Tonic inhibition of neuronal calcium channels by G proteins removed during whole-cell patch-clamp experiments |
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Authors: | Rainer Netzer Pascal Pflimlin Gerhard Trube |
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Affiliation: | (1) Pharma Division, Preclinical Research, F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd., Bldg. 70/431, P.O.B, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland;(2) Present address: Department of Electrophysiology, Battelle Europe, Route de drize 7, CH-1227 Geneva/Carouge, Switzerland |
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Abstract: | The barium current through voltage-dependent calcium channels was recorded from cultured rat cortical neurons with the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. The maximal current evoked by depolarising pulses from –80 mV to 0 mV was divided into inactivating and non-inactivating fractions. During the first minutes of whole-cell recording, the amplitude of the inactivating fraction increased from less than 0.1 nA to an average value of 1 nA, whereas the amplitude of the non-inactivating component remained essentially the same. This increase in amplitude was prevented when the perforated-patch technique was used, suggesting that some intracellular factor that inhibited the barium current was lost or destroyed during conventional whole-cell experiments. When GTP[-S] or GTP was added to the pipette solution, no increase or only a weak rise of the inactivating current was seen, whereas GDP[-S] accelerated its increase. The results suggest that some of the calcium channels expressed in cultured cortical neurons are inhibited by a G protein even in the absence of added neurotransmitter. The current increase observed during whole-cell recordings may be due to a loss of intracellular GTP and the subsequent inactivation of an inhibitory G protein. |
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Keywords: | Calcium channel Nerve cell culture Guanine-nucleotide-binding protein Guanosine triphosphate Patch clamp |
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