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Modification of Electrophysiological and Pharmacological Properties of K Channels in Neuroblastoma Cells Induced by the Oxidant Chloramine-T

Overview
Journal Pflugers Arch
Specialty Physiology
Date 1990 Jun 1
PMID 2169042
Citations 8
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Abstract

The effects of chloramine-T (CL-T) on voltage-dependent potassium channels in neuroblastoma cells were analysed using the whole-cell current recording technique. CL-T irreversibly decreased the peak whole-cell K current, considerably slowed its inactivation and shifted its activation-voltage curve towards positive voltages by 6 mV. Under control conditions, the inactivation of the whole-cell K current could be described by the sum of two exponentials, F and S, whose time constants at +50 mV were tau F = 1.00 +/- 0.15 S and tau S = 5.72 +/- 0.47 S respectively. After CL-T, it could be described by the sum of two (S1 and S2) or three (F, S1 and S2) exponentials whose time constants at +50 mV were: tau F = 0.81 +/- 0.22 S, tau S1 = 6.46 +/- 0.60 S and tau S2 = 48.56 +/- 3.64 S. Under control conditions, F and S inactivating components of the whole-cell K current were blocked by 4-aminopyridine, with a Hill coefficient of 1 and apparent dissociation constants of 0.04 and 0.7 mM respectively. After CL-T, both S1 and S2 components were equally blocked by 4-aminopyridine with a Hill coefficient of 0.25, being reduced to 64% of their control values by 10 mM. CL-T is known to slow the inactivation of sodium channels and to oxidize sulphydryl amino acids and unsaturated lipids. It is concluded that the inactivation gates of voltage-dependent sodium and potassium channels are either constituted of the same amino acid residues or are controlled by unsaturated lipid surrounding or bound to the channel proteins.

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