The acetylcholine-activated channel of chick myotube was studied using the patch-clamp method. Single channel current amplitudes were measured between -300 and +250 mV in solutions containing the permeant ions Cs+ and guanidine (G+). G+ has a relative permeability, PG/PCs, of 1.6, but carries no more than half the current that Cs+ does, with an equivalent electrochemical driving force. Experiments using G+ revealed an asymmetry of the acetylcholine-activated channel, with G+ being more effective at reducing Cs+ currents when added to the outside than when added to the inside. The block caused by outside, but not inside, G+ was evident for both inward and outward currents. The block caused by outside G+ was voltage dependent, first increasing and then being partially relieved when the driving force was made more negative. Experiments with mixtures of Cs+ and G+ revealed anomalously low magnitudes for reversal potentials, relative to predictions based on the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation. These findings are consistent with a two-well, three-barrier Eyring rate model for ion flow, and demonstrate that a highly permeant ion, guanidine, can block asymmetrically by acting from within the voltage field of the acetylcholine-activated channel.
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1 November 1986
Article|
November 01 1986
Guanidine block of single channel currents activated by acetylcholine.
T M Dwyer
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
J Gen Physiol (1986) 88 (5): 635–650.
Citation
T M Dwyer; Guanidine block of single channel currents activated by acetylcholine.. J Gen Physiol 1 November 1986; 88 (5): 635–650. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.88.5.635
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