(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2001;42:1847-1854.)
© 2001
by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
Two Types of K+ Currents Modulated by Arachidonic Acid in Bovine Corneal Epithelial Cells
Masayuki Takahira,
Norimasa Sakurada,
Yasunori Segawa and
Yutaka Shirao
From the Department of Ophthalmology, Kanazawa University School of Medicine, Japan.
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Abstract
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PURPOSE. Fenamate sensitivity of the large-conductance K+ current in
the corneal epithelium suggests that K+ transport could be
modulated by arachidonic acid (AA) and/or its metabolites, which also
regulate corneal epithelial migration. The main purpose of this study
was to investigate AA-induced modulation of K+ currents
expressed in the bovine corneal epithelium.
METHODS. Freshly isolated bovine corneal epithelial cells were perfused with
Ringer solution. Whole-cell currents were recorded by using either the
conventional whole-cellpatch or the perforated-patch configuration.
RESULTS. Two distinct types of K+ currents dominated the whole-cell
current. The first was a voltage-gated K+ current that was
inactivated completely by membrane depolarization. The inactivating
voltage-gated K+ current was largest in presumptive basal
cells. The second was a noisy, sustained K+ current that
was never inactivated and seemed to be a counterpart of the
large-conductance K+ current reported in the rabbit corneal
epithelium. External application of AA (520 µM) inhibited the
inactivating voltage-gated K+ current and augmented the
noisy, sustained K+ current. Identical dual modulation was
induced by other fatty acids (e.g., palmitoleic acid) that are not
substrates for enzymes in the AA cascade.
CONCLUSIONS. An inactivating voltage-gated K+ channel was identified for
the first time in the corneal epithelium. AA and some fatty acids may
directly activate the large-conductance K+ channel to
augment its housekeeping functions in corneal epithelial
cells.
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Introduction
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The corneal epithelium plays crucial roles in corneal
function, providing a refractive surface and serving as a barrier.
Epithelial migration and differentiation are important processes, not
only for epithelial turnover but also for corneal wound healing.
Recently, Watsky1
reported that a K+
current activated by fenamates is absent during corneal wound healing
in rabbits. This noninactivating K+ current
derives from a large-conductance K+ channel
identified in freshly dissociated rabbit corneal epithelium, which
constitutes the major K+ conductance in the basal
membrane.2
3
4
5
6
7
A recent study of cultured human corneal
epithelium demonstrated that fenamates activate two distinct types of
K+ current.8
The sensitivity of
these K+ channels to fenamates suggests that
arachidonic acid (AA) and/or its metabolites, which have been reported
to regulate corneal epithelial migration,9
10
could
modulate corneal K+ channel activities, but
details of this effect are unknown.
From studies of other tissues, it is thought that voltage-gated
K+ channels, which play a role in generating the
action potentials in excitable cells,11
may also
participate in developmental regulation,11
including cell
differentiation,12
proliferation,13
14
15
and
apoptosis.16
However, to our knowledge no voltage-gated
K+ current has been identified in the corneal
epithelium.
In the present study, we discovered that in addition to a counterpart
of the large-conductance K+ current, an
inactivating voltage-gated K+ current dominated
the whole-cell current in freshly isolated bovine corneal epithelial
cells. Modulation of these K+ currents by AA and
by some fatty acids was also investigated.
