Abstract

Potassium channels from the apical and basolateral membranes of Necturus proximal tubule were studied using the patch-clamp technique. The conductance of the basolateral channel was dependent on the pipette K+ concentration (apparent Km, 65.5 mM K+; maximum channel conductance, 49.8 pS). The permeability ratio (PK+/PNa+) was approximately 10:1. The fractional open time increased with hyperpolarization, whereas mean open times did not change. Ba2+ (0.1 mM pipette concentration) blocked the channel and reduced the mean open time. The apical K+ channel was activated with depolarization and had a slope conductance of 60 pS in the inside-out configuration (100 mM KCl in the pipette and 2.5 mM KCl in the bath). The K+-Na+ selectivity ratio was 32:1. These different channel types will allow independent control of the apical and basolateral membrane K+ conductances.

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