The Journal of General Physiology, Vol 103, 583-604, Copyright © 1994 by The Rockefeller University Press
Inward-rectifier potassium channels in basolateral membranes of frog skin epithelium
V Urbach, E van Kerkhove and BJ Harvey
Department of Cellular and Molecular Biology, Commissariat a l'Energie Atomique, Laboratoire Jean Maetz BP68, Villefranche-sur-mer, France.
Inward-rectifier K channel: using macroscopic voltage clamp and single-
channel patch clamp techniques we have identified the K+ channel
responsible for potassium recycling across basolateral membranes (BLM) of
principal cells in intact epithelia isolated from frog skin. The
spontaneously active K+ channel is an inward rectifier (Kir) and is the
major component of macroscopic conductance of intact cells. The current-
voltage relationship of BLM in intact cells of isolated epithelia, mounted
in miniature Ussing chambers (bathed on apical and basolateral sides in
normal amphibian Ringer solution), showed pronounced inward rectification
which was K(+)-dependent and inhibited by Ba2+, H+, and quinidine. A 15-pS
Kir channel was the only type of K(+)-selective channel found in BLM in
cell-attached membrane patches bathed in physiological solutions. Although
the channel behaves as an inward rectifier, it conducts outward current (K+
exit from the cell) with a very high open probability (Po = 0.74-1.0) at
membrane potentials less negative than the Nernst potential for K+. The Kir
channel was transformed to a pure inward rectifier (no outward current) in
cell- attached membranes when the patch pipette contained 120 mM KCl Ringer
solution (normal NaCl Ringer in bath). Inward rectification is caused by
Mg2+ block of outward current and the single-channel current-voltage
relation was linear when Mg2+ was removed from the cytosolic side.
Whole-cell current-voltage relations of isolated principal cells were also
inwardly rectified. Power density spectra of ensemble current noise could
be fit by a single Lorentzian function, which displayed a K dependence
indicative of spontaneously fluctuating Kir channels. Conclusions: under
physiological ionic gradients, a 15-pS inward- rectifier K+ channel
generates the resting BLM conductance in principal cells and recycles
potassium in parallel with the Na+/K+ ATPase pump.