Chronic dietary K+ loading stimulates an active K+ secretory process in rat distal colon, which involves an increase in the macroscopic apical K+ conductance of surface epithelial cells. In the present study, the abundance and characteristics of K+ channels constituting this enhanced apical K+ conductance were evaluated using patch clamp recording techniques.2. In isolated non‐polarized surface cells, K+ channels were seen in 9 of 90 (10%) cell‐attached patches in cells from control animals, and in 247 of 437 (57%) cell‐attached patches in cells from K+‐loaded animals, with a significant (P < 0.001) shift in distribution density. Similarly, recordings from cell‐attached patches of the apical membrane of surface cells surrounding the openings of distal colonic crypts revealed identical K+ channels in 1 of 11 (9%) patches in control animals, and in 9 of 13 (69%) patches in K+‐loaded animals.
In isolated surface cells and surface cells in situ, K+ channels had mean slope conductances of 209 ± 6 and 233 ± 14 pS, respectively, when inside‐out patches were bathed symmetrically in K2SO4 solution. The channels were sensitive to ‘cytosolic’ Ca2+ concentration, were voltage sensitive at ‘cytosolic’ Ca2+ concentrations encountered in colonic epithelial cells, and were inhibited by 1 mm quinidine, 20 mm TEA or 5 mm Ba2+ ions.
The data show that dietary K+ loading increases the abundance of Ca2+‐ and voltage‐sensitive large‐conductance K+ channels in the apical membrane of surface cells in rat distal colon. These channels constitute the enhanced macroscopic apical K+ conductance previously identified in these cells, and are likely to play a critical role in the active K+ secretory process that typifies this model of colonic K+ adaptation.
Somatostatin is a powerful inhibitor of intestinal Cl(-) secretion. We used patch-clamp recording techniques to investigate the effects of somatostatin on low-conductance (23-pS) K(+) channels in the basolateral membrane of human colonic crypts, which are an important component of the Cl(-) secretory process. Somatostatin (2 microM) elicited a >80% decrease in "spontaneous" K(+) channel activity in cell-attached patches in nonstimulated crypts (50% inhibition = approximately 8 min), which was voltage-independent and was prevented by pretreating crypts for 18 h with pertussis toxin (200 ng/ml), implicating a G protein-dependent mechanism. In crypts stimulated with 100-200 microM dibutyryl cAMP, 2 microM somatostatin and its synthetic analog octreotide (2 microM) both produced similar degrees of K(+) channel inhibition to that seen in nonstimulated crypts, which was also present under low-Cl(-) (5 mM) conditions. In addition, 2 microM somatostatin abolished the increase in K(+) channel activity stimulated by 2 microM thapsigargin but had no effect on the thapsigargin-stimulated rise in intracellular Ca(2+). These results indicate that somatostatin peptides inhibit 23-pS basolateral K(+) channels in human colonic crypt cells via a G protein-dependent mechanism, which may result in loss of the channel's inherent Ca(2+) sensitivity.
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