Abstract

1. K+ currents were studied in smooth muscle cells enzymatically dissociated from human bronchi, by use of the patch-clamp technique. 2. In whole-cell recordings a depolarization-induced, 4-aminopyridine (4-AP)-sensitive current was observed in only 26 of 155 cells, and in 20 of these 26 cells its amplitude at a test potential of 0 mV was less than 100 pA. 3. In the majority of cells depolarization to -40 mV or more positive potentials induced a noisy outward current which activated within milliseconds and showed almost no inactivation even during a 5 s depolarizing voltage step. This current was insensitive to 4-AP (up to 5 mM) but was strongly inhibited in the presence of tetraethylammonium (TEA, 1 mM), charybdotoxin (ChTX, 100 nM) or iberiotoxin (IbTX, 50 nM) in the bath. The same current was also recorded by the nystatin-perforated patch technique. 4. Single channels with a conductance of about 210 pS were recorded in cell-attached patch, inside-out patch, outside-out patch and whole-cell recording configurations. Channel open state probability in inside-out patches was 0.5 at a membrane potential of 4 +/- 14 mV (mean +/- s.d., n = 13) mV even with a free Ca2+ concentration on the cytosolic side of the patch of less than 0.1 nM. Open state probability increased with depolarization and internal Ca2+ concentration. Single channels could be reversibly blocked by externally applied TEA, ChTX and IbTX. 5. In current-clamp recordings with 100 nM free Ca2+ in the intracellular solution both TEA and ChTX caused substantial concentration-dependent depolarization. 6. These results suggest that in human bronchial smooth muscle cells, in marked contrast to other species, the majority of the outward current induced by depolarization is not due to a delayed rectifier,but to the activity of a large conductance, ChTX-sensitive K+ channel. The Ca2+- and voltage-dependency of this channel may well allow a sufficiently high open state probability for it to play a partin the regulation of the resting membrane potential.

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