Protein Information

ID 44
Name calcium channel (protein family or complex)
Synonyms calcium channel

Compound Information

ID 1690
Name IBA
CAS

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
10420008 Magistretti J, Brevi S, de Curtis M: Biophysical and pharmacological diversity of high-voltage-activated calcium currents in layer II neurones of guinea-pig piriform cortex. J Physiol. 1999 Aug 1;518 ( Pt 3):705-20.
1. High-voltage-activated calcium currents were studied with the whole-cell, patch-clamp technique in acutely dissociated pyramidal neurones from guinea-pig piriform cortex layer II. Barium ions were used as charge carriers. 2. Barium currents (IBa) displayed a remarkable kinetic diversity in different neurones. The ratio between the current amplitude at the end of the test pulses and the peak amplitude (Re/p) showed two frequency-distribution peaks at approximately 0.4 and 0.8. The index of current activation speed (rise time 10-90 %) directly correlated with the index of current persistence, Re/p. 3. The half-activation potential (V ) of total IBas positively correlated with the Re/p of the corresponding currents. This implied that the high-decay IBas also had a more negative voltage range of activation than the more persistent ones. 4. The L- and N-type channel blockers nifedipine (10 microM) and omega-conotoxin GVIA (omega-CTx GVIA, 0.5-1 microM) additively blocked 20 and 25 % of the total IBa, respectively. The P/Q-type calcium channel blockers omega-agatoxin IVA (100 nM), omega-conotoxin MVIIC (1 microM) and 3.3 funnel toxin (1 microM), had little effect on IBa. 5. The nifedipine- and omega-CTx GVIA-sensitive current had a Re/p > 0.55 and their voltage dependence of activation was of the high-voltage-activated type (V approximately 0 mV). 6. High-, intermediate- and low-decay blocker-resistant currents were observed in different neurones. Their Re/p values highly correlated with those of the corresponding total IBas and with the voltage dependence of activation of the underlying conductances. Exponential fittings of the inactivation phase of blocker-resistant currents returned very fast time constants (lower than 30 ms) for high-decay currents (Re/p < 0.25). The intermediate-decay currents (Re/p approximately 0.55) could not derive from variable combinations of high- and low-decay current components. 7. Our data demonstrate a remarkable variety in voltage-activated calcium currents expressed by piriform cortex neurones, that include currents resistant to high-voltage-activated calcium-channel blockers.
7(0,0,1,2)