Molecular and functional characterization of inwardly rectifying K+ currents in murine proximal colon.
Xu HuangSi Hyung LeeHongli LuKenton M SandersSang Don KohPublished in: The Journal of physiology (2017)
Membrane potentials of gastrointestinal muscles are important because voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels in smooth muscle cells (SMC) provide the Ca2+ that triggers contraction. Regulation of membrane potential is complicated because SMC are electrically coupled to interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC) and PDGFRα+ cells. Activation of conductances in any of these cells affects the excitability of the syncytium. We explored the role of inward rectifier K+ conductances in colonic ICC that might contribute to regulation of membrane potential. ICC expressed Kcnj2 (Kir2.1), Kcnj4 (Kir2.3), Kcnj14 (Kir2.4), Kcnj5 (Kir3.4), Kcnj8 (Kir 6.1) and Kcnj11 (Kir6.2). Voltage clamp experiments showed activation of inward current when extracellular K+ ([K+ ]o ) was increased. The current was inwardly rectifying and inhibited by Ba2+ (10 μm) and ML-133 (10 μm). A similar current was not available in SMC. The current activated in ICC by elevated [K+ ]o was not affected by Tertiapin-Q. Gβγ, when dialysed into cells, failed to activate a unique, Tertiapin-Q-sensitive conductance. Freshly dispersed ICC showed no evidence of functional KATP . Pinacidil failed to activate current and the inward current activated by elevated [K+ ]o was insensitive to glibenclamide. Under current clamp, ML-133 caused the depolarization of isolated ICC and also that of cells impaled with microelectrodes in intact muscle strips. These findings show that ICC, when isolated freshly from colonic muscles, expressed a Ba2+ -sensitive, inwardly rectifying K+ conductance. This conductance is most probably a result of the expression of multiple Kir2 family paralogues, and the inwardly rectifying conductance contributes to the regulation of resting potentials and excitability of colonic muscles.