Potassium channels inhibited by adenosine-5'-trisphosphate, K(ATP), found in the transverse tubular membrane of rabbit skeletal muscle were studied using the planar bilayer recording technique. In addition to the single-channel properties of K(ATP) we report its regulation of Mg2+ and by the guanosine-5'-trisphosphate analogue, GTP-y(gamma)-S. The K(ATP) channel (a) has a conductance of 67 pS in 250 mM internal, 50 mM external KCl, and rectifies weakly at holding potentials more positive than 50 mV, (b) is not activated by internal Ca2+ or membrane depolarization, (c) has a permeability ratio PK/PNa greater than 50, and (d) is inhibited by millimolar internal ATP. Activity of K(ATP), measured as open channel probability as a function of time, was unstable at all holding potentials and decreases continuously within a few minutes after a recording is initiated. After a decrease in activity, GTP-y-S (100 microM) added to the internal side reactivated K(ATP) channels but only transiently. In the presence of internal 1 mM Mg2+, GTP-y-S produced a sustained reactivation lasting 20-45 min. Incubation of purified t-tubule vesicles with AlF4 increased the activity of K(ATP) channels, mimicking the effect of GTP-y-S. The effect of AlF4 and the requirement of GTP-y-S plus Mg2+ for sustained channel activation suggests that a nucleotide-binding G protein regulates ATP-sensitive K channels in the t-tuble membrane of rabbit skeletal muscle.
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1 September 1989
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September 01 1989
Reconstitution of the ATP-sensitive potassium channel of skeletal muscle. Activation by a G protein-dependent process.
L Parent,
L Parent
Department of Physiology and Molecular Biophysics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030.
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R Coronado
R Coronado
Department of Physiology and Molecular Biophysics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030.
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L Parent
,
R Coronado
Department of Physiology and Molecular Biophysics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030.
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
J Gen Physiol (1989) 94 (3): 445–463.
Citation
L Parent, R Coronado; Reconstitution of the ATP-sensitive potassium channel of skeletal muscle. Activation by a G protein-dependent process.. J Gen Physiol 1 September 1989; 94 (3): 445–463. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.94.3.445
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