than that of cbv1; (b) reduces C; and (c) decreases coupling between Ca2+ binding and voltage sensing (parameter E). Decreased allosteric coupling leads to diminished BK activity. Thus, we have identified critical gating modifications that lead to the differential actions of ethanol on slo1 with and without different β subunits.


1991 ◽  
Vol 66 (4) ◽  
pp. 1166-1175 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. O. Smith ◽  
C. Franke ◽  
J. L. Rosenheimer ◽  
F. Zufall ◽  
H. Hatt

1. Single-channel properties of desensitizing glutamate-activated channels were analyzed in outside-out patch-clamp recordings from a motoneuron-enriched cell fraction from embryonic chick. A piezo-driven device was used to achieve fast solution exchange at the electrode tip, resulting in maximum activation within 2 ms. 2. Quisqualate/AMPA receptors, with a 13-pS conductance, desensitized rapidly; the desensitization rate depended on agonist concentration but not on membrane potential. When quisqualate was applied slowly, the quisqualate-activated channels desensitized without prior channel opening, indicating desensitization from the closed state. After a 10-ms refractory period, resensitization of all channels required up to 300 ms; resensitization rate did not depend on the duration of the preceding quisqualate application. 3. At agonist concentrations less than or equal to 1 mM, kainate receptors, with a 20-pS conductance, did not desensitize. At kainate concentrations greater than or equal to 1 mM, though, kainate receptors desensitized to a low steady-state conductance within approximately 200 ms. Resensitization of all channels required as long as 3 s, which could render kainate receptors inexcitable during high-frequency activation. 4. Desensitization rates of whole-cell currents were similar to those observed in outside-out mode. Glutamate- and quisqualate-activated responses were similar, suggesting that the rapidly desensitizing quisqualate-sensitive receptor type may dominate the kinetics of whole-cell excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) in this preparation. 5. It may be concluded that the efficacy of glutamate-mediated synaptic transmission is modulated by differences in the rates of desensitization and resensitization.


2018 ◽  
Vol 115 (40) ◽  
pp. 9923-9928 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vivian Gonzalez-Perez ◽  
Manu Ben Johny ◽  
Xiao-Ming Xia ◽  
Christopher J. Lingle

Structural symmetry is a hallmark of homomeric ion channels. Nonobligatory regulatory proteins can also critically define the precise functional role of such channels. For instance, the pore-forming subunit of the large conductance voltage and calcium-activated potassium (BK, Slo1, or KCa1.1) channels encoded by a single KCa1.1 gene assembles in a fourfold symmetric fashion. Functional diversity arises from two families of regulatory subunits, β and γ, which help define the range of voltages over which BK channels in a given cell are activated, thereby defining physiological roles. A BK channel can contain zero to four β subunits per channel, with each β subunit incrementally influencing channel gating behavior, consistent with symmetry expectations. In contrast, a γ1 subunit (or single type of γ1 subunit complex) produces a functionally all-or-none effect, but the underlying stoichiometry of γ1 assembly and function remains unknown. Here we utilize two distinct and independent methods, a Forster resonance energy transfer-based optical approach and a functional reporter in single-channel recordings, to reveal that a BK channel can contain up to four γ1 subunits, but a single γ1 subunit suffices to induce the full gating shift. This requires that the asymmetric association of a single regulatory protein can act in a highly concerted fashion to allosterically influence conformational equilibria in an otherwise symmetric K+channel.


2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 1603-1616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bailin Liu ◽  
Yanping Liu ◽  
Ruixiu Shi ◽  
Xueqin Feng ◽  
Xiang Li ◽  
...  

Background/Aims: Chronic hypoxia in utero could impair vascular functions in the offspring, underlying mechanisms are unclear. This study investigated functional alteration in large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channels in offspring mesenteric arteries following prenatal hypoxia. Methods: Pregnant rats were exposed to normoxic control (21% O2, Con) or hypoxic (10.5% O2, Hy) conditions from gestational day 5 to 21, their 7-month-old adult male offspring were tested for blood pressure, vascular BK channel functions and expression using patch clamp and wire myograh technique, western blotting, and qRT-PCR. Results: Prenatal hypoxia increased pressor responses and vasoconstrictions to phenylephrine in the offspring. Whole-cell currents density of BK channels and amplitude of spontaneous transient outward currents (STOCs), not the frequency, were significantly reduced in Hy vascular myocytes. The sensitivity of BK channels to voltage, Ca2+, and tamoxifen were reduced in Hy myocytes, whereas the number of channels per patch and the single-channel conductance were unchanged. Prenatal hypoxia impaired NS1102- and tamoxifen-mediated relaxation in mesenteric arteries precontracted with phenylephrine in the presence of Nω-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester. The mRNA and protein expression of BK channel β1, not the α-subunit, was decreased in Hy mesenteric arteries. Conclusions: Impaired BK channel β1-subunits in vascular smooth muscle cells contributed to vascular dysfunction in the offspring exposed to prenatal hypoxia.


