Abstract
Ionic channels are discrete sites at which the passive movement of ions takes place during nervous excitation. Three types of channels are distinguished. 1. Leakage channels that are permanently open to various cations. 2. Na channels that open promptly on depolarization but slowly close again (inactivate) on sustained depolarization and that are predominantly permeable to Na+ ions. 3. K channels that on depolarization open after some delay but stay open and that are mainly passed by K+ ions. The selectivity sequence of the Na channels of the squid axon (or frog nerve) is as follows: Na+ ≈ Li+>(T1+)>NH+ 4≫K+> Rb+, Cs+; that of K channels is: (T1+)>K+>Rb+>NH+ 4≫Na+, Cs+, Na channels are selectively blocked by tetrodotoxin (TTX) or saxitoxin (STX), K channels by tetraethylammonium ions (TEA). Either channel type is reversibly blocked when one drug molecule binds to one site per channel, the equilibrium dissociation constant of these reactions being about 3×10−9 MTTX (or STX) and 4×10−4 M TEA, respectively. Because of their specificity and high affinity, TTX and STX are used to “titrate” the Na channels whose density appears to be of the order of 100/Μm2. The “gates” of the channels operate as a function of potential and time but independent of the permeating ion species. Drugs (e.g. veratridine) and enzymes (e.g. pronase, applied intraaxonally) cause profound changes in the gating function of the Na channels without influencing their selectivity. This points to separate structures for gating and ion discrimination. The latter is thought to be, in part, brought about by a “selectivity filter” of which detailed structural ideas exist. Recent experiments suggest that the gates of the Na channels are controlled by charged particles moving within the membrane under the influence of the electrical field.
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Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.
I should like to thank Drs. H.-H. Wagner and M. Mályusz for reading the manuscript.
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Ulbricht, W. Ionic channels through the axon membrane (a review). Biophys. Struct. Mechanism 1, 1–16 (1974). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01022556
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01022556