Literature DB >> 2437264

Ionic mechanism of the outward current induced by intracellular injection of inositol trisphosphate into Aplysia neurons.

M Sawada, M Ichinose, T Maeno.   

Abstract

Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) has been proposed to be the intracellular second messenger in the mobilization of Ca2+ from intracellular stores in a variety of cell types. The ionic mechanism of the effect of intracellularly injected InsP3 on the membrane of identified neurons (R9-R12) of Aplysia kurodai was investigated with conventional voltage-clamp, pressure-injection, and ion-substitution techniques. Brief pressure injection of InsP3 into a neuron voltage-clamped at -40 mV reproducibly induced an outward current (10-60 sec in duration, 20-60 nA in amplitude) associated with a conductance increase. The current was increased by depolarization and decreased by hyperpolarization up to -80 mV, where it disappeared. Extracellular application of tetraethylammonium (TEA; 5 mM) blocked the InsP3-induced outward current, and the current was not affected by the presence of bath-applied 4-aminopyridine (4-AP; 5 mM). The InsP3-induced outward current recorded at a holding potential of -40 mV increased in amplitude in low-K+ solutions and decreased in amplitude in high-K+ solutions. Alteration of [Cl-]0, as well as perfusion with Ca2+ free plus 2 mM EGTA solution, did not affect the outward current. The InsP3-induced outward current was found to disappear when the neuron was injected with the Ca2+ chelator EGTA. The outward current evoked by repeated InsP3 injection at low doses exhibited summation and facilitation and, at high doses, was shown to desensitize. The calmodulin inhibitor N-(6-amino-hexyl)-5-chloro-1-naphthalene sulfonamide (W-7; 20-50 microM), inhibited both the InsP3-induced and the Ca2+-activated outward currents. An intracellular pressure injection of Ca2+ ions into the same identified neuron was shown to produce an outward current associated with a K+ conductance increase similar to the InsP3-induced current, and the current was blocked by bath-applied TEA (5mM). These results suggest that brief pressure injection of InsP3 into certain identified neurons of Aplysia induces a 4-AP-resistant, TEA-sensitive K+ current activated by increased intracellular free Ca2+ concentration, and this increase might be the result of the mobilization of Ca2+ from intracellular stores by InsP3.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 2437264      PMCID: PMC6568826     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  7 in total

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2.  Free calcium transients and oscillations in nerve cells.

Authors:  P G Kostyuk; P V Belan; A V Tepikin
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5.  Effects of inositol phosphates on the membrane activity of smooth muscle cells of the rabbit portal vein.

Authors:  Y Ohya; K Terada; K Yamaguchi; R Inoue; K Okabe; K Kitamura; M Hirata; H Kuriyama
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6.  On the transduction mechanism for muscarine-induced inhibition of M-current in cultured rat sympathetic neurones.

Authors:  D A Brown; N V Marrion; T G Smart
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Review 7.  Expansion of the calcium hypothesis of brain aging and Alzheimer's disease: minding the store.

Authors:  Olivier Thibault; John C Gant; Philip W Landfield
Journal:  Aging Cell       Date:  2007-04-26       Impact factor: 9.304

  7 in total

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