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  • COMPUTER PROGRAMMING AND SOFTWARE  (1)
  • Ca-activated K+ channel  (1)
  • Charybdotoxin  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    The journal of membrane biology 95 (1987), S. 105-112 
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: Ca-activated K+ channel ; solubilization ; reconstitution ; thick ascending limb of Henle's loop ; calmodulin inhibitors ; trypsin ; pH
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary A barium-sensitive Ca-activated K+ channel in the luminal membrane of the tubule cells in thick ascending limb of Henle's loop is required for maintenance of the lumen positive transepithelial potential and may be important for regulation of NaCl reabsorption. In this paper we examine if the K+ channel can be solubilized and reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles with preservation of its native properties. The K+ channel in luminal plasma membrane vesicles can be quantitatively solubilized in CHAPS at a detergent/protein ratio of 3. For reconstitution, detergent is removed by passage over a column of Sephadex G 50 (coarse). K+-channel activity is assayed by measurement of86Rb+ uptake against a large opposing K+ gradient. The reconstituted K+ channel is activated by Ca2+ in the physiological range of concentration (K1/2∼2×10−7 m at pH 7.2) as found for the K+ channel in native plasma membrane vesicles and shows the same sensitivity to inhibitors (Ba2+, trifluoperazine, calmidazolium, quinidine) and to protons. Reconstitution of the K+ channel into phospholipid vesicles with full preservation of its native properties is an essential step towards isolation and purification of the K+-channel protein. Titration with Ca2+ shows that most of the active K+ channels in reconstituted vesicles have their cytoplasmic aspect facing outward in contrast to the orientation in plasma membrane vesicles, which requires also addition of Ca2+ ionophore in order to observe Ca2+ stimulation. The reconstituted K+ channel is highly sensitive to tryptic digestion. Brief digestion leads to activation of the K+ channel in absence of Ca2+, to the level of activity seen with saturating concentrations of Ca2+. This tryptic split is located in a cytoplasmic aspect of the K+ channel that appears to be involved in opening and closing the K+ channel in response to Ca2+ binding.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: Maxi K+ channel ; Calcium ; pH ; Charybdotoxin ; Rabbit distal colon
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract To determine if their properties are consistent with a role in regulation of transepithelial transport, Ca2+-activated K+ channels from the basolateral plasma membrane of the surface cells in the distal colon have been characterized by single channel analysis after fusion of vesicles with planar lipid bilayers. A Ca2+-activated K+ channel with a single channel conductance of 275 pS was predominant. The sensitivity to Ca2+ was strongly dependent on the membrane potential and on the pH. At a neutral pH, the K 0.5 for Ca2+ was raised from 20nm at a potential of 0 mV to 300nm at −40 mV. A decrease in pH at the cytoplasmic face of the K+ channel reduced the Ca2+ sensitivity dramatically. A loss of the high sensitivity to Ca2+ was also observed after incubation with MgCl2, possibly a result of dephosphorylation of the channels by endogenous phosphatases. Modification of the channel protein may thus explain the variation in Ca2+ sensitivity between studies on K+ channels from the same tissue. High affinity inhibition (K 0.5=10nm) by charybdotoxin of the Ca2+-activated K+ channel from the extracellular face could be lifted by an outward flux of K+ through the channel. However, at the ion gradients and potentials found in the intact epithelium, charybdotoxin should be a useful tool for examination of the role of maxi K+ channels. The high sensitivity for Ca2+ and the properties of the activator site are in agreement with an important regulatory role for the high conductance K+ channel in the epithelial cells.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: This final report for research that was supported by grant number NAG-1-995 documents our progress in addressing two difficulties in parallel programming. The first difficulty is developing software that will execute quickly on a parallel computer. The second difficulty is transporting software between dissimilar parallel computers. In general, we expect that more hardware-specific information will be included in software designs for parallel computers than in designs for sequential computers. This inclusion is an instance of portability being sacrificed for high performance. New parallel computers are being introduced frequently. Trying to keep one's software on the current high performance hardware, a software developer almost continually faces yet another expensive software transportation. The problem of the proposed research is to create a design methodology that helps designers to more precisely control both portability and hardware-specific programming details. The proposed research emphasizes programming for scientific applications. We completed our study of the parallelizability of a subsystem of the NASA Earth Radiation Budget Experiment (ERBE) data processing system. This work is summarized in section two. A more detailed description is provided in Appendix A ('Programming Practices to Support Eventual Parallelism'). Mr. Chrisman, a graduate student, wrote and successfully defended a Ph.D. dissertation proposal which describes our research associated with the issues of software portability and high performance. The list of research tasks are specified in the proposal. The proposal 'A Design Methodology for Portable Software on Parallel Computers' is summarized in section three and is provided in its entirety in Appendix B. We are currently studying a proposed subsystem of the NASA Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES) data processing system. This software is the proof-of-concept for the Ph.D. dissertation. We have implemented and measured the performance of a portion of this subsystem on the Intel iPSC/2 parallel computer. These results are provided in section four. Our future work is summarized in section five, our acknowledgements are stated in section six, and references for published papers associated with NAG-1-995 are provided in section seven.
    Keywords: COMPUTER PROGRAMMING AND SOFTWARE
    Type: NASA-CR-194181 , NAS 1.26:194181
    Format: application/pdf
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