The effects of external Zn+2 and other divalent cations on K channels in squid giant axons were studied. At low concentration (2 mM) Zn+2 slows opening kinetics without affecting closing kinetics. Higher concentrations (5-40 mM) progressively slow opening and speed channel closing to a lesser degree. In terms of "shifts," opening kinetics are strongly shifted to the right on the voltage axis, and off kinetics much less so. The shift of the conductance-voltage relation along the axis is intermediate. Zinc's kinetic effects show little sign of saturation at the highest concentration attainable. Zn does not alter the shape of the instantaneous current-voltage relation of open channels. Some other divalent cations have effects similar to Zn+2, Hg2+ being the most potent and Ca+2 the least. After treatment with Hg+2, which is irreversible, Zn+2 still slows opening kinetics, which suggests that each channel has at least two sites for divalent cation action. The results are not compatible with a simple theory of fixed, uniform surface charges. They suggest that external cations interact directly with a negatively charged element of the gating apparatus that moves inward from the membrane's outer surface during activation. Examination of normal kinetics shows that there is a slow step somewhere in the chain leading to channel opening. But the slowest step must not be the last one.
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1 June 1982
Article|
June 01 1982
Divalent cations and the activation kinetics of potassium channels in squid giant axons.
W F Gilly,
C M Armstrong
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
J Gen Physiol (1982) 79 (6): 965–996.
Citation
W F Gilly, C M Armstrong; Divalent cations and the activation kinetics of potassium channels in squid giant axons.. J Gen Physiol 1 June 1982; 79 (6): 965–996. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.79.6.965
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