Journal of Pharmacological Sciences (Jan 2008)

Two Types of Cation Channel Activated by Stimulation of Muscarinic Receptors in Guinea-Pig Urinary Bladder Smooth Muscle

  • Masayuki Yamamoto,
  • Toshihiro Unno,
  • Hayato Matsuyama,
  • Masanobu Kohda,
  • Noriyuki Masuda,
  • Masakazu Nishimura,
  • Toshiaki Ishii,
  • Seiichi Komori

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 108, no. 3
pp. 248 – 257

Abstract

Read online

The present study, aiming to elucidate ion channel mechanisms underlying muscarinic receptor–induced depolarization, has characterized membrane currents induced by carbachol in single guinea-pig urinary bladder myocytes. Application of carbachol to cells that were voltage-clamped at − 50 mV produced an atropine-sensitive, biphasic inward current consisting of an initial peak followed by a smaller sustained phase. Replacing the extracellular Na+ and intracellular Cl− with impermeable tris+ and glutamate−, respectively, demonstrated that the biphasic current is entirely composed of cation currents. Its initial peak phase was abolished by buffering intracellular Ca2+ to a constant level of 100 nM or depleting intracellular Ca2+ stores, and it was mimicked by the Ca2+ releaser caffeine. Ca2+ entry evoked by voltage steps in the sustained phase induced no noticeable change, indicating that this phase of cation current is insensitive to a rise of [Ca2+]i. These results demonstrate that muscarinic receptor stimulation invokes the openings of two types of cation channel, a Ca2+-activated and a receptor-operated type; the former channels are gated by a rise in [Ca2+]i upon intracellular Ca2+ release, and the latter are gated through other muscarinic receptor–coupled signal transduction mechanisms. Keywords:: cation channel, muscarinic receptor, carbachol, bladder smooth muscle, guinea pig