Literature DB >> 9101402

Deuterium isotope effects on permeation and gating of proton channels in rat alveolar epithelium.

T E DeCoursey1, V V Cherny.   

Abstract

The voltage-activated H+ selective conductance of rat alveolar epithelial cells was studied using whole-cell and excised-patch voltage-clamp techniques. The effects of substituting deuterium oxide, D2O, for water, H2O, on both the conductance and the pH dependence of gating were explored. D+ was able to permeate proton channels, but with a conductance only about 50% that of H+. The conductance in D2O was reduced more than could be accounted for by bulk solvent isotope effects (i.e., the lower mobility of D+ than H+), suggesting that D+ interacts specifically with the channel during permeation. Evidently the H+ or D+ current is not diffusion limited, and the H+ channel does not behave like a water-filled pore. This result indirectly strengthens the hypothesis that H+ (or D+) and not OH- is the ionic species carrying current. The voltage dependence of H- channel gating characteristically is sensitive to pH0 and pHi and was regulated by pD0 and pDi in an analogous manner. shifting 40 mV/U change in the pD gradient. The time constant of H+ current activation was about three times slower (T(act) was larger) in D2O than in H2O. The size of the isotope effect is consistent with deuterium isotope effects for proton abstraction reactions, suggesting that H+ channel activation requires deprotonation of the channel. In contrast, deactivation (T(tail)) was slowed only by a factor < or = 1.5 in D2O. The results are interpreted within the context of a model for the regulation of H+ channel gating by mutually exclusive protonation at internal and external sites (Cherny, V.V., V.S. Markin, and T.E. DeCoursey. 1995. J. Gen. Physiol. 105:861-896). Most of the kinetic effects of D2O can be explained if the pKa of the external regulatory site is approximately 0.5 pH U higher in D2O.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9101402      PMCID: PMC2219434          DOI: 10.1085/jgp.109.4.415

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gen Physiol        ISSN: 0022-1295            Impact factor:   4.086


  51 in total

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10.  The voltage-activated hydrogen ion conductance in rat alveolar epithelial cells is determined by the pH gradient.

Authors:  V V Cherny; V S Markin; T E DeCoursey
Journal:  J Gen Physiol       Date:  1995-06       Impact factor: 4.086

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  53 in total

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