Carbachol increases basolateral K+ conductance in T84 cells: Simultaneous measurements of cell [Ca] and gK explore calcium's role

27Citations
Citations of this article
5Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

To explore the role of calcium in mediating the action of carbachol in chloride-secreting epithelia, we simultaneously measured intracellular free [Ca] ([Ca]i) and the potassium conductance (gK) of the basolateral membrane in T84 cells grown on collagen-coated filters. [Ca]i was measured with fura-2 and fluorescence microscopy and expressed as a relative value ([Ca]i′) normalized to control. To assess changes in basolateral gK, we measured the short circuit current (Isc) in the presence of luminal amphotericin and a transepithelial mucosa-to-serosa K+ gradient (Germann, W. J., M. E. Lowy, S. A. Ernst, and D. C. Dawson. 1986. J. Gen. Physiol. 88:237-251). Treatment of the monolayers with carbachol resulted in a parallel increase and then decrease in [Ca]i′ and gK. The carbachol-induced changes in gK appeared to be dependent on the increase in [Ca]i because stimulation of gK was significantly diminished when the hormone-induced increase in [Ca]i′ was blunted, either by loading the cells with BAPTA or by reducing the extracellular [Ca]. The carbachol-stimulated increase in gK appeared to be the direct result of the increase in steady-state [Ca]i′. The changes in gK and [Ca]i′ after stimulation with carbachol were correlated and ionomycin also increased gK and [Ca]i′ in a parallel manner. The carbachol-induced ΔgK per Δ[Ca]i′, however, was greater than that after ionomycin. Because ionomycin and carbachol appear to open the same channel, a conclusion based on inhibitor and selectivity experiments, carbachol may have a second action that amplifies the effect of calcium on gK.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Wong, S. M. E., Tesfaye, A., Debell, M. C., & Chase, H. S. (1990). Carbachol increases basolateral K+ conductance in T84 cells: Simultaneous measurements of cell [Ca] and gK explore calcium’s role. Journal of General Physiology, 96(6), 1271–1285. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.96.6.1271

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free