Title of article :
Amino Acid-Permeable Anion Channels in Early Mouse Embryos and Their Possible Effects on Cleavage
Author/Authors :
Sonoda، Momoyo نويسنده , , Inoue، Yoshihito نويسنده , , Okamoto، Fujio نويسنده , , Kajiya، Hiroshi نويسنده , , Honjo، Ko نويسنده , , Sumii، Yoshinari نويسنده , , Kawarabayashi، Tatsuhiko نويسنده , , Okabe، Koji نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages :
-946
From page :
947
To page :
0
Abstract :
Effects of several Cl- channel blockers on ionic currents in mouse embryos were studied using wholecell patch-clamp and microelectrode methods. Microelectrode measurements showed that the resting membrane potential of early embryonic cells (1-cell stage) was -23 mV and that reduction of extracellular Cl- concentration depolarized the membrane, suggesting that Cl- conductance is a major contributor for establishing the resting membrane potential. Membrane currents recorded by wholecell voltage clamp showed outward rectification and confirmed that a major component of these embryonic currents are carried by Cl- ions. A Cl- channel blocker, 4,4ʹ-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2ʹdisulfonic acid (DIDS), suppressed the outward rectifier current in a voltage- and concentrationdependent manner. Other Cl- channel blockers (5-nitro-2-[3-phenylpropyl-amino] benzoic acid and 2-[3-(trifluoromethyl)-anilino] nicotinic acid [niflumic acid]) similarly inhibited this current. Simultaneous application of niflumic acid with DIDS further suppressed the outward rectifier current. Under high osmotic condition, niflumic acid, but not DIDS, inhibited the Cl-current, suggesting the presence of two types of Cl- channels: a DIDS-sensitive (swelling-activated) channel, and a DIDSinsensitive (niflumic acid-sensitive) Cl- channel. Anion permeability of the DIDS-insensitive Cl- current differed from that of the compound Cl- current: Rank order of anion permeability of the DIDSsensitive Cl- channels was I- = Br- > Cl- > gluconate-, whereas that of the DIDS-insensitive Cl- channel was I- = Br- > Cl- >> gluconate-. These results indicate that early mouse embryos have a Cl- channel that is highly permeable to amino acids, which may regulate intracellular amino acid concentration.
Keywords :
early development , embryo , developmental biology
Journal title :
Biology of Reproduction
Serial Year :
2003
Journal title :
Biology of Reproduction
Record number :
88958
Link To Document :
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