Ince C, Leijh P C, Meijer J, Van Bavel E, Ypey D L
J Physiol. 1984 Jul;352:625-35. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.1984.sp015313.
L cells (a mouse fibroblast cell line) and macrophages have been reported to exhibit slow oscillatory hyperpolarizations and relatively low membrane potentials, when measured with glass micro-electrodes. This paper describes the role of micro-electrode-induced leakage in these oscillations for L cells and a mouse macrophage cell line (P388D1). Both L cells and macrophages showed fast negative-going peak-shaped potential transients upon micro-electrode entry. This shows that the micro-electrode introduces a leakage conductance across the membrane. The peak values of these fast transients were less negative for L cells (-17 mV) than for macrophages (-39 mV), although their sustained resting membrane potentials were about equal (-13 mV). This indicates that the pre-impaled membrane potential of macrophages is more negative than that of L cells. Ionophoretic injection of Ca2+ into the P388D1 macrophages showed the existence of a Ca2+ -dependent hyperpolarizing conductance presumed to be involved in the oscillatory hyperpolarizations of L cells and macrophages. Cells increased in size by X-ray irradiation to reduce membrane input resistances were still found to be susceptible to micro-electrode-induced leakage. Impalement transients upon entry of a second electrode during a hyperpolarization evoked by a first electrode, were often step-shaped instead of peak-shaped due to the high membrane conductance associated with hyperpolarization. Since peak-shaped impalement transients were always seen with the first impalement both in oscillating and non-oscillating cells, oscillatory hyperpolarizations cannot be regarded as spontaneously occurring in the unperturbed cells but are induced by micro-electrode penetration. Since the hyperpolarizing response can be evoked by ionophoretic injection of Ca2+, and oscillatory as well as single hyperpolarizing responses are absent in a Ca2+ -free medium, it is concluded that the Ca2+ needed intracellularly to activate the hyperpolarizing responses enters the cell via the leakage pathway introduced by the measuring electrode.
据报道,当用玻璃微电极测量时,L细胞(一种小鼠成纤维细胞系)和巨噬细胞会表现出缓慢的振荡性超极化以及相对较低的膜电位。本文描述了微电极诱导的漏电在L细胞和小鼠巨噬细胞系(P388D1)的这些振荡中的作用。L细胞和巨噬细胞在微电极插入时均显示出快速的负向峰形电位瞬变。这表明微电极在膜上引入了漏电导。这些快速瞬变的峰值,L细胞(-17 mV)比巨噬细胞(-39 mV)的负值小,尽管它们持续的静息膜电位大致相等(-13 mV)。这表明巨噬细胞的刺入前膜电位比L细胞的更负。向P388D1巨噬细胞中离子电泳注射Ca2+显示存在一种Ca2+依赖性超极化电导,推测其与L细胞和巨噬细胞的振荡性超极化有关。通过X射线照射使细胞体积增大以降低膜输入电阻,仍发现这些细胞易受微电极诱导的漏电影响。在由第一个电极诱发的超极化期间,第二个电极插入时的刺入瞬变,由于与超极化相关的高膜电导,通常呈阶梯形而非峰形。由于在振荡细胞和非振荡细胞中,第一次刺入时总是能看到峰形刺入瞬变,所以振荡性超极化不能被视为在未受干扰的细胞中自发发生,而是由微电极刺入诱导的。由于超极化反应可通过离子电泳注射Ca2+诱发,且在无Ca2+的培养基中不存在振荡性以及单个超极化反应,因此得出结论,细胞内激活超极化反应所需的Ca2+是通过测量电极引入的漏电途径进入细胞的。