Abstract
The membrane potential of proximal tubule cells is dominated by the potassium conductance of the basolateral membrane. In the present paper the nature of this conductance is investigated by the patch-clamp technique. Only one type of K channel was found in the basolateral membranes of freshly isolated proximal cells. In cell-attached patches, the current/voltage relationship is markedly non-linear with much larger inward (30 pS) than outward (approximately 6 pS) conductances, even in the presence of roughly symmetrical K concentrations. Thus the channels show inward rectification. The determination of the conductance for outward current flow is complicated since the current/voltage curves show an area of negative conductance. Nevertheless, taking the conductance for outward current flow and the density of the channels it is possible to account for all of the previously reported potassium conductance of amphibian proximal tubule cells. The open probability of the channels was found not to depend upon the membrane potential. However, the non-linearity of the current/voltage relationships will confer upon the channel the same voltage dependence as that seen in intact proximal tubules, i.e. the conductance decreases with depolarisation. Incubation of cells in Ringer with no substrates or in the presence of alanine and/or glucose showed no change in the activity of the channels. These findings suggest that, although these channels may represent the basolateral conductance of frog proximal tubule cells, they are not involved in the well-established coupling between transport rate and potassium conductance.
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