 |
Methods
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Solutions
External and internal solutions were buffered with HEPES, as in
previous patchclamp studies of corneal epithelium1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
and essentially the same as the solutions used in a patchclamp study
on the bovine retinal pigment epithelium (RPE).17
Briefly,
the standard Ringer solution consisted of (in mM) 135 NaCl, 5.0 KCl, 10
HEPES, 10 glucose, 1.8 CaCl2, and 1.0
MgCl2 and was titrated to pH 7.4 with NaOH. The
standard pipette solution consisted of (in mM) 30 KCl, 83 potassium
gluconate, 5.0 HEPES, 5.5 EGTA-KOH, 0.5 CaCl2
(
10-8 M free
Ca2+, calculated using Calcium, a computer
program in Basic18
), and 2.0 MgCl2
and was titrated to pH 7.2 with KOH. In the whole-cellpatch
configuration, 2 mM adenosine triphosphate (ATP;
Mg2+ salt) was added to the pipette solution. In
the perforated-patch configuration, 20 µl amphotericin B stock
solution (1.2 mg amphotericin B/50 µl dimethyl sulfoxide [DMSO])
was added to 2.0 ml of the pipette solution to give a final
concentration of 240 µg/ml. The cell isolation medium was similar to
that used in a previous study of RPE17
and contained (in
mM) 135 N-methyl-D-glutamine
(NMDG)-Cl, 5.0 KCl, 10 HEPES, 3.0 EDTA-KOH, 10 glucose, 3.0 cysteine,
1.0 glutathione, 1.0 L(+)-ascorbic acid, 1.0
taurine, and 0.2 mg/ml papain (type III) and was titrated to pH 7.4
with NaOH.
In experiments in which the concentrations of K+,
Cs+, or tetraethylammonium+
(TEA+) were varied, NaCl was replaced by an
equimolar amount of the appropriate Cl- salt.
Diltiazem was dissolved in DMSO and diluted in Ringer solution (DMSO
<0.1%). Perfusates containing AA and other fatty acids were made just
before the experiments by dilution of the stock solutions, in either
methanol or DMSO. Throughout the experiments, final concentrations of
methanol and DMSO in perfusates were no more than 0.1% and 0.2%,
respectively, which by themselves did not affect the whole-cell
currents in this study.
NaCl, KCl, CaCl2, and L(+)-ascorbic
acid were obtained from Wako Chemical Co. (Osaka, Japan). The remaining
reagents were obtained from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO).
Cell Isolation
All experiments were conducted in accordance with the ARVO
Statement for the Use of Animals in Ophthalmic and Vision Research.
Bovine eyes were enucleated at a local abattoir just after death and
transferred to the laboratory within 30 minutes. A 5 x 5 to 8 x 8 mm
square piece of the epitheliumstroma was cut from the central cornea
and was incubated in the cell isolation medium for 10 minutes. The
tissue was transferred to standard Ringer solution containing 0.1%
bovine serum albumin for 3 minutes and incubated in the standard Ringer
solution for 10 minutes followed by gentle vortexing. This series of
incubations was repeated two or three times before isolated cells were
seen in a sample of the suspension under microscopy. The cell
suspension was stored for up to 24 hours at 4°C before use.
Cell Perfusion
The isolated corneal epithelial cells were transferred to a
lucite perfusion chamber (RC-5/25; Warner Instruments, Hamden, CT) and
settled for 10 to 20 minutes before perfusion. The perfusate flowed
into the chamber under gravity at a flow rate of 0.7 ml/min by a
perfusion system (BPS-4; ALA Scientific Instruments, Westbury, NY) and
was continuously removed by suction. Fluid height was adjusted to give
a chamber volume of approximately 0.5 ml and a complete solution
exchange within 2 minutes. All experiments were conducted at room
temperature (2025°C).
Electrophysiological Methods
Patch pipettes were pulled from borosilicate glass tubing
(BF150110-10; Sutter Instruments, San Rafael, CA) with a multistage
programmable puller (P-97; Sutter Instruments). The pipette input
resistance was between 1 and 3 M
. Under phase-contrast microscopy
(Eclipse TE300; Nikon, Tokyo, Japan), a target cell was selected (see
the Results section), and the pipette tip was pressed onto the cell
membrane by using a micromanipulator (MP-285; Sutter Instruments) to
establish a gigaohm seal. Currents under voltage clamp were recorded by
an amplifier system (EPC-8; Heka, Lambrecht, Germany). The built-in
low-pass filter was set to 3 kHz, unless noted otherwise. Recordings
were referenced to an Ag-AgCl electrode (EP-2; WPI, Sarasota, FL). The
membrane capacitance was compensated by built-in circuits. The apparent
membrane potential was corrected by the pipette tip potential (10 mV).
