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. 1987 May;408(5):465-73.
doi: 10.1007/BF00585070.

Modulation of ionic currents in smooth muscle balls of the rabbit intestine by intracellularly perfused ATP and cyclic AMP

Modulation of ionic currents in smooth muscle balls of the rabbit intestine by intracellularly perfused ATP and cyclic AMP

Y Ohya et al. Pflugers Arch. 1987 May.

Abstract

The effects of intracellularly perfused ATP and cyclic-AMP (c-AMP) on ionic currents recorded from fragmented smooth muscle cells (smooth muscle ball; SMB) were investigated, using the single electrode whole cell voltage clamp method. The Ca2+ current was distinguished from K+ currents, using pipette solution containing Cs+, TEA+ and 4 mM EGTA. ATP enhanced the Ca2+ current dose-dependently between 0.3 and 10 mM, and slightly slowed the slow component of the decay of the Ca2+ current, while the steady-state inactivation curve remained unaffected. Intracellular application of 5'-adenylyl-imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP; 1 mM) inhibited the Ca2+ current by competition with ATP, but c-AMP (up to 300 microM) had no effect. With a high-K+ solution containing 0.3 mM EGTA and ATP in the pipette and physiological salt solution in the bath, a net inward current with transient (Ca2+ dependent) and delayed (Ca2+ independent) K+ outwart currents were evoked. Increased concentrations of ATP (above 1 mM) but not c-AMP (up to 100 microM) in the pipette enhanced the transient K+ outward current. Neither agent had any effect on the delayed outward current. When repetitive stimulations of intervals shorter than 5 s were applied, the amplitude of the transient outward current was markedly reduced, and 100 microM c-AMP partially prevented this attenuation. ATP may act on the Ca2+ channel either by phosphorylating the channel protein or by other ATP requiring mechanisms, independently from those induced by the action of c-AMP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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