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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: K+ channel ; Chara ; Patch clamp ; Ion permeation ; Surface potential ; Diffusion-limited ion flow
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract The kinetics of single K+ channels were derived for patch-clamp recordings of membrane patches excised from cytoplasmic drops from the plant, Chara australis R. Br. Specifically, the “tilt effect” model of MacKinnon, Latorre and Miller (1989. Biochemistry 28:8092–8099) has been used to measure the electrostatic potential (surface PD) and fixed charge at the entrances of the channel. The surface PD is derived from the difference between the trans-pore potential difference (PD) and that between the two bulk phases. The trans-pore PD is probed using three voltage-dependent properties of the channel. These are (1) the association and dissociation rates of Ca2+ binding to the channel, from both the cytoplasmic and vacuolar solutions. These were determined from the mean blocked and unblocked durations of the channel in the presence of either 20 mmol liter−1 vacuolar or 1 mmol liter−1 cytoplasmic Ca2+; (2) the closing rate of the channel's intrinsic gating process. This was determined from the mean channel open time in the absence of vacuolar Ca2+ at membrane PDs more negative than −100 mV; and (3) the effect of Mg2+ on channel conductance when added to solutions initially containing 3 mmol liter−1 KCl. The voltage dependence of properties 1 and 2 shifts along the voltage axis according to the ionic strength of the bathing media, consistent with the presence of negative charge in the channel vestibules. Furthermore, the magnitude of this shift depends on the current in a manner consistent with diffusion-limited ion flow in the channel (i.e., the rate of ion diffusion in the external electrolyte limits the channel conductance). Mg2+ on either side of the membrane alters channel conductance in a voltage-dependent way. A novel feature of the Mg2+ effect is that it reverses, from a block to an enhancement, when the membrane PD is more negative than −70 mV. This reversal only appears in solutions of low ionic strength. The attenuating effect is due to voltage-dependent binding of Mg2+ within the pore, which presumably plugs the channel. The enhancing effect is due to screening by Mg2+ of surface potentials arising from diffusion-limited flow of K+. All experimental approaches give a consistent picture of K + permeation in which the surface charge and convergence permeability of the cytoplasmic vestibule are the major factors in determining channel conductance. The cytoplasmic vestibule has a charge density of −0.035 C/m 2 which is similar to that found for maxi K channels in rat muscle. The properties of the vacuolar vestibule, which is effectively neutral, differ from the negatively charged external vestibules in rat maxi K channels indicating a differing protein structure in this part of the channel. Finally, we note that our method of testing for diffusion-limited ion flow, by measuring the dependence of the surface PD on the current passing through the channel, is more reliable than common tests, which make use of nonelectrolytes such as sucrose. It appears that these molecules alter channel conductance by interfering with the intrinsic permeation mechanism of the channel rather than by altering bulk viscosity.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    The journal of membrane biology 108 (1989), S. 153-164 
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: K+ channel ; permeation kinetics ; patch clamp ; Chara australis ; cytoplasmic drop ; diffusion limited
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary We report a study of a potassium-selective channel in the membrane delineating cytoplasmic drops fromChara australis. The relatively large conductance (170 pS in 150 mol/m3 (mm) KCl), high ion selectivity (P Cl/P K=0.015±0.01) and voltagedependent kinetics of this channel indicate that it is a type of maxi-K channel commonly found in animal cells but not previously detected in any plant cell. The current-voltage (I/V) characteristic of these channels was examined in drop-attached and in excised outside-out patches using the patch-clamp technique, over the unusually large voltage range of −250 to 200 mV. TheI/V characteristic is nonlinear and shows saturation at extreme voltages; the current also saturates at high [K+]. In solutions with symmetrical KCl concentrations the saturation behavior of the current is asymmetrical. The permeability of the channel depends on whether it is observed in excised or in drop-attached membrane patches. Here we investigate the main factors affecting the permeation of K+ ions through this maxi-K channel. We present the first direct evidence for the importance of diffusion external to the pore in limiting ion flow through maxi-K channels. The data are consistent with an ion translocation mechanism whose current is limited (i) at high voltages by ion diffusion external to the pore and (ii) at high [K+] by the maximum transport rate of the channel. We fit the data to a diffusion-limited pore model in which the pore exhibits saturation described by Michaelis-Menten kinetics with aK m=50±25 mol/m3 andG max=300±20 pS.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    The journal of membrane biology 128 (1992), S. 103-113 
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: K+ channel ; Ca2+ channel ; selectivity ; permeation ; plant ; Vicia faba
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary The whole-cell patch-clamp method has been used to measure Ca2+ influx through otherwise K+-selective channels in the plasma membrane surrounding protoplasts from guard cells of Vicia faba. These channels are activated by membrane hyperpolarization. The resulting K+ influx contributes to the increase in guard cell turgor which causes stomatal opening during the regulation of leaf-air gas exchange. We find that after opening the K+ channels by hyperpolarization, depolarization of the membrane results in tail current at voltages where there is no electrochemical force to drive K+ inward through the channels. Tail current remains when the reversal potential for permeant ions other than Ca2+ is more negative than or equal to the K+ equilibrium potential (−47 mV), indicating that the current is due to Ca2+ influx through the K+ channels prior to their closure. Decreasing internal [Ca2+] (Ca i ) from 200 to 2 nm or increasing the external [Ca2+] (Ca o ) from 1 to 10 mm increases the amplitude of tail current and shifts the observed reversal potential to more positive values. Such increases in the electrochemical force driving Ca2+ influx also decrease the amplitude of time-activated current, indicating that Ca2+ permeation is slower than K+ permeation, and so causes a partial block. Increasing Ca o also (i) causes a positive shift in the voltage dependence of current, presumably by decreasing the membrane surface potential, and (ii) results in a U-shaped current-voltage relationship with peak inward current ca. −160 mV, indicating that the Ca2− block is voltage dependent and suggesting that the cation binding site is within the electric field of the membrane. K+ channels in Zea mays guard cells also appear to have a Ca i -, and Ca o -dependent ability to mediate Ca2+ influx. We suggest that the inwardly rectiying K+ channels are part of a regulatory mechanism for Ca i . Changes in Ca o and (associated) changes in Ca i regulate a variety of intracellular processes and ion fluxes, including the K+ and anion fluxes associated with stomatal aperture change.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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