Bustamante J O
Department of Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore 21201-1559.
J Membr Biol. 1994 Feb;138(1):77-89. doi: 10.1007/BF00211071.
Prevalent nucleocytoplasmic transport theory views flow of monoatomic ions as completely unrestricted, resulting from the presence of large diameter pore complexes (NPCs) that perforate, but hold together, the two separate membranes of the nuclear envelope (NE). However, three lines of investigations indicate that, at least in some cell types, monoatomic ion flow is restricted. (i) Patch clamp reveals quantized, ion channel-like activity in several NE preparations; activity thought to result from nuclear ion channels (NICs) connected to NPCs. (ii) Ratiometric fluorescence microscopy demonstrates that ions, as well as small molecules relevant to signal transduction, do distribute as if there is a NE barrier. (iii) Electron microscopy shows that NPCs contain material that behaves like a plug. NICs' large conductance (up to 1,000 pS) makes them a major determinant of nuclear ion concentrations which, in turn, influence nuclear processes. Therefore, NICs are an important modulating force of gene and transcriptional activities--two major determinants of gene expression. As nuclear processes may take from seconds (e.g., signaling) to minutes (e.g., transcription), the time the channels dwell in the ion-conducting open state is relevant to understanding NICs' role in nuclear function. Consequently, dwell-times and lifetimes of open NIC states were studied in 61 patch-clamped adult mouse cardiac myocyte nuclei. Upon voltage stimulation, NICs opened to main states of large conductance (281 +/- 198 pS, range = 120-490 pS, n = 55) and wide-range mean dwell-times (approximately 100 msec, 1-10 sec, and min). Closed states (0 pS) also had widely distributed mean dwell-times (approximately 100 msec, 1-10 sec, and min). Putative open substates (37 +/- 11 pS, range = 25-50, pS, n = 6) of high bursting frequency (< 1 msec) were observed without intervening main states (approximately 5% of patches). Fast (approximately 0.1 msec) and slow (approximately 10 msec) state-transitions were also detected. These observations suggest a role of NICs in mediating cytoplasmic signal control of cardiomyocyte gene expression.
普遍的核质运输理论认为,单原子离子的流动是完全不受限制的,这是由于存在大直径孔复合物(NPCs),这些复合物贯穿并维系着核膜(NE)的两层独立膜。然而,三项研究表明,至少在某些细胞类型中,单原子离子的流动是受到限制的。(i)膜片钳技术揭示了几种核膜制剂中存在量化的、类似离子通道的活性;这种活性被认为是由与NPCs相连的核离子通道(NICs)产生的。(ii)比率荧光显微镜显示,离子以及与信号转导相关的小分子的分布,就好像存在一个核膜屏障一样。(iii)电子显微镜显示,NPCs含有表现得像塞子的物质。NICs的大电导(高达1000 pS)使其成为核离子浓度的主要决定因素,而核离子浓度又反过来影响核过程。因此,NICs是基因和转录活动的重要调节力量——基因表达的两个主要决定因素。由于核过程可能从几秒(如信号传导)到几分钟(如转录)不等,通道处于离子传导开放状态的时间与理解NICs在核功能中的作用相关。因此,在61个经膜片钳记录的成年小鼠心肌细胞核中研究了开放NIC状态的驻留时间和寿命。在电压刺激下,NICs开放至大电导的主要状态(281±198 pS,范围 = 120 - 490 pS,n = 55),且平均驻留时间范围较广(约100毫秒、1 - 10秒和分钟)。关闭状态(0 pS)的平均驻留时间也分布广泛(约100毫秒、1 - 10秒和分钟)。在没有中间主要状态的情况下(约5%的膜片),观察到了高爆发频率(< 1毫秒)的假定开放亚状态(37±11 pS,范围 = 25 - 50 pS,n = 6)。还检测到了快速(约0.1毫秒)和缓慢(约10毫秒)的状态转换。这些观察结果表明,NICs在介导心肌细胞基因表达的细胞质信号控制中发挥作用。