Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 9, 1055-1061, Copyright © 1989 by Society for Neuroscience
Development of saxitoxin-sensitive and insensitive sodium channels in cultured neonatal rat astrocytes
PJ Yarowsky and BK Krueger
Department of Pharmacology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201.
Voltage-sensitive Na channels were studied in cultures of neonatal rat
cortical astrocytes. These channels were present at all times in culture as
determined by tracer 22Na+ influx in the presence of batrachotoxin (BTX)
and sea anemone polypeptide toxin (AxTx). The affinity of saxitoxin (STX)
binding and sensitivity to STX inhibition of sodium influx were utilized to
characterize these channels. Up to 7 d in culture, high-affinity 3H-STX
binding (Kd of 0.2 nM at 4 degrees C) was very low, and 22Na+ influx was
inhibited only by high concentrations (Ki = 170 nM) of STX. From 7 to 14 d,
total specific binding of STX increased to a maximum of over 2 pmol/mg
protein and remained constant for 28 d. By 14 d, inhibition of 22Na+ influx
by STX was clearly biphasic, indicating the presence of 2 populations of
channels with Ki's of 0.2 nM and 150 nM. At 14 d in culture, binding of
3H-STX to astrocyte membranes revealed the presence of 2 specific sites.
During this second week, increasing numbers of high-affinity STX binding
sites and increasing sensitivity to the inhibition of BTX + AxTx-stimulated
22Na+ influx by STX coincided with the change in morphology of primitive
flat polygonal cells to highly branched stellate forms characteristic of
mature astrocytes in vivo. Changes in culture conditions modified the time
course of the onset of high STX affinity binding. Twenty-four hours after
changing to serum-free G5 medium, there was both an 8-fold increase in STX
binding sites and a change to a stellate shape in all cells. The results
suggest that although low-affinity STX Na channels are always present in
astrocytes, after 7 d in culture a different population of channels appears
with the high affinity for STX characteristic of adult neuronal sodium
channels. This spontaneous process is greatly accelerated by changing to a
chemically defined medium.