Publication | Open Access
Activation of chloride current by purinergic stimulation in guinea pig heart cells.
66
Citations
31
References
1992
Year
Single Atrial CellsPurinergic StimulationCardiac MuscleHeart FailureMolecular PhysiologyHyperpolarization (Biology)MedicinePhysiologyIon ChannelsCardiologyMembrane BiologyElectrophysiologyCardiovascular PhysiologyCardiac CellsPharmacologyCellular PhysiologyGuinea Pig Heart
Single atrial cells from guinea pig heart were voltage-clamped using the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique under conditions in which most of the ionic and exchange currents known in cardiac cells were minimized. Extracellular 5 or 50 microM ATP activated a Cl- current, in addition to a rapidly desensitizing cation-selective current. A nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue, adenosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (50 microM), also evoked these two currents, indicating involvement of purinoceptors rather than ecto-ATPase on the membrane. ADP, AMP, and adenosine were also effective in inducing the Cl- current, showing no clear order of potency for the purinoceptor subtypes involved. The purinoceptor-activated Cl- current, like the beta-catecholamine-cAMP-dependent cardiac Cl- current, showed outward rectification and time independence.
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