Drugs, Drug Targets and You: Patch Clamping

Similar documents
Neuroscience 201A Problem Set #1, 27 September 2016

Nervous System. Master controlling and communicating system of the body. Secrete chemicals called neurotransmitters

Chapter 3 subtitles Action potentials

Communication within a Neuron

35-2 The Nervous System Slide 1 of 38

EE 791 Lecture 2 Jan 19, 2015

Membrane Structure, Resting membrane potential, Action potential. Biophysics seminar

LESSON 3.2 WORKBOOK How do our neurons communicate with each other?

Questions. Question 1!

Quantitative Electrophysiology

Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling

Sample Lab Report 1 from 1. Measuring and Manipulating Passive Membrane Properties

AP Biology Unit 6. The Nervous System

BI 232: Human Anatomy & Physiology

Ameen Alsaras. Ameen Alsaras. Mohd.Khatatbeh

Cellular Neurobiology BIPN 140 Fall 2016 Problem Set #1

Chapter 3 Neurotransmitter release

ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF NEURONS. AP Biology Chapter 48

6.5 Nerves, Hormones and Homeostasis

BIONB/BME/ECE 4910 Neuronal Simulation Assignments 1, Spring 2013

Branches of the Nervous System

Chapter 2: Cellular Mechanisms and Cognition

In the Name of God, the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate. Movement of substances across the plasma membrane

Skeletal Muscle Contraction 5/11/2017 Dr. Hiwa Shafiq

Plasma Membrane Structure and Function

STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM

nachr α 4 β 2 CHO Cell Line

The Nervous System 12/11/2015

PMT. Explain the importance of reflex actions (3) Page 1 of 19

Endocrine System Nervous System

General Principles of Endocrine Physiology

NEURONS Chapter Neurons: specialized cells of the nervous system 2. Nerves: bundles of neuron axons 3. Nervous systems

Introduction to Neurobiology

Cells: The Living Units

Endocrine System Nervous System

Skeletal Muscle Contraction 4/11/2018 Dr. Hiwa Shafiq

Chapter 45: Synapses Transmission of Nerve Impulses Between Neurons. Chad Smurthwaite & Jordan Shellmire

(a) Gene for NMDA receptor subunit knocked out selectively in hippocampus No LTP in hippocampal region CA1, no water-maze learning by mouse.

Thursday, January 22, Nerve impulse

Chapter 5 subtitles GABAergic synaptic transmission

Cell Membrane and Transport

The action potential travels down both branches because each branch is a typical axon with voltage dependent Na + and K+ channels.

The Nervous System AP Biology

Chapter 2. The Cellular and Molecular Basis of Cognition Cognitive Neuroscience: The Biology of the Mind, 2 nd Ed.,

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR NEUROSCIENCE

Chapter 2. The Cellular and Molecular Basis of Cognition

THE NERVOUS SYSTEM. Neurons & Impulses

Implantable Microelectronic Devices

Lecture Series 4 Cellular Membranes

Neurophysiology scripts. Slide 2

Neurons and Nervous Systems

Applied Neuroscience. Conclusion of Science Honors Program Spring 2017

211MDS Pain theories

NS200: In vitro electrophysiology section September 11th, 2013

Quantal Analysis Problems

Physiology of the nerve

Bioscience in the 21st century

Membrane transport. Small molecules. pumps. Large molecules

Razi Kittaneh & Leen Osama. Marah Bitar. Mohammad Khatatbeh

Chapter 2 The Brain or Bio Psychology

Chapter 11 Introduction to the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Chapter Outline

The Nervous System. Nervous System Functions 1. gather sensory input 2. integration- process and interpret sensory input 3. cause motor output

Nerve. (2) Duration of the stimulus A certain period can give response. The Strength - Duration Curve

Cellular Neurophysiology I Membranes and Ion Channels

Ch. 45 Continues (Have You Read Ch. 45 yet?) u Central Nervous System Synapses - Synaptic functions of neurons - Information transmission via nerve

Synaptic Integration

Chapter 7. Objectives

Chapter 7. The Nervous System: Structure and Control of Movement

Summarized by B.-W. Ku, E. S. Lee, and B.-T. Zhang Biointelligence Laboratory, Seoul National University.