Statistical data are presented as mean ± SD. Data were fitted by
a nonlinear least-squares fitting on computer (IGOR Pro software;
Wavemetrics, Lake Oswego, OR).
 |
Results
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Isolated Corneal Epithelial Cells
Cells with thick membrane and dense intracellular material under
phase-contrast microscopy (magnification, x400) were selected for
recording. Relatively large (>25 µm in diameter) and flat cells,
indicating superficial cells,4
were excluded. Cells most
commonly observed were relatively small (1520 µm in diameter) and
round, showing poor polarity (Fig. 1)
. Some cells, however, appeared columnar with distinct polarity (Fig. 1)
. The latter were morphologically similar to the basal cells in a
vertical slice of the intact bovine cornea (not shown). However, we
could not determine precisely which layer of the corneal epithelium
(superficial, midepithelial, or basal) the round cells came from.
Therefore, data from cells with and without polarity were pooled in
this study.

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Figure 1. Photomicrograph of isolated bovine corneal epithelial cells. A columnar
cell was clamped by a patch pipette. Another round cell is also seen.
Bar, 30 µm.
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Electrophysiological Parameters
In the perforated-patch configuration, the series resistance
(Rs) and the membrane capacitance
(Cm) were calculated from
uncompensated capacitative transients.19
Rs and
Cm averaged respectively 32 ± 13
M
and 14 ± 4 pF for the perforated-patch recordings (n
= 34). In the conventional whole-cell configuration (n
= 154), Rs and
Cm could not be precisely determined,
because capacitative transients were too fast (
< 0.1 msec),
although Rs was usually less than 10
M
. The zero-current potential (V0)
measured after establishment of the whole cell mode was -24.2 ±
9.9 mV in 188 cells bathed with the standard Ringer solution. These
values were less negative than those of the rabbit corneal epithelium
reported in several studies.3
4
5
6
7
In another study in
rabbit, Watanabe et al.20
reported that dissociated
corneal epithelial cells had considerably less negative potentials (>
-10 mV), which might be caused by cell dissociation or storage.
Whole-Cell Current
Figure 2
A shows an example of whole-cell currents recorded from a bovine
epithelial cell using the standard Ringer and pipette solutions. When
the membrane was held at -70 mV, voltage steps to test potentials
greater than 0 mV (upper panel) generated noisy currents that rose to a
peak and decreased slowly, indicating channel inactivation. In
contrast, when the holding potential was set at -10 mV (lower panel),
the inactivating component was not elicited by voltage steps to the
same potentials (>0 mV), but noisy outward currents remained.
Therefore, the bovine corneal epithelium apparently exhibited two types
of outwardly rectifying currents: The first was an inactivating,
voltage-dependent current, and the other was a noisy current that was
independent of the holding potential. The latter seems to be a
counterpart of the large-conductance K+ current
in rabbit corneal epithelial cells2
3
4
5
6
7
(described later).

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Figure 2. Representative whole-cell currents expressed in the bovine corneal
epithelial cells. In each cell (A, B, and
C), whole-cell currents were elicited by 200-msec voltage
steps ranging from +50 to -50 mV in -20-mV increments from a holding
potential (HP) of -70 or -10 mV. The different scales for the current
amplitudes are shown. Currentvoltage (I-V) relationships are depicted
for each cell (bottom panels) with HP of -70 () and -10
mV ( ). Current amplitudes were averaged between 100 and 200 msec for
the I-V plots in (A) and (C). For the I-V plots
in (B), the peak amplitudes were measured when the
inactivating voltage-gated K+ current activated.
Otherwise, steady state current amplitudes (180200 msec) were used.
