Abstract

Recently, two enteric neuronal cell lines, one fetal and the other post-natal (IM-PEN), have been developed from the H-2K(b)-tsA58 transgenic mouse (immortomouse). However, their electrophysiological properties are not known. The goal of this study was to determine the electrical excitability and ionic conductance of the immortalized postnatal enteric neuronal (IM-PEN) cell line. Whole cell patch clamp studies, immunohistochemistry and RT-PCR were performed on differentiated IM-PEN cells following propagation at 33 °C and differentiation at 37 °C. Differentiated IM-PEN cells stained positively for the neuron specific markers βIII-tubulin and PGP9.5. The mRNA for several ion channels expressed in enteric neurons were detected by RT-PCR. In current clamp, the resting membrane potential was -24.6 ± 2.1 mV (n = 6) for IM-FEN and -29.8 ± 0.9 mV (n = 30) for IM-PEN. Current injections from Vh -80 mV resulted in passive responses but not action potentials. Depolarizing pulses in the whole cell voltage clamp configuration from Vh -80 mV elicited small nifedipine-sensitive inward currents. Additionally, outward currents with slow deactivating tail currents were blocked by niflumic acid and low chloride solution. A volume-regulated anion current was elicited by hypo-osmotic solution and inhibited by 10 μM DCPIB. Growth with rabbit gastrointestinal smooth muscle did not yield significant differences in the active properties of the IM-PEN cell line. Transient expression of L-type Ca(2+) channels produced large inward currents demonstrating a working mechanism for protein folding and transport. The electrophysiological characteristics of IM-PEN cells suggest that chloride channels in IM-PEN cells play an important role in their resting state, and membrane trafficking of some of the ion channels may preclude their electrical excitability.

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