In freshly dissociated uterine myocytes, the outward current is carried by K+ through channels highly selective for K+. Typically, nonpregnant myocytes have rather noisy K+ currents; half of them also have a fast-inactivating transient outward current (ITO). In contrast, the current records are not noisy in late pregnant myocytes, and ITO densities are low. The whole-cell IK of nonpregnant myocytes respond strongly to changes in [Ca2+]o or changes in [Ca2+]i caused by photolysis of caged Ca2+ compounds, nitr 5 or DM-nitrophene, but that of late-pregnant myocytes respond weakly or not at all. The Ca2+ insensitivity of the latter is present before any exposure to dissociating enzymes. By holding at −80, −40, or 0 mV and digital subtractions, the whole-cell IK of each type of myocyte can be separated into one noninactivating and two inactivating components with half-inactivation at approximately −61 and −22 mV. The noninactivating components, which consist mainly of iberiotoxin-susceptible large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ currents, are half-activated at 39 mV in nonpregnant myocytes, but at 63 mV in late-pregnant myocytes. In detached membrane patches from the latter, identified 139 pS, Ca2+-sensitive K+ channels also have a half-open probability at 68 mV, and are less sensitive to Ca2+ than similar channels in taenia coli myocytes. Ca2+-activated K+ currents, susceptible to tetraethylammonium, charybdotoxin, and iberiotoxin contribute 30–35% of the total IK in nonpregnant myocytes, but <20% in late-pregnant myocytes. Dendrotoxin-susceptible, small-conductance delayed rectifier currents are not seen in nonpregnant myocytes, but contribute ∼20% of total IK in late-pregnant myocytes. Thus, in late-pregnancy, myometrial excitability is increased by changes in K+ currents that include a suppression of the ITO, a redistribution of IK expression from large-conductance Ca2+-activated channels to smaller-conductance delayed rectifier channels, a lowered Ca2+ sensitivity, and a positive shift of the activation of some large-conductance Ca2+-activated channels.
Potassium Currents in Freshly Dissociated Uterine Myocytes from Nonpregnant and Late-Pregnant Rats
Dr. C.Y. Kao died on May 26, 1998.
Address correspondence to Peter N. Kao, M.D., Ph.D., Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA 94305-5236. Fax: 650-725-5489; E-mail: [email protected]
This paper is dedicated to Chien Yuan Kao, M.D., who died unexpectedly on May 26, 1998. My father introduced me to scientific research and medicine and served as my most trusted mentor and closest friend throughout my life (P.N. Kao). The C.Y. Kao Memorial Medical Student Research Scholarship Fund has been established to support training in basic science investigation, and is administered at the Department of Pharmacology, State University of New York Health Sciences Center.
The work described was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (HD00378 and DK39371).
S.Y. Wang, M. Yoshino, J.L. Sui, M. Wakui, P.N. Kao, C.Y. Kao; Potassium Currents in Freshly Dissociated Uterine Myocytes from Nonpregnant and Late-Pregnant Rats . J Gen Physiol 1 December 1998; 112 (6): 737–756. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.112.6.737
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