Abstract

The roles of potassium and calcium in the slow hyperpolarizations of membranes of activated macrophages are investigated using standard intracellular electrical recording techniques. The amplitude of spontaneous slow hyperpolarizations decreases as a logarithmic function of the external potassium concentration in the culture medium. Similar dependence on the potassium gradient is observed when different levels of membrane potentials are imposed by constant current injection. The reversal potential for electrically evoked slow hyperpolarizations is −90 mV. A 10-fold increase in external potassium concentration causes a 60 mV shift of the reversal potential towards zero. Divalent cation ionophores (A23187 and X537A) can induce slow hyperpolarization responses in quiescent cells or permanent hyperpolarization in spontaneously active cells. The amplitude of the ionophore-induced hyperpolarizations is reduced by an increase in external potassium concentration in a manner consistent with data on slow hyperpolarization responses in the absence of ionophore. The calcium antagonist, verapamil, depresses the slow hyperpolarization responses at the concentration of 10 −5 M. It is suggested that the development of the hyperpolarizing response is due to a calcium-dependent potassium channel. The data support the assumption that spontaneous and artificially elicited slow hyperpolarization responses share a common calcium-dependent mechanism.

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