Author:
Kim Insook,Boyle Kathleen M.,Carroll John L.
Abstract
The O2sensitivity of dissociated type I cells from rat carotid body increases with age until ∼14–16 days. Hypoxia-induced depolarization appears to be mediated by an O2-sensitive K+current, but other K+currents may modulate depolarization. We hypothesized that membrane potential may be stabilized in newborn type I cells by human ether-a-go-go-related gene (HERG)-like K+currents that inhibit hypoxia-induced depolarization and that a decrease in this current with age could underlie, in part, the developmental increase in type I cell depolarization response to hypoxia. In dissociated type I cells from 0- to 1- and 11- to 16-day-old rats, using perforated patch-clamp and 70 mM K+extracellular solution, we measured repolarization-induced inward K+tail currents in the absence and presence of E-4031, a specific HERG channel blocker. This allowed isolation of the E-4031-sensitive HERG-like current. E-4031-sensitive peak currents in type I cells from 0- to- 1-day-old rats were 2.5-fold larger than in cells from 11- to 16-day-old rats. E-4031-sensitive current density in newborn type I cells was twofold greater than in cells from 11- to 16-day-old rats. Under current clamp conditions, E-4031 enhanced hypoxia-induced depolarization in type I cells from 0- to- 1-day-old but not 11- to 16-day-old rats. With use of fura 2 to measure intracellular Ca2+, E-4031 increased the cytosolic Ca2+concentration response to anoxia in cells from 0- to- 1-day-old but not cells from 11- to 16-day-old rats. E-4031-sensitive K+currents are present in newborn carotid body type I cells and decline with age. These findings are consistent with a role for E-4031-sensitive K+current, and possibly HERG-like K+currents, in the type I cell hypoxia response maturation.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
16 articles.
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