1) Drop off in the Bi 150 box outside Baxter 331 or to the head TA (jcolas).

BRIEF COMMUNICATION CALCIUM- AND VOLTAGE-ACTIVATED POTASSIUM CHANNELS IN HUMAN MACROPHAGES. frequency of channel opening increased with depolarization

Respiration Cellular Respiration Understand the relationship between glucose breakdown and ATP when you burn glucose with the help of oxygen, it

THE BRAIN I. INTRODUCTION. i) mass increase due to growth of axons, dendrites, synapses, myelin sheaths

Cell Membranes and Signaling

Station Neurons and synapses

THE EFFECT OF ZINC ON CALCIUM AND HYDROGEN ION CURRENTS IN INTACT SNAIL NEURONES BY M. P. MAHAUT-SMITH*

NEURONS COMMUNICATE WITH OTHER CELLS AT SYNAPSES 34.3

Chapter 3 Biological measurement 3.1 Nerve conduction

7.06 Spring of PROBLEM SET #6

Bear: Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain 3e

Local Anesthetics. Xiaoping Du Room E417 MSB Department of Pharmacology Phone (312) ;

NEUROCHEMISTRY Brief Review

Ch7: Membrane Structure & Function

2/27/2019. Functions of the Nervous System. Nervous Tissue and Neuron Function. Fundamentals Of The Nervous System And Nervous Tissue

LESSON 3.3 WORKBOOK. Why does applying pressure relieve pain? Workbook. Postsynaptic potentials

Membrane Structure. Membrane Structure. Membranes. Chapter 5

Is action potential threshold lowest in the axon?

In your answer, you should use appropriate technical terms, spelled correctly [4]

Neurons, Synapses and Signaling. Chapter 48

Lecture Series 5 Cellular Membranes

A. Membrane Composition and Structure. B. Animal Cell Adhesion. C. Passive Processes of Membrane Transport. D. Active Transport

Cell Membranes Valencia college

Cardiac muscle is different from other types of muscle in that cardiac muscle

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. Supplementary Figure 1

Major Structures of the Nervous System. Brain, cranial nerves, spinal cord, spinal nerves, ganglia, enteric plexuses and sensory receptors

Nervous tissue, charachteristics, neurons, glial cells

Functional Organization of Nervous Tissue. Nervous tissue, charachteristics, neurons, glial cells. The Nervous System. The Nervous System 21/12/2010

All biological membranes are bilayers of phospholipid. The proteins in each type of membrane give it its unique properties.

Transcription:

Drugs, Drug Targets and You: Patch Clamping Introduction To elucidate how an ion channel operates, one needs to examine the factors that influence its opening and closing as well as measure the resulting current flow. For quite some time, the challenges involved in isolating a very small membrane area containing just a few ion channels or a single ion channel and measuring the extraordinarily small ionic currents proved to be insurmountable. Two cell physiologists, Edwin Neher and Bert Sakmann of the Max Planck Institute (in Göttingen, Germany), succeeded in developing a technique that allowed them to measure the membrane current of a single ion channel. They used a glass microelectrode, called a micropipette, having a diameter of the order of 1 µm. It is said that by accident they placed the electrode very close to the cell membrane so that it came in tight contact with it. The impedance of the measurement circuit then rose to about 50 GΩ (Neher and Sakmann, 1976). The current changes caused by single ion channels of the cell could then be measured by the voltage clamp method. This device came to be known as a patch clamp since it examined the behavior of a "patch" of membrane; it constitutes an excellent "space clamp" configuration. The patch clamp method was further developed to measure the capacitance of the cell membrane (Neher and Marty, 1982). Since the membrane capacitance is proportional to the membrane surface, an examination of minute changes in membrane surface area became possible. This feature has proven useful in studying secretory processes. Nerve cells, as well as hormone producing cells and cells engaged in the host defense (like mast cells), secrete different agents. They are stored in vesicles enclosed by a membrane. When the cell is stimulated, the vesicles move to the cell surface. The cell and vesicle membranes fuse, and the agent is liberated. The mast cell secretes histamine and other agents that give rise to local inflammatory reactions. The cells of the adrenal medulla liberate the stress hormone adrenaline, and the beta cells in the pancreas liberate insulin. Neher elucidated the secretory processes in these cell types through the development of the new technique which records the fusion of the vesicles with the cell membrane. Neher realized that the electric properties of a cell would change if its surface area increased, making it possible to record the actual secretory process. Through further developments of their sophisticated equipment, its high resolution finally permitted recording of individual vesicles fusing with the cell membrane. Neher and Sakmann received the Nobel Prize for their work, in 1991. Patch Clamp Measurement Techniques We discuss here the principles of the patch clamp measurement technique (Sakmann and Neher, 1984; Neher and Sakmann, 1992). We do not present the technical details, which can be found in the original literature (Hamill et al. 1981; Sakmann and Neher, 1984). There are four main methods in which a patch clamp experiment may be performed. These are: 1. Cell attached recording 2. Whole cell configuration 3. Outside out configuration 4. Inside out configuration These four configurations are further illustrated in Figure 4.27 and discussed in more detail below.

