Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 9, 4089-4099, Copyright © 1989 by Society for Neuroscience
Clustered distribution and variability in kinetics of transient K channels in molluscan neuron cell bodies
BA Premack, S Thompson and J Coombs-Hahn
Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University, Pacific Grove, California 93950.
The spatial distribution of transient K current, IA, was studied using a
combination of patch-clamp and whole-cell voltage-clamp techniques. The
average IA current density in somatic patches is 0.64 times the current
density in the entire axotomized cell body, a finding which suggests that
the axon hillock or initial segment of the axon has a higher concentration
of IA channels than much of soma. The highest density of active channels
during the peak IA is 1/micron2 at a membrane voltage of -20 mV. There is
no evidence for a gradient in the distribution of IA channels in the cell
body, but the channels are not evenly distributed. The variability in the
number of channels per patch for multiple patches on the same neuron is
much higher than expected for a random distribution. Statistical analysis
of the data yields a coefficient of dispersion of 8.1, a value indicating a
high degree of clustering. The utility of this statistic for evaluating
channel distributions is discussed. Several lines of evidence suggest that
the upper limit for the area of IA channel clusters is approximately 250
micron2. Single-channel currents attributed to IA were recorded in the
cell-attached configuration. The voltage dependence of channel opening and
inactivation are the same as measured in whole-cell voltage-clamp
experiments. The single-channel conductance is about 9 pS in normal saline.
Patches 9-30 micron2 in areas that contain IA channels are often devoid of
other K channel types, suggesting that IA channels can occur in isochannel
clusters. IA inactivation follows an exponential time course in all of the
neurons examined, but the time constant of inactivation ranges from 25 to
560 msec in different cells. The voltage dependence of activation and
inactivation and the reversal potential of the current are approximately
the same in all cells. When multiple patches on the same neuron are
studied, it is found that IA inactivates exponentially with approximately
the same time constant in each patch, regardless of patch area. The data
suggest that each neuron expresses predominantly, and perhaps exclusively,
a single type of IA channel with distinct kinetic properties. The wide
range of IA inactivation time constants observed in different cell suggests
that a large number of channel types are available for expression. Possible
mechanisms for generating diversity in channel types are discussed.