| Literature DB >> 2428898 |
A Marty, M G Evans, Y P Tan, A Trautmann.
Abstract
A large variety of responses has been uncovered by recent investigations of conductance changes elicited by muscarinic agonists. In exocrine glands, the permeability to K+, Cl- and Na+ ions is increased, and internal Ca2+ serves as a second messenger. Patch-clamp analysis of the secreting cells has revealed three types of Ca2+-dependent channels, which are respectively selective for K+, for Cl-, and for monovalent cations. The channels differ in their sensitivity to the internal Ca2+ concentration, Cai. K+-selective channels are partially activated at rest, with Cai approx. 10 nmol l-1; Cl(-)-selective channels are activated between 100 nmol l-1 and 1 mumol l-1; activation of cationic channels requires micromolar Cai levels. Cell-attached recordings, performed either on isolated cells or on cell clusters, show an activation of all three channel types upon application of acetylcholine. In whole-cell recordings, mostly K+- and Cl(-)-selective channels are activated. The cell currents display slow oscillations linked to variations of Cai. Whole-cell currents rise after a delay of approx. 1 s, and decay with a time constant of approx. 0.7 s upon removal of acetylcholine. They do not depend on extracellular Ca2+. The recent demonstration that Ca2+-dependent currents can also be obtained when dialysing the cells with inositoltrisphosphate or with GTP gamma S, a non-hydrolysable analogue of guanosine triphosphate, opens promising leads to an analysis of intracellular events regulated by acetylcholine.Entities:
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Year: 1986 PMID: 2428898 DOI: 10.1242/jeb.124.1.15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Biol ISSN: 0022-0949 Impact factor: 3.312