Figure 1. Schematic illustration of the four different methods of patch clamp: (A)cell attached recording, (B) whole cell configuration, (C) outside out configuration, and (D) inside out configuration. (Modified from Hamill et al., 1981.)

If a heat polished glass microelectrode, called a micropipette, having an opening of about 0.5 1 µm, is brought into close contact with an enzymatically cleaned cell membrane, it forms a seal on the order of 50 MΩ. Even though this impedance is quite high, within the dimensions of the micropipette the seal is too loose, and the current flowing through the micropipette includes leakage currents which enter around the seal (i.e., which do not flow across the membrane) and which therefore mask the desired (and very small) ion channel transmembrane currents. If a slight suction is applied to the micropipette, the seal can be improved by a factor of 100 1000. The resistance across the seal is then 10 100 GΩ ("G" denotes "giga" = 10 9 ). This tight seal, called gigaseal, reduces the leakage currents to the point where it becomes possible to measure the desired signal the ionic currents through the membrane within the area of the micropipette. Cell attached recording In the basic form of cell attached recording, the micropipette is brought into contact with the cell membrane, and a tight seal is formed by suction with the periphery of the micropipette orifice, as described above. Suction is normally released once the seal has formed, but all micropipette current has been eliminated except that flowing across the delineated membrane patch. As a consequence, the exchange of ions between the inside of the micropipette and the outside can occur only through whatever ion channels lie in the membrane fragment. In view of the small size, only a very few channels may lie in the patch of membrane under observation. When a single ion channel opens, ions move through the channel; these constitute an electric current, since ions are charged particles. Whole cell recording In the whole cell recording, the cell membrane within the micropipette in the cell attached configuration is ruptured with a brief pulse of suction. Now the micropipette becomes directly connected to the inside of the cell while the gigaseal is maintained; hence it excludes leakage currents. In contrast, the electric resistance is in the range of 2 10 MΩ. In this situation the microelectrode measures the current due to the ion channels of the whole cell. While the gigaseal is preserved, this situation is very similar to a conventional microelectrode penetration. The technique is particularly applicable to small cells in the size range of 5 20 µm in diameter, and yields good recordings in cells as small as red blood cells. Outside out configuration The outside out configuration is a microversion of the whole cell configuration. In this method, after the cell membrane is ruptured with a pulse of suction, the micropipette is pulled away from the cell. During withdrawal, a cytoplasmic bridge surrounded by membrane is first pulled from the cell. This bridge becomes more and more narrow as the separation between pipette and cell increases, until it collapses, leaving behind an intact cell and a small piece of membrane, which is isolated and attached to the end of the micropipette. The result is an attached membrane "patch" in which the former cell exterior is on the outside and the former cell interior faces the inside of the micropipette. With this method the outside of the cell membrane may be exposed to different bathing solutions; therefore, it may be used to investigate the behavior of single ion channels activated by extracellular receptors. Inside out configuration In the inside out configuration the micropipette is pulled from the cell attached situation without rupturing the membrane with a suction pulse. As in the outside out method, during withdrawal, a cytoplasmic bridge surrounded by the membrane is pulled out from the cell. This bridge becomes more and more narrow and finally collapses, forming a closed structure inside the pipette. This vesicle is not suitable for electric measurements. The part of the membrane outside the pipette may, however, be

