Lüthi A, Gähwiler B H, Gerber U
Brain Research Institute, University of Zürich, Switzerland.
J Neurosci. 1996 Jan 15;16(2):586-94. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.16-02-00586.1996.
The time- and voltage-dependent properties of a slowly inactivating K+ current were investigated by using the single-electrode current- and voltage-clamp recording technique in CA3 hippocampal cells of organotypic slice cultures. After a period of prolonged hyperpolarization, the onset of action-potential discharge in response to depolarizing current injection was delayed by several seconds. The conductances underlying this delay were identified in voltage-clamp recordings. A biphasically decaying outward current was evoked when the membrane potential was stepped back to -60 mV after a 30 sec period of hyperpolarization. The fast component was identified as the previously described D-current and was blocked by 100 microM 4-aminopyridine (4-AP). The slow component, which we refer to as IK(slow), appeared to be mediated by K+ ions, because its reversal potential shifted in a Nernstian manner with changes in extracellular K+ concentration. It decayed with a time constant of 7.5 sec and required a hyperpolarizing prepulse below -95 mV for 5.5 sec for 50% recovery from inactivation. IK(slow) was found to be voltage-dependent, with 50% activation occurring at -65 mV and 50% steady-state inactivation occurring at -84 mV. It displayed minimal or no sensitivity to the K(+)-channel blockers 4-AP (0.1-5 mM), Cs+ (1 mM), tetraethylammonium (10-50 mM), Ba2+ (1 mM), dendrotoxin-alpha (5-10 microM), charybdotoxin (0.5-2.5 microM), or glibenclamide (5-10 microM) and was not affected by preventing increases in intracellular Ca2+ concentration with Ca2+ chelators. IK(slow) was reduced by activation of metabotropic glutamatergic and cholinergic receptors. In summary, the biophysical characteristics of IK(slow) suggest a role in determining discharge onset after a period of membrane hyperpolarization, and its modulation by G-protein-coupled receptors reveals an additional function for these receptors in the control of cellular excitability.
采用单电极电流钳和电压钳记录技术,在器官型脑片培养的海马CA3细胞中研究了一种缓慢失活钾电流的时间和电压依赖性特性。在一段长时间的超极化之后,对去极化电流注入的动作电位发放起始延迟了几秒。在电压钳记录中确定了造成这种延迟的电导。在30秒超极化期后,当膜电位阶跃回到-60 mV时,诱发了一个双相衰减外向电流。快速成分被鉴定为先前描述的D电流,并被100 μM 4-氨基吡啶(4-AP)阻断。缓慢成分,我们称之为IK(slow),似乎由钾离子介导,因为其反转电位随细胞外钾离子浓度的变化呈能斯特方式移动。它以7.5秒的时间常数衰减,从失活状态恢复50%需要在-95 mV以下进行5.5秒的超极化预脉冲。发现IK(slow)具有电压依赖性,50%激活发生在-65 mV,50%稳态失活发生在-84 mV。它对钾通道阻滞剂4-AP(0.1 - 5 mM)、铯离子(1 mM)、四乙铵(10 - 50 mM)、钡离子(1 mM)、α-树突毒素(5 - 10 μM)、蝎毒素(0.5 - 2.5 μM)或格列本脲(5 - 10 μM)表现出最小或无敏感性,并且不受用钙离子螯合剂防止细胞内钙离子浓度升高的影响。代谢型谷氨酸能和胆碱能受体的激活可降低IK(slow)。总之,IK(slow)的生物物理特性表明其在决定膜超极化一段时间后的发放起始中起作用,并且其被G蛋白偶联受体调节揭示了这些受体在控制细胞兴奋性方面的另一个功能。