1996 ◽  
Vol 76 (4) ◽  
pp. 2455-2460 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Nabekura ◽  
T. Omura ◽  
N. Horimoto ◽  
T. Ogawa ◽  
N. Akaike

1. The potentiation of glycine receptor-mediated taurine response (Itau) by alpha 1 adrenoceptor activation was investigated in neurons freshly dissociated from the rat substantia nigra (SN) using a nystatin perforated-patch recording. 2. Norepinephrine (NE) at a concentration of 10(-4) M in the presence of 10(-5) M yohimbine and 10(-5) M propranolol potentiated the peak amplitude of Itau (10(-3) M) at a holding potential of -40 mV under voltage clamp conditions. NE could be substituted by phenylephrine at this potentiation. 3. This potentiation of the taurine response persisted in the treatment with pertussis toxin (500 ng/ml) for 18 h. The intracellular application of GDP-beta S (100 microM) with a conventional whole cell patch recording mode abolished the effect of alpha 1 adrenoceptor activation on the Itau. 4. Staurosporine (10(-7) M) blocked the enhancement of Itau by 10(-4) M NE with 10(-5) M yohimbine and 10(-5) M propranolol. In additional phorbol-12-myristate 13-acetate (10(-5) M) potentiated Itau. 5. The intracellular application of 0.275 U/ml protein kinase C (PKC) with a conventional whole cell configuration gradually increased the peak amplitude of Itau. On the other hand, intracellular perfusion either without PKC or with PKC plus 4 microM PKC (19-36), a PKC inhibitor, did not potentiate Itau. 6. A single channel recording in a cell attached configuration revealed that NE (10(-4) M) with 10(-5) M yohimbine and 10(-5) M propranolol increased the total open time of the taurine-activated channel. This increase of the channel opening was antagonized by staurosporine (10(-7) M). 7. Neither tapsigargin (10(-6) M), LiCl (10(-4) M), trifluoperazine (10(-5) M) nor (S)-5-isoquinolinesulfonic acid, 4-[2-[(5-isoquinolinylsulfonyl) methylamino]-3-oxo-(4-phenyl-1-piperazinyl)-propyl]phenyl ester (10(-4) M) applied in the perfusate were found to affect the potentiation of Itau by alpha 1 adrenoceptor. The intracellular application of inositol triphosphates (10(-4) M) in a conventional whole cell recording also had no effect on Itau. 8. These findings thus indicate that alpha 1 adrenoceptor coupled with pertussis-insensitive G protein increases the intracellular PKC activity, thus leading to an increase in the channel opening activated by taurine and an enhancement of the peak amplitude of Itau in the SN neurons.


2000 ◽  
Vol 278 (2) ◽  
pp. H548-H557 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tao Zeng ◽  
Glenna C. L. Bett ◽  
Frederick Sachs

Mechanoelectric transduction can initiate cardiac arrhythmias. To examine the origins of this effect at the cellular level, we made whole cell voltage-clamp recordings from acutely isolated rat ventricular myocytes under controlled strain. Longitudinal stretch elicited noninactivating inward cationic currents that increased the action potential duration. These stretch-activated currents could be blocked by 100 μM Gd3+ but not by octanol. The current-voltage relationship was nearly linear, with a reversal potential of approximately −6 mV in normal Tyrode solution. Current density varied with sarcomere length (SL) according to I (pA/pF) = 8.3 − 5.0SL (μm). Repeated attempts to record single channel currents from stretch-activated ion channels failed, in accord with the absence of such data from the literature. The inability to record single channel currents may be a result of channels being located on internal membranes such as the T tubules or, possibly, inactivation of the channels by the mechanics of patch formation.


1994 ◽  
Vol 71 (5) ◽  
pp. 1873-1882 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. C. McKay ◽  
S. I. Dworetzky ◽  
N. A. Meanwell ◽  
S. P. Olesen ◽  
P. H. Reinhart ◽  
...  

1. We used electrophysiological techniques to examine the effects of 5-trifluoromethyl-1-(5-chloro-2-hydroxyphenyl)-1,3-dihydro-2H-benzimidaz ole- 2-one (NS004) on large-conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK) channels. 2. We used recordings from excised membrane patches (cell-attached and inside-out single-channel configurations) and whole-cell patch-clamp recordings to examine the effects of NS004 on single BK channels and whole-cell outward currents, respectively, in rat GH3 clonal pituitary tumor cells. We also tested NS004 on voltage-clamped BK channels isolated from rat brain plasma membrane preparations and reconstituted into planar lipid bilayers. Finally, we used two-electrode voltage-clamp techniques to study the effects of NS004 on currents expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes by the recently described Slo BK clone from Drosophila. 3. In GH3 cells and in Xenopus oocytes expressing the Slo gene product NS004 produced an increase in an iberiotoxin- or tetraethylammonium-sensitive whole-cell outward current, respectively. NS004 produced a significant increase in the activity of single GH3 cell BK channels and rat brain BK channels reconstituted into planar lipid bilayers. In both systems this was characterized by an increase in channel mean open time, a decrease in interburst interval, and an apparent increase in channel voltage/calcium sensitivity. 4. These data indicate that NS004 could be useful for investigating the biophysical and molecular properties of BK channels and for determining the functional consequences of the opening of BK channels.


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