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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Kinetics and steady-state properties of the charged system controlling sodium conductance in the squid giant axon.

R. D. Keynes, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1974 - 
- Vol. 239, Iss: 2, pp 393-434
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TLDR
Asymmetries in the early time course of the displacement current passing across the membrane after application of equal voltage‐clamp pulses in the two directions have been investigated in the squid giant axon.
Abstract
1. Asymmetries in the early time course of the displacement current passing across the membrane after application of equal voltage-clamp pulses in the two directions have been investigated in the squid giant axon. Before making the measurements, Na current was blocked by removal of external Na and treatment with tetrodotoxin. Potassium current was usually blocked by perfusion with CsF, but some experiments were done with intact axons. A signal averaging technique was used to eliminate the symmetrical components of the membrane current.2. The asymmetrical current had a contribution of appreciable size attributed to the movement of mobile charges or dipoles in the membrane. This was manifested as an outward current rising rapidly to a peak on depolarization of the membrane and then declining exponentially to zero, followed at the end of the pulse by an inward surge of current with a similar time course. There was also a sustained flow of current outwards during the pulse, arising from ionic leakage with a rectifying characteristic.3. The identification of the exponentially changing current component with the displacement of charged particles forming an integral part of the membrane was supported by the demonstration that the total transfer of charge was equal and opposite at the beginning and end of the pulse, that it reached saturation when the internal potential was taken to a sufficient positive value, and that its size was unaffected by temperature, although its time constant had a large temperature coefficient.4. The disposition of the mobile charges in the steady state was shown to obey a Boltzmann distribution. At the midpoint of the distribution curve, the proportion of the charge displaced underwent an e-fold change for a 19 mV change in potential. The effective valency of the particles, that is their actual charge multiplied by the fraction of the electric field acting on them, was therefore 1.3.5. The total quantity of mobile charge was estimated as about 1500 x 10(-12) C for 0.05 cm(2) of membrane, corresponding to some 1900 charges/mum(2).6. The identification of these mobile charges with the gating particles responsible for controlling Na conductance was supported by the findings that (a) their time constants were the same as those of Hodgkin & Huxley's ;m' system, both in absolute magnitude and in their dependence on potential and temperature, (b) the transition potential at which the charges were evenly distributed on the two sides of the membrane also agreed with that for the ;m' system in intact axons, and its value was similarly shifted in a positive direction by a reduction in internal ionic strength or by raising the external Ca concentration, (c) comparison of the steepness of the curves governing on the one hand the steady-state distribution of the mobile charges and on the other the Na conductance, suggested that an effective cooperation of the charges in groups of three was involved, again in excellent agreement with the ;m' system.7. Displacement of the mobile charges was unaffected by external pH over the range 5-8, but preliminary observations showed that 1% procaine reduced the total charge transfer to somewhat less than 40% of the initial value, and roughly halved the time constant.

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI

The ionic channels in excitable membranes.

TL;DR: Comparisons can now be made between the kinetics of the ionic conductances as described by Hodgkin & Huxley, and the steady-state distribution and kinetic changes of the charged controlling particles, which should lead to useful conclusions about the intramolecular organization of the sodium channels and the conformational changes that take place under the influence of the electric field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inactivation of the sodium channel. I. Sodium current experiments.

TL;DR: This work interprets the correlations between inactivation and immobilization to mean that the immobilized charge returns slowly to "off" position with the time course of recovery from inactivation, and that the small current generated is lost in base-line noise.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structural parts involved in activation and inactivation of the sodium channel.

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that the positive charges in segment S4 are involved in the voltage–sensing mechanism for activation of the channel and that the region between repeats III and IV is important for its inactivation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Voltage Sensor in Voltage-Dependent Ion Channels

TL;DR: The theoretical basis of the energy coupling between the electric field and the voltage is presented, which allows the interpretation of the gating charge that moves in one channel, and the novel results on lanthanide-based resonance energy transfer that show small distance changes between residues in the channel molecule.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contribution of the S4 segment to gating charge in the Shaker K+ channel.

TL;DR: Findings show that movement of the NH2- terminal half but not the CO2H-terminal end of the S4 segment underlies gating charge, and that this portion of theS4 segment appears to move across the entire transmembrane voltage difference in association with channel activation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A quantitative description of membrane current and its application to conduction and excitation in nerve

TL;DR: This article concludes a series of papers concerned with the flow of electric current through the surface membrane of a giant nerve fibre by putting them into mathematical form and showing that they will account for conduction and excitation in quantitative terms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Currents Related to Movement of the Gating Particles of the Sodium Channels

TL;DR: By use of signal averaging techniques, small transient currents are observed which are believed to be the gating currents of the sodium channels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ionic channels in nerve membranes.

TL;DR: A wide variety of experiments with axons provides kinetic, electrochemical, and pharmacological evidence that three types of channels through the membrane contribute to the ionic permeability changes underlying action potentials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Voltage clamp experiments on internally perfused giant axons.

W K Chandler, +1 more
TL;DR: Voltage clamp experiments were carried out on squid giant axons perfused by the method of Baker, Hodgkin & Shaw (1962a), in general agreement with the ionic theory and provide additional information about the selectivity of the membrane.
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