Abstract

The effects of batrachotoxin (BTX) on cloned alpha-subunit Na+ channels were examined in CHO-K1 cells (a chinese hamster ovary cell line) transfected with rat brain NaIIA cDNA. Under whole-cell patch clamp conditions, BTX shifted the voltage dependence of the activation process by about 45 mV towards the hyperpolarizing direction and eliminated the inactivating phase of Na+ currents. Repetitive depolarizations greatly facilitated the binding of BTX with NaIIA channels while the membrane was held at -100 mV. In chloramine-T-pretreated cells, the association rate of BTX binding with the NaIIA channel was 6.5-fold faster than that in untreated cells. The estimated association rate constant for BTX binding with the open form of NaIIA channel was 1.11 x 10(6) mol-1.s-1 at room temperature. BTX-modified NaIIA channels were blocked by tetrodotoxin (TTX) in a complicated manner. First, the TTX binding to the closed state of BTX-modified NaIIA channels was not voltage dependent. The KD value of TTX was measured at 8.9 nM, which was similar to that of unmodified channels (KD = 14.2 nM). Second, the block of the open state of BTX-modified NaIIA channels by TTX was voltage dependent; depolarization reduced the potency of TTX block between -20 mV to +50 mV. Below -30 mV, the TTX affinity began to level off, probably because of the increased presence of the closed state. Unexpectedly, steady-state inactivation of BTX-modified NaIIA channels was minimal as measured by the two-pulse protocol, a phenomenon distinctly different from that found in GH3 cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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