CALCIUM-ACTIVATED POTASSIUM CHANNELS IN SKELETAL MUSCLE
Project Number5R29GM039731-03
Contact PI/Project LeaderBLATZ, ANDREW L
Awardee OrganizationUT SOUTHWESTERN MEDICAL CENTER
Description
Abstract Text
The ultimate goal of the research described in this proposal is to
fully characterize the properties of small conductance, apamin-
blocked Ca-activated K channels (SK channels) that are probably
responsible for the sustained afterhyperpolarization (AHP) in
tissue cultured rat skeletal muscle. The kinetics, permeability
properties and block of SK channels will be examined and the roles
of SK channels and other Ca-activated K channels in muscle
excitation will be determined. The modulation of SK channels by
innervation will be studied, particularly addressing whether or not
functional synapse formation is required for channel regulation.
Currents through single SK channels will be recorded using the
patch voltage clamp technique. Distributions of open and shut
channel events will be fitted with sums of exponentials. The
number of exponential components required to fit these
distributions suggests a minimum number of the kinetic states that
underlie SK channel activity. The apparent number of Ca ions that
bind during activity will be determined by measuring the slopes of
Hill plots of the percent of time the channel is open at several
different intracellular Ca concentrations. Interval distributions
predicted by several kinetic models will be compared with the
experimentally observed distributions in order to find the models
that are the most consistent with the experimental data.
Permeability properties will be examined by several methods which
will address the selectivity of SK channels as well as examine
possible ion-channel interactions such as multiple ion occupancy.
The block by apamin, a toxin that has a very high affinity for SK
channels, will be characterized at the single channel level to
investigate the mechanism of block. The roles of SK channels and
large conductance Ca-activated channels (BK channels) will be
examined by intracellular potential recording while, at the same
time, monitoring single channel currents through a cell-attached
membrane patch. With this technique it will be possible to observe
which channels are active during the various phases of the action
potential, particularly during the AHP. Neural modulation of SK
channels will be studied by monitoring the muscle cells for SK
channels and synapse formation in the presence of growing spinal
neurons and/or media conditioned by neurons. These studies will
enhance our knowledge about how ion channels function, how the
channel properties affect the functioning of excitable cells, and
give insights about how neurons can regulate the expression of ion
channels.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R29GM039731-03
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