Reinhardt R, Bridges R J, Rummel W, Lindemann B
J Membr Biol. 1987;95(1):47-54. doi: 10.1007/BF01869629.
Vesicles derived from epithelial cells of the colonic mucosa of the rat were fused to planar phospholipid bilayer membranes, revealing spontaneously switching anion-conducting channels of 50 pS conductance (at -30 mV with 200 mM Cl- each side). The equilibrium selectivity series was I- (1.7)/Br- (1.3)/Cl- (1.0)/F- (0.4)/HCO3- (0.4)/Na (less than 0.11). Only one dominant open-state conductance could be resolved, which responded linearly to Cl- concentrations up to 600 mM. The single-channel current-voltage curve was weakly rectifying with symmetrical solutions. When 50 mV were exceeded at the high-conductance branch of the curve, switching was arrested in the closed state. At more moderate voltages (+/- 40 mV) kinetics were dominated by one open state of about 35-msec lifetime and two closed states of about 2 and 9-msec lifetime. Of these, the more stable closed state occurred less often. At these voltages one additional closed state of significantly longer lifetime (greater than 0.5 sec) was observed.