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Magnitudes of these two types of K+ currents
varied considerably between cells. In 40 cells where the peak current
elicited by a voltage step to +50 mV from -70 mV was larger than 500
pA (no leak subtraction, mean 944 ± 333 pA), the inactivating
current was dominant, whereas the noisy current was negligible (Fig. 2B) . In voltage dependence and kinetics, the inactivating current
seemed to derive from a type of voltage-gated K+
channel that has been reported in other unexcitable
cells.11
The inactivating voltage-gated
K+ current was expressed in 130 of 188 total
cells. In the remaining 58 cells, only the noisy current was expressed
(Fig. 2C)
. Currents elicited by membrane depolarization from a holding
potential of -70 mV showed no decay, indicating no inactivation. Of
interest, the inactivating voltage-gated K+
current was often large in amplitude when we selected the columnar
cells, although the relationship between K+
current expression and cell types (superficial, midepithelial, or
basal) could not be analyzed systematically.
General properties of the two K+ currents are
shown separately in the following sections.
Inactivating Voltage-Gated K+ Current
The activation threshold of the inactivating voltage-gated
K+ current in the bovine corneal epithelium was
usually approximately -30 mV (Fig. 2B)
, which is similar to that of
native delayed rectifier-type K+ currents in
other cells.11
The activation kinetics became faster as
the membrane potential was made more positive (Fig. 2B)
. Although
current activation was too fast to model kinetics precisely, the
activation time course seemed to be well fitted by the Hodgkin-Huxley
n2 model21
(Fig. 3A
).

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Figure 3. Activation and inactivation of the voltage-gated K+
current. (A) Activation kinetics. Membrane depolarization in
response to the voltages indicated activated currents with a sigmoid
time course. Currents were recorded in the conventional whole-cell
configuration with a low-pass filter of 5 kHz. The smooth curve is the
fit of the data to the Hodgkin-Huxley
n2 model as follows:
with act of 4.60 (+20 mV),
6.49 (+10 mV), and 9.85 msec (0 mV). (B) Inactivation
kinetics. The smooth curves are exponential fits of the data at
voltages ranging from +40 to -10 mV in -10-mV increments with
inact of 498, 505, 692, 775, 1137, and 1708
msec, respectively. (C) Steady state inactivation. Peak
currents elicited by voltage pulses to + 40 mV after 30-second
prepulses to various test potentials were measured (inset)
and the normalized mean values were plotted (n = 3). The
smooth curve is the least-square fit of the data to a Boltzmann
function as follows:
with V1/2 (the
prepulse voltage at which the current is half-maximum) of -30.0 mV and
kn (the steepness of the slope) of +6.3
mV.
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The inactivation time course was well fitted by an exponential function
(Fig. 3B)
. The time constant of inactivation
(
inact) at +40 mV for 2 seconds was
615 ± 135 msec in seven cells recorded with the conventional
whole-cell configuration. Considering this value of
inact, we would call this delayed rectifier,
rather than A-type K+ current, because of its
slow rate of inactivation (
inact > 100 msec).
The voltage dependence of steady state inactivation (Fig. 3C)
indicates
that maximal conductance of the inactivating voltage-gated
K+ current could be obtained when the membrane
was depolarized from a holding potential of -70 mV and that the
inactivation was almost complete when the holding potential was -10
mV. Because the complete recovery from inactivation after full
activation took approximately 10 seconds at -70 mV (data not shown),
the interval between voltage steps was set at 15 seconds in all trials.
Membrane repolarization around the peak of the inactivating
voltage-gated K+ current produced a tail current,
due to channel deactivation (Fig. 4A
). In seven cells in which the tail current was analyzed (Fig. 4A
,
inset) the reversal potential was -71.9 ± 4.2 mV, indicating
high selectivity to K+
(EK = -80 mV). The
conductancevoltage relationship of the inactivating voltage-gated
K+ current (Fig. 4B) shows that its activation
threshold was positive to -30 mV and that the voltage at which
conductance was half maximum (V1/2) was
-7.6 mV. Conductance declined at a membrane potential more positive
than +30 mV.

