Slow components of potassium tail currents in rat skeletal muscle. 1983

K G Beam, and P L Donaldson

The kinetics of potassium tail currents have been studied in the omohyoid muscle of the rat using the three-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique. The currents were elicited by a two-pulse protocol in which a conditioning pulse to open channels was followed by a test step to varying levels. The tail currents reversed at a single well-defined potential (VK). At hyperpolarized test potentials (-100 mV and below), tail currents were inward and exhibited two clearly distinguishable phases of decay, a fast tail with a time constant of 2-3 ms and a slow tail with a time constant of approximately 150 ms. At depolarized potentials (-60 mV and above), tail currents were outward and did not show two such easily separable phases of decay, although a slow kinetic component was present. The slow kinetic phase of outward tail currents appeared to be functionally distinct from the slow inward tail since the channels responsible for the latter did not allow significant outward current. Substitution of Rb for extracellular K abolished current through the anomalous (inward-going) rectifier and at the same time eliminated the slow inward tail, which suggests that the slow inward tail current flows through anomalous rectifier channels. The amplitude of the slow inward tail was increased and VK was shifted in the depolarizing direction by longer conditioning pulses. The shift in VK implies that during outward currents potassium accumulates in a restricted extracellular space, and it is suggested that this excess K causes the slow inward tail by increasing the inward current through the anomalous rectifier. By this hypothesis, the tail current slowly decays as K diffuses from the restricted space. Consistent with such a hypothesis, the decay of the slow inward tail was not strongly affected by changing temperature. It is concluded that a single delayed K channel is present in the omohyoid. Substitution of Rb for K has little effect on the magnitude or time course of outward current tails, but reduces the magnitude and slows the decay of the fast component of inward tails. Both effects are consistent with a mechanism proposed for squid giant axon (Swenson and Armstrong, 1981): that (a) the delayed potassium channel cannot close while Rb is inside it, and (b) that Rb remains in the channel longer than K.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007473 Ion Channels Gated, ion-selective glycoproteins that traverse membranes. The stimulus for ION CHANNEL GATING can be due to a variety of stimuli such as LIGANDS, a TRANSMEMBRANE POTENTIAL DIFFERENCE, mechanical deformation or through INTRACELLULAR SIGNALING PEPTIDES AND PROTEINS. Membrane Channels,Ion Channel,Ionic Channel,Ionic Channels,Membrane Channel,Channel, Ion,Channel, Ionic,Channel, Membrane,Channels, Ion,Channels, Ionic,Channels, Membrane
D007700 Kinetics The rate dynamics in chemical or physical systems.
D009132 Muscles Contractile tissue that produces movement in animals. Muscle Tissue,Muscle,Muscle Tissues,Tissue, Muscle,Tissues, Muscle
D011188 Potassium An element in the alkali group of metals with an atomic symbol K, atomic number 19, and atomic weight 39.10. It is the chief cation in the intracellular fluid of muscle and other cells. Potassium ion is a strong electrolyte that plays a significant role in the regulation of fluid volume and maintenance of the WATER-ELECTROLYTE BALANCE.
D004553 Electric Conductivity The ability of a substrate to allow the passage of ELECTRONS. Electrical Conductivity,Conductivity, Electric,Conductivity, Electrical
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia
D012413 Rubidium An element that is an alkali metal. It has an atomic symbol Rb, atomic number 37, and atomic weight 85.47. It is used as a chemical reagent and in the manufacture of photoelectric cells.
D013997 Time Factors Elements of limited time intervals, contributing to particular results or situations. Time Series,Factor, Time,Time Factor
D051381 Rats The common name for the genus Rattus. Rattus,Rats, Laboratory,Rats, Norway,Rattus norvegicus,Laboratory Rat,Laboratory Rats,Norway Rat,Norway Rats,Rat,Rat, Laboratory,Rat, Norway,norvegicus, Rattus

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