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J Physiol Vol 402 pp 363-374
Copyright © 1988 by The Physiological Society
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The potassium conductance of the resting squid axon and its blockage by clinical concentrations of general anaesthetics.

D A Haydon, J Requena and A J Simon

Physiological Laboratory, Cambridge.

1. The effects of some neutral clinical and experimental general anaesthetics on the resting potential of normal squid axons and squid axons exposed to tetrodotoxin and 3,4-diaminopyridine have been studied. 2. Depolarizations of 1-4 mV were produced by all the anaesthetics at 'clinical' concentrations in the normal axon. Larger depolarizations (5-11 mV) were produced by the same anaesthetic concentrations in axons exposed to tetrodotoxin and 3,4-diaminopyridine. 3. The conductance of axons exposed to tetrodotoxin and either tetraethyl-ammonium or 3,4-diaminopyridine in zero Na+, 430 mM-K+ artificial sea water was examined by voltage clamp and AC bridge techniques. 4. The evidence that this conductance is due predominantly to K+ is discussed. 5. Pre-pulse protocols under voltage clamp have been used to show that part of this conductance arises from the incompletely blocked delayed rectifier. 6. Substantial reductions in this conductance are produced by anaesthetics at 'clinical' concentrations. 7. It is concluded that there is a component of the K+ conductance of the resting squid axon other than the Hodgkin-Huxley delayed rectifier which is extremely sensitive to anaesthetics and which to an appreciable extent determines the resting potential.




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M. Covarrubias, T. B. Vyas, L. Escobar, and A. Wei
Alcohols Inhibit a Cloned Potassium Channel at a Discrete Saturable Site
J. Biol. Chem., August 18, 1995; 270(33): 19408 - 19416.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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