## Abstract Inwardly rectifying potassium (K~ir~) channels are a prominent feature of mature, postmitotic astrocytes. These channels are believed to set the resting membrane potential near the potassium equilibrium potential (E~K~) and are implicated in potassium buffering. A number of previous stu
Role of Kir4.1 channels in growth control of glia
β Scribed by Haruki Higashimori; Harald Sontheimer
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1018 KB
- Volume
- 55
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0894-1491
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The inwardly rectifying potassium channel Kir4.1 is widely expressed by astrocytes throughout the brain. Kir4.1 channels are absent in immature, proliferating glial cells. The progressive expression of Kir4.1 correlates with astrocyte differentiation and is characterized by the establishment of a negative membrane potential (> β70 mV) and an exit from the cell cycle. Despite some correlative evidence, a mechanistic interdependence between Kir4.1 expression, membrane hyperpolarization, and control of cell proliferation has not been demonstrated. To address this question, we used astrocyteβderived tumors (glioma) that lack functional Kir4.1 channels, and generated two glioma cell lines that stably express either AcGFPβtagged Kir4.1 channels or AcGFP vectors only. Kir4.1 expression confers the same K^+^ conductance to glioma membranes and a similar responsiveness to changes in [K^+^]~o~ that characterizes differentiated astrocytes. Kir4.1 expression was sufficient to move the resting potential of gliomas from β50 to β80 mV. Importantly, Kir4.1 expression impaired cell growth by shifting a significant number of cells from the G2/M phase into the quiescent G0/G1 stage of the cell cycle. Furthermore, these effects could be nullified entirely if Kir4.1 channels were either pharmacologically inhibited by 100 ΞΌM BaCl~2~ or if cells were chronically depolarized by 20 mM KCl to the membrane voltage of growth competent glioma cells. These studies therefore demonstrate directly that Kir4.1 causes a membrane hyperpolarization that is sufficient to account for the growth attenuation, which in turn induces cell maturation characterized by a shift of the cells from G2/M into G0/G1. Β© 2007 WileyβLiss, Inc.
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## Abstract The weakly inwardly rectifying K^+^ channel Kir4.1 is found in many glial cells including astrocytes. However, questions remain regarding the relative contribution of Kir4.1 to the resting K^+^ conductance of mature astrocytes in situ. We employed a bacterial artificial chromosome trans
## Abstract Spinal cord astrocytes (SCA) have a high permeability to K^+^ and hence have hyperpolarized resting membrane potentials. The underlying K^+^ channels are believed to participate in the uptake of neuronally released K^+^. These K^+^ channels have been studied extensively with regard to t
## Abstract Several inward rectifier K^+^ (Kir) channels are pHβsensitive, making them potential candidates for CO~2~ chemoreception in cells. However, there is no evidence showing that Kir channels change their activity at near physiological level of P, as most previous studies were done using hig