| Literature DB >> 28553230 |
Philippe Behe1, Juliet R Foote1, Adam P Levine1, Craig D Platt2, Janet Chou2, Fernando Benavides3, Raif S Geha2, Anthony W Segal1.
Abstract
The dialysis of human and mouse neutrophils in patch clamp experiments in the conventional whole-cell mode induces the emergence of a chloride (Cl-) current that appeared to be primarily regulated by cytoplasmic ionic strength. The characteristics of this current resembled that of the classical, and ubiquitous volume-sensitive outwardly rectifying Cl- current: strong outward rectification, selectivity sequence of the Eisenman1 type, insensitivity to external pH and strong inhibition by tamoxifen, DCPIB and WW781. We show that this current is essentially supported by the leucine rich repeat containing 8 A (LRRC8A); the naturally occurring LRRC8A truncation mutant in ebo/ebo mice drastically reduced Cl- conductance in neutrophils. Remarkably, the residual component presents a distinct pharmacology, but appears equally potentiated by reduced ionic strength. We have investigated the role of the LRRC8A-supported current in the ionic homeostasis of the phagosomal compartment. The vacuolar pH, measured using SNARF-1 labeled Candida albicans, normally rises because of NADPH oxidase activity, and this elevation is blocked by certain Cl- channel inhibitors. However, the pH rise remains intact in neutrophils from the ebo/ebo mice which also demonstrate preserved phagocytic and respiratory burst capacities and normal-sized vacuoles. Thus, the LRRC8A-dependent conductance of neutrophils largely accounts for their "swell activated" Cl- current, but is not required for homeostasis of the phagosomal killing compartment.Entities:
Keywords: LRRC8A; NADPH oxidase; Tamoxifen; VSOR Cl- current; chloride; ion channel; neutrophil; vacuolar homeostasis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28553230 PMCID: PMC5427109 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Intracellular and extracellular solutions for patch-clamp recordings
| SetA: Unselective solutions, hyperosmotic internal . | Set B: Unselective solutions, standard internal ( . | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| INTERNAL | EXTERNAL | INTERNAL | EXTERNAL |
| 90 mM KCl | 135 mM NaCl | 27 mM K Aspartate | 140 mM NaCl |
| 36 mM K Gluconate | 4.7 mM NaOH | 100 mM K Gluconate | 5 mM KCl |
| 13 mM KOH | 5 mM KCl | 13 mM KOH | 1 mM MgCl 2 |
| 5 mM NaCl | 0.5 mM MgCl2 | 5 mM NaCl | 1.5 mM MgCl2 |
| 0.9 mM CaCl2 | 1.8 mM CaCl2 | 0.2 mM CaCl2 | 10 mM Hepes |
| 2 mM EGTA | 10 mM Hepes | 1 mM EGTA | 5 mM Glucose |
| 10 mM Hepes | 5 mM Glucose | 20 mM Hepes | |
| 3 mM Mg ATP | 2 mM Mg ATP | ||
| 5 mM NADPH | |||
| pH 7.35 | pH 7.35 | pH 7.35 | pH 7.35 |
| Osm 350 mOsm | Osm 300 mOsm | Osm 290 mOsm | Osm 300 mOsm |
| Ionic strength 144 mM | Ionic strength 149 mM | Ionic strength 144 mM | Ionic strength 155 mM |
. | . | ||
| Low strength | Standard strength | ||
| 44 mM CsCl | 2 mM NaCl | 155 mM NMDG | 140 mM NMDG |
| 30 mM CsOH | 132 mM CsCl | 32 mM HCl | 133 mM HCl |
| 2 mM NaATP | 6 mM CsOH | 105 mM Gluconic acid | 2 mM CaCl2 |
| 2 mM MgCl2 | 1 mM MgCl2 | 4 mM EGTA | 1 mM MgCl2 |
| 1 mM CaCl2 | 2 mM CaCl2 | 1 mM CaCl2 | 10 mM Hepes |
| 10 mM Hepes | 10 mM Hepes | 10 mM Hepes | 5 mM Glucose |
| 4 mM EGTA | 5 mM Glucose | 2 mM MgCl2 | |
| 157 mM Sucrose | 2 mM MgATP | ||
| pH 7.35 | pH 7.35 | pH 7.35 | pH 7.35 |
| Osm 280 mOsm | Osm 300 mOsm | Osm 290 mOsm | Osm 300 mOsm |
| Ionic strength 84 mM | Ionic strength 143 mM | Ionic strength 154 mM | Ionic strength 148 mM |
| Low strength | |||
| 50 mM NMDG | 140 mM NMDG | ||
| 32 mM HCl | 133 mM HCl | ||
| 4 mM EGTA | 2 mM CaCl2 | ||
| 1 mM CaCl2 | 1 mM MgCl2 | ||
| 2 mM MgCl2 | 10 mM Hepes | ||
| 10 mM Hepes | 5 mM Glucose | ||
| 2 mM MgATP | |||
| 180 mM Sucrose | |||
| pH 7.35 | pH 7.35 | ||
| Osm 280 mOsm | Osm 300 mOsm | ||
| Ionic strength 53 mM | Ionic strength 148 mM | ||