Kirk K, Elford B C, Ellory J C
University Laboratory of Physiology, Oxford, UK.
Biochim Biophys Acta. 1992 Apr 30;1135(1):8-12. doi: 10.1016/0167-4889(92)90159-9.
Charybdotoxin and nitrendipine both inhibited K+(86Rb+) influx via the Ca(2+)-activated channel of uninfected erythrocytes but had no effect on K+(86Rb+) transport in malaria-infected cells. Activation of the channel in uninfected cells in which the cytoplasmic [Na+]/[K+] ratio was adjusted to be comparable with that of late-stage malaria-infected erythrocytes resulted in a large (nitrendipine-sensitive) increase in K+(86Rb+) influx. These results suggest that the endogenous Ca(2+)-activated K+ channel remains inactive in human red cells infected with late-stage parasites. The identity of the pathway which mediates the increased K(+)-leak in infected erythrocytes remains to be established.