Tetraethylammonium potentiates the activity of muscarinic potassium channels in guinea-pig atrial myocytes

The modulation of native muscarinic potassium channels (K ACh ) by tetraethylammonium (TEA) was studied at 35 o C in cell-free patches from acutely dissociated guinea-pig atrial myocytes. The channels were identified unambiguously by their conductance, inward rectification, rapid gating kinetics and...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of physiology 2000-12, Vol.529 (3), p.699-705
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Desuo, Armstrong, David L.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The modulation of native muscarinic potassium channels (K ACh ) by tetraethylammonium (TEA) was studied at 35 o C in cell-free patches from acutely dissociated guinea-pig atrial myocytes. The channels were identified unambiguously by their conductance, inward rectification, rapid gating kinetics and pharmacological responses to muscarinic agonists and GTPγS. Addition of 5 m m TEA to the cytoplasmic side of the patches almost doubled the open probability of K ACh channels that had been activated maximally by GTPγS. In contrast even 30 m m TEA did not significantly potentiate the response to carbachol in whole-cell recordings. Unlike GTPγS, TEA alone did not activate K ACh channels de novo , but in patches that showed spontaneous K ACh activity, 5 m m TEA increased channel open probability fourfold in the absence of added sodium, ATP or guanine nucleotides. Furthermore, the effect of TEA was not blocked by 10 μ m atropine or by 1 m m GDPβS, and subsequent addition of 0.1 m m GTPγS did not stimulate channel activity further in the presence of TEA. Phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP 2 ) also stimulates K ACh channels under these conditions, but the kinetics of gating differ from channels stimulated by either TEA or GTP, which are very similar to one another. The effects of TEA were not mimicked by tetramethyl- or tetrapentylammonium or by sodium or spermine, and TEA did not potentiate the activity of other inwardly rectifying potassium (K ATP ) channels in patches from cardiac myocytes. We consider the possibility that TEA is mimicking the effect of an unidentified cellular factor, not sodium or PIP 2 , which normally occupies the TEA site on K ACh channel proteins but which diffuses away when the patch is excised.
ISSN:0022-3751
1469-7793
DOI:10.1111/j.1469-7793.2000.00699.x