The IRK1 channel is inhibited by intracellular cations such as Mg2+ and polyamines in a voltage-dependent manner, which renders its I-V curve strongly inwardly rectifying. However, even in excised patches exhaustively perfused with a commonly used artificial intracellular solution nominally free of Mg2+ and polyamines, the macroscopic I-V curve of the channels displays modest rectification. This observation forms the basis of a hypothesis, alternative to the pore-blocking hypothesis, that inward rectification reflects the enhancement of intrinsic channel gating by intracellular cations. We find, however, that residual rectification is caused primarily by the commonly used pH buffer HEPES and/or some accompanying impurity. Therefore, inward rectification in the strong rectifier IRK1, as in the weak rectifier ROMK1, can be accounted for by voltage-dependent block of its ion conduction pore by intracellular cations.
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1 October 2000
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September 25 2000
Pore Block versus Intrinsic Gating in the Mechanism of Inward Rectification in Strongly Rectifying Irk1 Channels
Donglin Guo,
Donglin Guo
aDepartment of Physiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
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Zhe Lu
Zhe Lu
aDepartment of Physiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
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Donglin Guo
,
Zhe Lu
aDepartment of Physiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
Received:
June 29 2000
Revision Requested:
August 25 2000
Accepted:
August 28 2000
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
© 2000 The Rockefeller University Press
2000
The Rockefeller University Press
J Gen Physiol (2000) 116 (4): 561–568.
Article history
Received:
June 29 2000
Revision Requested:
August 25 2000
Accepted:
August 28 2000
Citation
Donglin Guo, Zhe Lu; Pore Block versus Intrinsic Gating in the Mechanism of Inward Rectification in Strongly Rectifying Irk1 Channels. J Gen Physiol 1 October 2000; 116 (4): 561–568. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.116.4.561
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