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J Physiol Volume 565, Number 1, 243-259, May 15, 2005 DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2005.084574
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A pH-sensitive potassium conductance (TASK) and its function in the murine gastrointestinal tract

Sang Yun Cho1, Elizabeth A. Beckett1, Salah A. Baker1, Insoo Han1, Kyu Joo Park1, Kevin Monaghan1, Sean M. Ward1, Kenton M. Sanders1 and Sang Don Koh1

1 Department of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada Reno, School of Medicine, Reno, NV 89557, USA

The excitability of smooth muscles is regulated, in part, by background K+ conductances that determine resting membrane potential. However, the K+ conductances so far described in gastrointestinal (GI) muscles are not sufficient to explain the negative resting potentials of these cells. Here we describe expression of two-pore K+ channels of the TASK family in murine small and large intestinal muscles. TASK-2, cloned from murine intestinal muscles, resulted in a pH-sensitive, time-dependent, non-inactivating K+ conductance with slow activation kinetics. A similar conductance was found in native intestinal myocytes using whole-cell patch-clamp conditions. The pH-sensitive current was blocked by local anaesthetics. Lidocaine, bupivacaine and acidic pH depolarized circular muscle cells in intact muscles and decreased amplitude and frequency of slow waves. The effects of lidocaine were not blocked by tetraethylammonium chloride, 4-aminopyridine, glibenclamide, apamin or MK-499. However, depolarization by acidic pH was abolished by pre-treatment with lidocaine, suggesting that lidocaine-sensitive K+ channels were responsible for pH-sensitive changes in membrane potential. The kinetics of activation, sensitivity to pH, and pharmacology of the conductance in intestinal myocytes and the expression of TASK-1 and TASK-2 in these cells suggest that the pH-sensitive background conductance is encoded by TASK genes. This conductance appears to contribute significantly to resting potential and may regulate excitability of GI muscles.

(Received 7 February 2005; accepted after revision 14 March 2005; first published online 17 March 2005)
Corresponding author S. D. Koh: Department of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada Reno, School of Medicine, Reno, NV 89557, USA. Email: sdk{at}unr.edu


S. Y. Cho, E. A. Beckett and S. A. Baker contributed equally to this work.




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