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© The Rockefeller University Press, 0022-1295/1998//565/ $5.00
Journal of General Physiology, Volume 111, Number 4, 1998


Article

Gating of Recombinant Small-Conductance Ca-activated K+ Channels by Calcium

Birgit Hirschberg*, James Maylie{ddagger}, John P. Adelman*, and Neil V. Marrion*

From the * Vollum Institute, and {ddagger} Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon 97201

Small-conductance Ca-activated K+ channels play an important role in modulating excitability in many cell types. These channels are activated by submicromolar concentrations of intracellular Ca2+, but little is known about the gating kinetics upon activation by Ca2+. In this study, single channel currents were recorded from Xenopus oocytes expressing the apamin-sensitive clone rSK2. Channel activity was detectable in 0.2 µM Ca2+ and was maximal above 2 µM Ca2+. Analysis of stationary currents revealed two open times and three closed times, with only the longest closed time being Ca dependent, decreasing with increasing Ca2+ concentrations. In addition, elevated Ca2+ concentrations resulted in a larger percentage of long openings and short closures. Membrane voltage did not have significant effects on either open or closed times. The open probability was ~0.6 in 1 µM free Ca2+. A lower open probability of ~0.05 in 1 µM Ca2+ was also observed, and channels switched spontaneously between behaviors. The occurrence of these switches and the amount of time channels spent displaying high open probability behavior was Ca2+ dependent. The two behaviors shared many features including the open times and the short and intermediate closed times, but the low open probability behavior was characterized by a different, long Ca2+-dependent closed time in the range of hundreds of milliseconds to seconds. Small-conductance Ca- activated K+ channel gating was modeled by a gating scheme consisting of four closed and two open states. This model yielded a close representation of the single channel data and predicted a macroscopic activation time course similar to that observed upon fast application of Ca2+ to excised inside-out patches.

Key Words: potassium channel • calcium-activated • single channel • afterhyperpolarization • gating


Address correspondence to Birgit Hirschberg, Vollum Institute, L474, Oregon Health Sciences University, 3181 S.W. Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, OR 97201. Fax: 503-494-4976; E-mail: hirschbe @ohsu.edu


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