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J Neurophysiol 60: 1322-1332, 1988;
0022-3077/88 $5.00
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Journal of Neurophysiology, Vol 60, Issue 4 1322-1332, Copyright © 1988 by APS


ARTICLES

Local superfusion modifies the inward rectifying potassium conductance of isolated retinal horizontal cells

I. Perlman, A. G. Knapp and J. E. Dowling
Biological Laboratories, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138.

1. Horizontal cells were enzymatically and mechanically dissociated from the white perch (Roccus americana) retina and voltage clamped using patch electrodes. Steady-state current-voltage (I-V) relationships of solitary horizontal cells were determined by changing the membrane potential in a rampwise fashion. 2. The I-V curve of cells bathed in normal Ringer solution exhibited a large conductance increase at negative membrane potentials. This conductance activated near the K+ equilibrium potential, had no clear reversal potential, was enhanced by raising the extracellular concentration of K+, and was suppressed by external Cs+. These properties identify the conductance as the inward (anomalous) rectifier. 3. Continuous superfusion of the cells' local environment with drug-free Ringer reduced the magnitude of the inward rectifier current and shifted its activation point to more negative potentials. This effect developed over approximately 30 s, lasted as long as superfusion continued and was reversible upon cessation of superfusion. 4. Pressure ejection of drug-free Ringer solution onto cells bathed in the identical solution also reduced the magnitude of the inward rectifier current, although the effects were more rapid and more transient than those exerted by superfusion. Pressure ejection had little effect when cells were simultaneously superfused with Ringer, suggesting a common mode of action on the inward rectifier. 5. In the absence of superfusion, pressure ejection of Ringer containing 200 microM L-glutamate had a biphasic effect on membrane conductance. At potentials above -60 mV, glutamate caused a conductance increase with a reversal potential near +10 mV. At potentials below -60 mV, glutamate caused a conductance decrease whose reversal potential could not reliably be determined. The latter effect was similar to the suppression of the inward rectifier by application of Ringer alone, suggesting that it may represent an artifact of pressure ejection rather than a direct effect of glutamate. 6. In support of this interpretation, we found that pressure ejection of glutamate in the presence of external Cs+ (which blocks the inward rectifier) or during local superfusion with Ringer (which prevents attenuation of the inward rectifier by pressure ejection) did not cause a conductance decrease at negative potentials. Under these conditions, glutamate caused primarily a conductance increase with a reversal potential near +10 mV.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


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D. B. Dixon and D. R. Copenhagen
Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor-Mediated Suppression of an Inward Rectifier Current Is Linked via a cGMP Cascade.
J. Neurosci., December 1, 1997; 17(23): 8945 - 8954.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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