|
|
||||||||
Department of Physiology, University of Rochester, NY 14642.
1. Cells from a pluripotent murine embryonal carcinoma cell line (P19) were differentiated in vitro into cells with neurone- and cardiac-like phenotypes. Cells treated with 0.5 microM retinoic acid developed into neurone-like cells possessing extensive neurites. Dimethyl sulphoxide treatment (0.5%) produced large, spontaneously contracting cell aggregates with many properties of cardiac cells. 2. The neurone- and cardiac-like cells contained voltage-sensitive Na+ channels with properties similar to those of native neuronal and cardiac cells. 3. We used whole-cell patch clamp techniques to measure inward currents from the neurone- and cardiac-like cells. Undifferentiated (untreated) cells had only small inward currents (peak of -0.15 nA in 150 mM external Na+). The peak inward current in the neurone-like and cardiac-like cells was -1.2 nA (in 154 mM external Na+) and -2.8 nA (in only 46 mM Na+), respectively. These large currents were absent when the external solution contained no Na+. 4. Tetrodotoxin (TTX) blocked the Na+ currents in the neurone- and cardiac-like cells in a dose-dependent manner. The Kd for TTX block of the Na+ current in the neurone-like cells was 6.7 nM. The Na+ current in the cardiac-like cells was much more resistant to TTX; the half-blocking concentration was two orders of magnitude higher, 710 nM. 5. The kinetic properties of the Na+ channel currents in the neurone- and cardiac-like cells were similar but developed over somewhat different voltage ranges. The voltage sensitivity of activation was similar in both cell types but the activation mid-point voltage was different: -12 mV in the neuronal cells and -34 mV for cardiac cells. Inactivation of the neuronal Na+ channels had a mid-point near -47 mV and was more sensitive to the membrane voltage than inactivation of the cardiac channels. The mid-point of inactivation for the cardiac Na+ channels was -80 mV.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
M. A.G. van der Heyden and L. H.K. Defize Twenty one years of P19 cells: what an embryonal carcinoma cell line taught us about cardiomyocyte differentiation Cardiovasc Res, May 1, 2003; 58(2): 292 - 302. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. A.G. van der Heyden, M. J.A. van Kempen, Y. Tsuji, M. B. Rook, H. J. Jongsma, and T. Opthof P19 embryonal carcinoma cells: a suitable model system for cardiac electrophysiological differentiation at the molecular and functional level Cardiovasc Res, May 1, 2003; 58(2): 410 - 422. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. K. G. Maier, R. E. Westenbroek, K. A. Schenkman, E. O. Feigl, T. Scheuer, and W. A. Catterall An unexpected role for brain-type sodium channels in coupling of cell surface depolarization to contraction in the heart PNAS, March 6, 2002; (2002) 261705699. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |