- Experimental and theoretical studies on Tl+ interactions with the cation-selective channel of the sarcoplasmic reticulum.
Experimental and theoretical studies on Tl+ interactions with the cation-selective channel of the sarcoplasmic reticulum.
This paper presents an experimental study and a theoretical interpretation of the effects of thallous ion on the electrical properties of the cation-selective channel of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR channel). The properties of this channel in solutions which do not contain thallous ion are consistent with the predictions of Läuger's theory for singly occupied pores (P. Lüger, 1973, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 311:423-441). However, this theory does not account for SR channel properties in mixtures containing thallous ion. SR channel conductance is less than predicted in mixed salt solutions of thallium with either potassium or ammonium (J. Fox, 1983, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 736:241-245), yet is greater than expected in mixtures of lithium and thallium. In a simple single-ion pore, the ratio of the products of the single-salt binding constants and maximum conductances is equal to the permeability ratio calculated from zero-current potential experiments under near equilibrium conditions. This is not found for the SR channel when thallous ion is present. SR channel properties in the presence of thallous ion can, however, be explained by a model which postulates the existence of two external modulatory sites on the channel, without implying double-occupancy in the permeation pathway. When thallous ion is bound to a modulatory site the maximum conductance of the channel to all permeating ions is altered (thallous included). Two other models (a three-barrier, two-internal-site pore which allows multiple occupancy, and a pore with fluctuating barriers) are discussed, but are found to be unable to fit our conductance data at different concentrations.