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Figure 4. Voltage dependence of the inactivating voltage-gated K+
current. (A) Tail-current analysis to determine the reversal
potential. Tail currents due to channel deactivation were produced by
membrane repolarization (range: -75 to -55 mV) after a brief
depolarization that fully activated the channel. The filter was set to
5 kHz. The reversal potential was determined from plots of tail-current
magnitudes calculated by exponential fit of the data, as
representatively shown (inset). In this cell, the reversal
potential was -68 mV. (B) Conductancevoltage
relationship. Conductance (G) of the inactivating
voltage-gated K+ channel in each cell was
calculated using the equation: G =
Ip/(V -
Vr), where
Ip is the peak current and
Vr is the reversal potential
determined by tail-current analysis as in (A).
Conductancevoltage plots were well fitted by a Boltzmann function:
Each point depicts the average conductance for seven cells
(Gmax = 8.21 ± 2.45 nS). The
smooth curve is the least-square fit of data to the Boltzmann equation,
with V1/2 of -5.5 mV and
kn of -7.6 mV.
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External application of TEA+, one of the classic
K+ channel blockers, inhibited the inactivating
voltage-gated K+ current in a dose-dependent
manner. The inhibition was almost complete at a concentration of 5 mM
(seven of seven cells, data not shown). At a lower concentration (0.5
mM), TEA+ inhibited the peak amplitude partially without
changing the inactivation kinetics (Fig. 5
, similar results in the other four cells). Another classic
K+ channel blocker, 4-aminopyridine (4-AP),
inhibited the inactivating voltage-gated K+
current completely at a concentration of 2 mM (n = 4). The
inactivating voltage-gated K+ current was
relatively insensitive to external 20 µM apamin (6.7% ± 6.5%
inhibition in three cells), a known blocker of some A-type
K+ currents.11
External 20 µM
diltiazem, which completely blocks the large-conductance
K+ current in the rabbit corneal
epithelium,3
partially inhibited the inactivating
voltage-gated K+ current (29% ± 18% inhibition
of peak amplitudes in four cells). The inactivating voltage-gated
K+ current was sensitive to 2 mM
Ba2+ (100% inhibition in two cells) but not to 2
mM Cs+ (1% ± 2% inhibition in three cells).

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Figure 5. TEA+-induced inhibition of the voltage-gated K+
current. Currents generated by membrane depolarizations to +30 mV from
a holding potential of -70 mV in absence and presence of 0.5 mM
TEA+. Smooth traces are exponential fits of
inactivating current decays with inact of 375 (control)
and 395 msec (TEA+).
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Sustained K+ Current
In some cells the only major current was a noisy, outwardly
rectifying current that was never inactivated (Fig. 2C)
. Previous
studies of rabbit corneal epithelium have shown that external fenamates
enhance a noisy K+ current known as the
large-conductance K+ current.4
In
bovine corneal epithelial cells, external application of the fenamate,
niflumic acid (500 µM), markedly augmented a noisy current that
reversed near EK, identifying it as a
K+-selective current (Fig. 6
, similar results in the other three cells). Another fenamate,
flufenamic acid (100 µM), also stimulated the noisy, sustained
K+ current (n = 3, data not shown).
These results indicate that bovine corneal epithelial cells express a
counterpart of the large-conductance K+ current.

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Figure 6. Effects of niflumic acid (NA) on K+ currents. Families of
whole-cell currents elicited by voltage steps (range: +50 to -50 mV)
from a holding potential of -10 mV in absence and presence of 0.5 mM
NA. Currents in the currentvoltage graph represent averaged values
between 100 and 200 msec at each voltage. () Control; ( ) NA.
Continuous curves are data generated by a voltage ramp protocol. Note
crossover of curves near EK.
