Shigetomi T, Hayashi T, Ueda M, Kaneda T, Tokuno H, Takai A, Tomita T
Department of Oral Surgery, School of Medicine, Nagoya University, Japan.
Pflugers Arch. 1991 Oct;419(3-4):332-7. doi: 10.1007/BF00371115.
In freshly dispersed rat parotid acinar cells, 10 microM carbachol increased outward currents at 0 mV and also inward currents at -70 mV recorded with the wholecell clamp method using patch pipettes containing 1 mM EGTA. When EGTA in the pipette was increased to 2.4 mM, carbachol increased only outward currents and a further increase of EGTA to 4 mM blocked the carbachol response. Effects of changes in external K+ and Cl- concentrations suggested that outward currents were carried by K+ and inward by Cl-. Effects of Ca2+ removal from the medium differed between experiments with 0 and 5 mM ATP in the patch pipettes. When pipettes contained no ATP, responses evoked by repeated applications of 10 microM carbachol (0.5-1 min) at 1.5-4 min intervals decreased only slowly after Ca2+ removal, outward currents being reduced to 90 +/- 6% and inward currents to 47 +/- 11% (n = 6) in 10 min. On the other hand, when 5 mM ATP was included in the electrodes, Ca2+ removal abolished the carbachol responses in about 5 min (n = 4). It was also found that tetraethylammonium (5 mM) strongly reduced both currents, by blocking muscarinic receptors, while Ba2+ (2.4 mM) inhibited only the outward K+ current.