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Department of Physiology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester 01655.
The effects of the beta-adrenergic agent isoproterenol on membrane currents were studied in freshly dissociated gastric smooth muscle cells of Bufo marinus. Voltage-clamp experiments were carried out with patch pipettes in the tight-seal, whole-cell recording mode or with conventional microelectrodes. Isoproterenol induced a current identified as M current by the following criteria: the induced current is outward and carried by K+ ions, is suppressed by muscarine or acetylcholine, remains steadily activated, turns off with hyperpolarization, and exhibits slow relaxations in response to voltage jumps. In contrast to endogenous M current, isoproterenol-induced M current usually exhibited slower relaxations on hyperpolarizing voltage commands and displayed a steady-state conductance/voltage relationship that was shifted in the negative direction along the voltage axis. M current was also induced by either forskolin or phosphodiesterase-resistant cAMP analogs. In all cases, muscarinic agonists suppressed the M current, apparently by acting at a locus downstream from regulation of cAMP levels by adenylate cyclase and phosphodiesterase. beta-Adrenergic agents may act to increase the number of M channels available to be opened and also modify their kinetics.
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