| Literature DB >> 12632188 |
F Liang1, A Niedzielski, B A Schulte, S S Spicer, D J Hazen-Martin, Z Shen.
Abstract
Evidence is accruing that spiral ligament fibrocytes (SLFs) play an important role in cochlear K(+) homeostasis, but little direct physiological data is available to support this concept. Here we report the presence and characterization of a voltage- and Ca(2+)-dependent big-conductance K (BK) channel in type I SLFs cultured from the gerbil cochlea. A single-channel conductance of 298+/-5.6 pS (n=28) was measured under symmetrical K(+). Membrane potentials for half-maximal open probability (P(o)) were -67, -45 and 85 mV with cytosolic free-Ca(2+) levels of 0.7 mM, 10 microM and 1 microM, respectively (n=8-14). The Hill coefficient for Ca(2+) affinity was 1.9 at a membrane potential of 60 mV (n=6). The BK channel showed very low activity (P(o)=0.0019, n=5) under normal physiological conditions, suggesting a low resting intracellular free [Ca(2+)]. Pharmacological results fit well with the profile of classic BK channels. The estimated half-maximal inhibitory concentration and Hill coefficient for tetraethylammonium were 0.086+/-0.021 mM and 0.99, respectively (n=4-9). In whole cell recordings, the voltage-activated outward K current was inhibited 85.7+/-4.5% (n=6) by 0.1 microM iberiotoxin. A steady-state kinetic model with two open and two closed stages best described the BK gating process (tau(o1) 0.23+/-0.08 ms, tau(o2) 1.40+/-0.32 ms; tau(c1) 0.26+/-0.09 ms, tau(c2) 3.10+/-1.2 ms; n=11). RT-PCR analyses revealed a splice variant of the BK channel alpha subunit in cultured type I SLFs and freshly isolated spiral ligament tissues. The BK channel is likely to play a major role in regulating the membrane potential of type I SLFs, which may in turn influence K(+) recycling dynamics in the mammalian cochlea.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12632188 DOI: 10.1007/s00424-002-0976-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pflugers Arch ISSN: 0031-6768 Impact factor: 3.657