Soliven B, Nelson D J
Department of Neurology, University of Chicago, Illinois 60637.
J Membr Biol. 1990 Sep;117(3):263-74. doi: 10.1007/BF01868456.
The whole-cell voltage-clamp technique was employed to study the beta-adrenergic modulation of voltage-gated K+ currents in CD8+ human peripheral blood lymphocytes. The beta-receptor agonist, isoproterenol, decreased the peak current amplitude and increased the rate of inactivation of the delayed rectifier K+ current. In addition, isoproterenol decreased the voltage dependence of steady-state inactivation and shifted the steady-state inactivation curve to the left. Isoproterenol, on the other hand, had no significant effect on the steady-state parameters of current activation. The isoproterenol-induced decrease in peak current amplitude was inhibited by the beta-blocker propranolol. Bath application of dibutyryl cAMP (1 mM) mimicked the effects of isoproterenol on both K+ current amplitude and time course of inactivation. Furthermore, the reduction in the peak current amplitude in response to isoproterenol was attenuated when PKI5-24 (2-5 microM), a synthetic peptide inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, was present in the pipette solution. The increase in the rate of inactivation of the K+ currents in response to isoproterenol was mimicked by the internal application of GTP-gamma-S (300 microM) and by exposure of the cell to cholera toxin (1 microgram/ml), suggesting the involvement of a G protein. These results demonstrate that the voltage-dependent K+ conductance in T lymphocytes can be modulated by beta-adrenergic stimulation. The effects of beta-agonists, i.e., isoproterenol, appear to be receptor mediated and could involve cAMP-dependent protein kinase as well as G proteins. Since inhibition of the delayed rectifier K+ current has been found to decrease the proliferative response in T lymphocytes, the beta-adrenergic modulation of K+ current may well serve as a feedback control mechanism limiting the extent of cellular proliferation.
采用全细胞膜片钳技术研究CD8 + 人外周血淋巴细胞中电压门控钾电流的β-肾上腺素能调节。β-受体激动剂异丙肾上腺素降低了延迟整流钾电流的峰值电流幅度并增加了失活速率。此外,异丙肾上腺素降低了稳态失活的电压依赖性并使稳态失活曲线向左移动。另一方面,异丙肾上腺素对电流激活的稳态参数没有显著影响。β-阻滞剂普萘洛尔抑制了异丙肾上腺素诱导的峰值电流幅度降低。浴槽中加入二丁酰环磷腺苷(1 mM)模拟了异丙肾上腺素对钾电流幅度和失活时间进程的影响。此外,当移液管溶液中存在cAMP依赖性蛋白激酶的合成肽抑制剂PKI5 - 24(2 - 5 microM)时,对异丙肾上腺素反应的峰值电流幅度降低减弱。向内施加GTP-γ-S(300 microM)以及使细胞暴露于霍乱毒素(1微克/毫升)模拟了异丙肾上腺素引起的钾电流失活速率增加,提示G蛋白参与其中。这些结果表明,T淋巴细胞中电压依赖性钾电导可被β-肾上腺素能刺激调节。β-激动剂(即异丙肾上腺素)的作用似乎是受体介导的,可能涉及cAMP依赖性蛋白激酶以及G蛋白。由于已发现抑制延迟整流钾电流会降低T淋巴细胞的增殖反应,钾电流的β-肾上腺素能调节很可能作为一种反馈控制机制限制细胞增殖的程度。