broken with a short exposure to air, and thus the cytoplasmic side of the membrane becomes open to the outside (just the reverse of the outside out configuration). Inside out patches can also be obtained directly without air exposure if the withdrawal is performed in Ca free medium. With this configuration, by changing the ionic concentrations in the bathing solution, one can examine the effect of a quick change in concentration on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. It can therefore be used to investigate the cytoplasmic regulation of ion channels. Formation of an outside out or inside out patch may involve major structural rearrangements of the membrane. The effects of isolation on channel properties have been determined in some cases. It is surprising how minor these artifacts of preparation are for most of the channel types of cell membranes. Applications of the Patch Clamp Method From the four patch clamp techniques, the cell attached configuration disturbs least the structure and environment of the cell membrane. This method provides a current resolution several orders of magnitude larger than previous current measurement methods. The membrane voltage can be changed without intracellular microelectrodes, and both transmitter and voltage activated channels can be studied in their normal ionic environment. Figure 2 shows recording of the electric current of a single ion channel at the neuromuscular endplate of frog muscle fiber. In the whole cell configuration a conductive pathway of very low resistance as (i.e.,2 10 MΩ) is formed between the micropipette and the interior of the cell. When the whole cell configuration is utilized with large cells, it allows the researcher to measure membrane voltage and current, just as conventional microelectrode methods do. But when it is applied to very small cells, it provides, in addition, the conditions under which high quality voltage clamp measurements can be made. Voltage clamp recordings may be accomplished with the whole cell method for cells as small as red blood cells. Many other cell types could be studied for the first time under voltage clamp conditions in this way. Among them are bovine chromaffin cells, sinoatrial node cells isolated from rabbit heart, pancreatic islet cells, cultured neonatal heart cells, and ciliary ganglion cells. A chromaffin cell of 10 µm in diameter can serve to illustrate the electric parameters that may be encountered. This cell has a resting state input resistance of several giga ohms (GΩ) and active currents of about a few hundred picoamperes (pa). If the electrode has a series resistance R S of about 5 MΩ, that represents a negligible series resistance in the measurement configuration. The membrane capacitance C m is about 5 pf and thus the time constant τ m = R S C m is about 25 µs. Thus a voltage clamp measurement may be performed simply by applying a voltage to the micropipette and measuring the current in the conventional way. The outside out configuration is particularly well suited to those experiments where one wants to examine the ionic channels controlled by externally located receptors. The extracellular solution can be changed easily, allowing testing of effects of different transmitter substances or permeating ions. This configuration has been used to measure the dependence of conductance states of the AChR channel in embryonic cells on the permeating ion. The outside out patches have also been used to isolate transmitter gated Cl channels in the soma membrane of spinal cord neurones, in Aplysia neurones, and in the muscle membrane of Ascaris. The inside out configuration is suitable for experiments where the effects of the intracellular components of the ionic channels are under study. Such control over the composition of solutions on both sides of a membrane has been possible, in the past, only with quite involved techniques. Patch

clamp methods with the inside out configuration is a simple way to achieve this goal. Most of the studies to date have involved the role of intracellular Ca 2+. This configuration has also been used for permeability studies, and for exposing the inner surface of electrically excitable membranes to agents that remove Na + channel inactivation. Figure 2. Registration of the flow of current through a single ion channel at the neuromuscular endplate of frog muscle fiber with patch clamp method. (From Sakmann and Neher, 1984.) Adapted from http://www.bem.fi/book/04/04.htm Patch Clamp Animation Resource: http://sites.sinauer.com/neuroscience5e/animations04.01.html