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Modulation of ATP-sensitive potassium channel activity by flash-photolysis of ‘caged-ATP’ in rat heart cells

✍ Scribed by C. G. Nichols; E. Niggli; W. J. Lederer


Publisher
Springer
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
355 KB
Volume
415
Category
Article
ISSN
0031-6768

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✦ Synopsis


We have used 'caged-ATP' to investigate the kinetic behavior of KATP channels in ventricular cells from rat heart. In whole cells, loaded with 'caged-ATP', an increase of intracellular [ATP] following a UV light flash produced a decrease of KATP channel current that was too slow (tau approximately 300 ms) to be explained by the expected time-course of ATP release (tau approximately 3 ms) and the time-course of channel blockade by ATP (tau approximately 20 ms). In isolated membrane patches, caged-ATP itself caused partial blockade of KATP) channels. Under these conditions, photorelease of ATP caused channel activity to decline further. The results suggest that caged-ATP can bind to the KATP) channel but, on binding, decreases the open probability to a lesser extent than does ATP. Additionally, the observations indicate that for photolytically-generated ATP to bind to the channel, caged-ATP must first unbind (slowly) from the channel. We conclude that 'caged-ATP' is not fully caged with respect to its allosteric action on the KATP channel.


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