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Bimodal Control of a Ca(2+)-Activated Cl(−) Channel by Different Ca(2+) Signals

Ca(2+)-activated Cl(−) channels play important roles in a variety of physiological processes, including epithelial secretion, maintenance of smooth muscle tone, and repolarization of the cardiac action potential. It remains unclear, however, exactly how these channels are controlled by Ca(2+) and vo...

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Autores principales: Kuruma, Akinori, Hartzell, H. Criss
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1887779/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10613919
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author Kuruma, Akinori
Hartzell, H. Criss
author_facet Kuruma, Akinori
Hartzell, H. Criss
author_sort Kuruma, Akinori
collection PubMed
description Ca(2+)-activated Cl(−) channels play important roles in a variety of physiological processes, including epithelial secretion, maintenance of smooth muscle tone, and repolarization of the cardiac action potential. It remains unclear, however, exactly how these channels are controlled by Ca(2+) and voltage. Excised inside-out patches containing many Ca(2+)-activated Cl(−) channels from Xenopus oocytes were used to study channel regulation. The currents were mediated by a single type of Cl(−) channel that exhibited an anionic selectivity of I(−) > Br(−) > Cl(−) (3.6:1.9:1.0), irrespective of the direction of the current flow or [Ca(2+)]. However, depending on the amplitude of the Ca(2+) signal, this channel exhibited qualitatively different behaviors. At [Ca(2+)] < 1 μM, the currents activated slowly upon depolarization and deactivated upon hyperpolarization and the steady state current–voltage relationship was strongly outwardly rectifying. At higher [Ca(2+)], the currents did not rectify and were time independent. This difference in behavior at different [Ca(2+)] was explained by an apparent voltage-dependent Ca(2+) sensitivity of the channel. At +120 mV, the EC(50) for channel activation by Ca(2+) was approximately fourfold less than at −120 mV (0.9 vs. 4 μM). Thus, at [Ca(2+)] < 1 μM, inward current was smaller than outward current and the currents were time dependent as a consequence of voltage-dependent changes in Ca(2+) binding. The voltage-dependent Ca(2+) sensitivity was explained by a kinetic gating scheme in which channel activation was Ca(2+) dependent and channel closing was voltage sensitive. This scheme was supported by the observation that deactivation time constants of currents produced by rapid Ca(2+) concentration jumps were voltage sensitive, but that the activation time constants were Ca(2+) sensitive. The deactivation time constants increased linearly with the log of membrane potential. The qualitatively different behaviors of this channel in response to different Ca(2+) concentrations adds a new dimension to Ca(2+) signaling: the same channel can mediate either excitatory or inhibitory responses, depending on the amplitude of the cellular Ca(2+) signal.
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spelling pubmed-18877792008-04-21 Bimodal Control of a Ca(2+)-Activated Cl(−) Channel by Different Ca(2+) Signals Kuruma, Akinori Hartzell, H. Criss J Gen Physiol Original Article Ca(2+)-activated Cl(−) channels play important roles in a variety of physiological processes, including epithelial secretion, maintenance of smooth muscle tone, and repolarization of the cardiac action potential. It remains unclear, however, exactly how these channels are controlled by Ca(2+) and voltage. Excised inside-out patches containing many Ca(2+)-activated Cl(−) channels from Xenopus oocytes were used to study channel regulation. The currents were mediated by a single type of Cl(−) channel that exhibited an anionic selectivity of I(−) > Br(−) > Cl(−) (3.6:1.9:1.0), irrespective of the direction of the current flow or [Ca(2+)]. However, depending on the amplitude of the Ca(2+) signal, this channel exhibited qualitatively different behaviors. At [Ca(2+)] < 1 μM, the currents activated slowly upon depolarization and deactivated upon hyperpolarization and the steady state current–voltage relationship was strongly outwardly rectifying. At higher [Ca(2+)], the currents did not rectify and were time independent. This difference in behavior at different [Ca(2+)] was explained by an apparent voltage-dependent Ca(2+) sensitivity of the channel. At +120 mV, the EC(50) for channel activation by Ca(2+) was approximately fourfold less than at −120 mV (0.9 vs. 4 μM). Thus, at [Ca(2+)] < 1 μM, inward current was smaller than outward current and the currents were time dependent as a consequence of voltage-dependent changes in Ca(2+) binding. The voltage-dependent Ca(2+) sensitivity was explained by a kinetic gating scheme in which channel activation was Ca(2+) dependent and channel closing was voltage sensitive. This scheme was supported by the observation that deactivation time constants of currents produced by rapid Ca(2+) concentration jumps were voltage sensitive, but that the activation time constants were Ca(2+) sensitive. The deactivation time constants increased linearly with the log of membrane potential. The qualitatively different behaviors of this channel in response to different Ca(2+) concentrations adds a new dimension to Ca(2+) signaling: the same channel can mediate either excitatory or inhibitory responses, depending on the amplitude of the cellular Ca(2+) signal. The Rockefeller University Press 2000-01-01 /pmc/articles/PMC1887779/ /pubmed/10613919 Text en © 2000 The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Kuruma, Akinori
Hartzell, H. Criss
Bimodal Control of a Ca(2+)-Activated Cl(−) Channel by Different Ca(2+) Signals
title Bimodal Control of a Ca(2+)-Activated Cl(−) Channel by Different Ca(2+) Signals
title_full Bimodal Control of a Ca(2+)-Activated Cl(−) Channel by Different Ca(2+) Signals
title_fullStr Bimodal Control of a Ca(2+)-Activated Cl(−) Channel by Different Ca(2+) Signals
title_full_unstemmed Bimodal Control of a Ca(2+)-Activated Cl(−) Channel by Different Ca(2+) Signals
title_short Bimodal Control of a Ca(2+)-Activated Cl(−) Channel by Different Ca(2+) Signals
title_sort bimodal control of a ca(2+)-activated cl(−) channel by different ca(2+) signals
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1887779/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10613919
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