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Modulation by AA
Fenamates are well-known inhibitors of the cyclooxygenase pathway
in the AA cascade, which suggests that the fenamate-induced activation
could be caused by the buildup of AA and/or changes in the levels of
certain AA metabolites of the cytochrome P-450 oxygenase and
lipoxygenase pathways. External application of AA (10 µM) mimicked
the effect of fenamates (Fig. 7A
). Again, the reversal potential was near
EK. Similar results were obtained in
all 23 cells perfused with AA (5 or 10 µM). The current at +50 mV
increased from 99 ± 79 pA in the standard Ringer solution to
491 ± 424 pA after exposure to AA (5 or 10 µM in 23 cells, Fig. 7B
) for 10.0 ± 2.5 minutes, which is significant by a paired
t-test (P = 0.000046). The noisy, sustained
K+ current activated by AA was completely blocked
by external application of 20 µM diltiazem (n = 3, Fig. 7C
), which is known to inhibit the large-conductance
K+ current in the rabbit corneal
epithelium.3
TEA+ (5 mM), a potent inhibitor
of the inactivating voltage-gated K+ current, did
not affect the noisy K+ current (n =
4). These results regarding the voltage-dependence, kinetics, and
pharmacologic properties of the noisy, sustained
K+ current enhanced by AA further support the
idea that it is a counterpart of the large-conductance
K+ current described in the rabbit corneal
epithelium.2
3
4
5
6
7
AA-induced activation of the sustained K+ current
was unaffected by preincubation of cells with either lipoxygenase
inhibitors (10 µM 5,8,11-eicosatriynoic acid [ETI], n
= 2 and 10 µM nordihydroguaiaretic acid [NDGA], n =
3) or a cytochrome P-450 oxygenase inhibitor (10 µM clotrimazole,
n = 3; data not shown), indicating that metabolites of these
pathways did not mediate the response.
In cells expressing the inactivating voltage-gated
K+ current, external application of 10 µM AA
blocked it completely before the augmentation of the noisy, sustained
K+ current developed (in seven of seven cells,
Fig. 7D
). A lower concentration of 2 µM AA inhibited the peak current
partially and accelerated the inactivation kinetics markedly (n
= 4, Fig. 7D
). This inhibition was qualitatively different from
that of TEA+, which did not affect inactivation kinetics
(Fig. 5)
. The AA-induced activation of the noisy, sustained
K+ current is also shown in Figure 7D
.
Modulation by Fatty Acids
To date, many studies have reported that AA modulates
K+ channels.22
In smooth muscle,
several fatty acids that are not substrates for enzymes in the AA
cascade mimic the AA-induced K+ channel
activation, suggesting that AA activates the K+
channel as a direct mediator.23
We also investigated
whether fatty acids affect the two types of K+
channels in the bovine corneal epithelium. Figure 8
A shows a representative example in which palmitoleic acid (20 µM)
mimicked the effect of AA on the inactivating voltage-gated
K+ currentthat is, the peak current decreased
and the inactivation kinetics accelerated. In 10 cells, 20 µM
palmitoleic acid inhibited the peak current at +50 mV by 51% ± 22%
and decreased the inactivation time constant
(
inact) to less than 50 msec. The effects of
AA and other fatty acids on the inactivating voltage-gated
K+ current are summarized in Table 1
. Palmitoleic acid and linolelaidic acid, as well as AA,
inhibited the peak current but accelerated the inactivation. Myristic
acid and oleic acid inhibited the peak current partially without
changing the kinetics (data not shown).

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Figure 8. Effects of palmitoleic acid (PA) on K+ currents.
(A) Effects of PA on the inactivating voltage-gated
K+ current. The voltage-gated
K+ current was elicited by a voltage step to +50
mV from -70 mV in absence and presence of 20 µM PA. Subsequent
addition of 2 mM 4-AP blocked the inactivating voltage-gated
K+ current completely. (B) PA-induced
augmentation of the noisy, sustained K+ current.
