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Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale Unité U114, Collège de France, 75231 Paris, Cedex 05, France
In the brain, astrocytes represent a major target for endothelins (ETs), a family of peptides that can be released by several cell types and that have potent and multiple effects on astrocytic functions. Four types of K+ currents (IK) were detected in various proportions by patch-clamp recordings of cultured striatal astrocytes, including the A-type IK, the inwardly rectifying IK IR, the Ca2+-dependent IK (IK Ca), and the delayed-rectified IK (IK DR). Variations in the shape of current-voltage relationships were related mainly to differences in the proportion of these currents. ET-1 was found to regulate with opposite effects the two more frequently recorded outward K+ currents in striatal astrocytes. Indeed, this peptide induced an initial activation of IK Ca (composed of SK and BK channels) and a delayed long-lasting inhibition of IK DR. In current-clamp recordings, the activation of IK Ca correlated with a transient hyperpolarization, whereas the inhibition of IK DR correlated with a sustained depolarization. These ET-1-induced sequential changes in membrane potential in astrocytes may be important for the regulation of voltage gradients in astrocytic networks and the maintenance of K+ homeostasis in the brain microenvironment.
glial cells; endothelins; calcium-dependent potassium channels
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