Literature DB >> 4092073

Calcium activates and inactivates a photoreceptor soma potassium current.

D L Alkon, M Sakakibara.   

Abstract

Light-induced currents were measured with a two-microelectrode voltage clamp of type B photoreceptor somata, which had been isolated by axotomy from all synaptic interactions as well as from all membranes capable of generating impulse activity. In artificial seawater (ASW), light elicited a transient early inward current, INa+, which depended on Na+o and had a linear current-voltage relation and an extrapolated reversal potential of 30-40 mV (absolute). In 0-Na+ ASW, light elicited a transient short-latency outward current that dependent on K+o, increased exponentially with more positive voltages (greater than or equal to -40 mV), and reversed at -70 to -75 mV. This outward current was not blocked by Ca++ channel blockers (e.g., Cd++, Co++) or substitution of Ba++o, for Ca++o, but was reduced by iontophoretic injection of EGTA. In both ASW and 0-Na+ ASW, light also elicited a delayed, apparently inward current, which was associated with a decreased conductance, depended on K+o, increased exponentially with more positive voltages (greater than or equal to -40 mV), reversed at the equilibrium potential for K+ flux in elevated K+o was eliminated by substitution of Ba++o for Ca++o, and was greatly reduced by Cd++o or Co++o. Thus, light elicited an early Ca++-dependent K+ current, IC, and a prolonged decrease of IC. Iontophoretic injection of Ca++ through a third microelectrode caused prolonged reduction of both IC and the light-induced decrease of IC, but did not alter ICa++ or the current-voltage relation of IC. Ruthenium red (1 microM) in the external medium caused a prolongation of the light-induced decrease of IC. Iontophoretic injection of EGTA often eliminated the light-induced IC decrease while decreasing peak IC (during depolarizing steps to -5 or 0 mV) by less than one-half. EGTA injection, on the average, did not affect steady state IC but reduced the light-induced decrease of steady state IC to approximately one-third of its original magnitude. The prolonged IC decrease, elicited by dim light in the absence of light-induced IC or INa+, was more completely eliminated by EGTA injection. It was concluded that light, in addition to inducing a transient inward Na+ current, causes both a transient increase and a prolonged decrease of IC via elevation of Ca++i.

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Year:  1985        PMID: 4092073      PMCID: PMC1329431          DOI: 10.1016/S0006-3495(85)83861-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biophys J        ISSN: 0006-3495            Impact factor:   4.033


  47 in total

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  14 in total

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7.  Reconstruction of ionic currents in a molluscan photoreceptor.

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9.  Different ionic conductances are modulated during the late receptor potential and the prolonged depolarizing afterpotential in Hermissenda type A photoreceptors.

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10.  Inositol trisphosphate regulation of photoreceptor membrane currents.

Authors:  M Sakakibara; D L Alkon; J T Neary; E Heldman; R Gould
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