Families of whole-cell currents were generated by voltage steps (range:
+40 to -60 mV) from a holding potential of -10 mV in absence and
presence of 50 µM PA. The average currents between 100 and 200 msec
are depicted in the currentvoltage graph. () Control; ( ) PA.
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In addition to the inhibitory modulation of the inactivating
voltage-gated K+ current, these fatty acids had a
stimulatory effect on the noisy, sustained K+
current that mimicked the AA-induced activation. Figure 8B
shows an
example in which palmitoleic acid (50 µM) augmented the sustained
K+ current markedly. In 12 of 17 cells, the
sustained K+ current increased in the presence of
20 or 50 µM palmitoleic acid. Effects of other fatty acids on the
sustained K+ current are summarized in Table 1
.
Fatty acids that accelerated inactivation of the voltage-gated
K+ current were potent stimulators of the
sustained K+ current as well.
 |
Discussion
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We identified two types of dominant macroscopic
K+ currents in the bovine corneal epithelial
cells. The first is an inactivating K+ current
with characteristics identifying it as a member of the voltage-gated
K+ channel family. So far, this is the first
description of an inactivating voltage-gated K+
current in the corneal epithelium. Another is a noisy, sustained
K+ current that resembles the large-conductance
K+ current in the rabbit. Previous studies have
shown that the rabbit large-conductance K+
current begins to open at -100 mV, is never inactivated during
prolonged membrane depolarization, and is inhibited by quinidine,
diltiazem, and Ba2+, but not by TEA+
or 4-AP.4
7
24
We determined that AA can act as a direct mediator, because some fatty
acids that are not substrates for enzymes in the AA cascade mimicked
the AA-induced activation, as reported first in the smooth
muscle.23
The alternative possibility that AA acts through
its metabolites seems unlikely, because AA-induced activation was
unaffected by some inhibitors of enzymes in the AA cascade. Contrary to
the stimulatory effect on the sustained K+
current, AA suppressed the inactivating voltage-gated
K+ current in amplitude but accelerated the
inactivation kinetics. Here again, other fatty acids mimicked the
AA-induced inhibition (Table 1)
, indicating that AA inhibits the
channel directly, as opposed to one of its metabolites.
To date, studies have shown that AA plays crucial roles in the cornea
in mediating wound healing, inflammation, and
angiogenesis.9
10
25
26
In contrast, only a few studies
have described roles of other fatty acids in corneal physiology:
stimulation of chloride transport in frog corneal
epithelium27
and inhibition of corneal deswelling in
rabbit.28
In this report, we describe for the first time a
mechanism by which K+ transport in the corneal
epithelium may be modulated by fatty acids. Previous reports suggest
that the physiological roles of the large-conductance
K+ channel are to maintain the resting
potential4
and to regulate cell volume.5
7
When AA levels increase during inflammation or wound healing, AA may
directly modulate this K+ channel to augment
these housekeeping functions.
Physiological roles of the inactivating voltage-gated
K+ channel in the corneal epithelium are not
clear. Because of its low threshold of activation and complete
inactivation, it cannot contribute to the resting potential. Generally,
voltage-gated K+ channels are widely expressed in
excitable cells and regulate action potentials.11
It is
also known, however, that voltage-gated K+
channels participate in cell migration, proliferation, and
differentiation, not only in excitable cells12
but also in
unexcitable cells.13
14
15
Although voltage-gated
K+ channels are generally rare in native
epithelial cells,11
they exist in some ocular epithelia
such as the lens29
and the RPE.17
30
It was
notable in the present study that the inactivating voltage-gated
K+ current was often large in amplitude when
columnar cells (presumptive basal cell) were selected, whereas it was
sometimes absent in nonpolarized cells. These results indicate that the
inactivating voltage-gated K+ current may play a
role in corneal cell differentiation. Further investigations are needed
to test this hypothesis.
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Acknowledgements
|
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The authors thank Bret A. Hughes (University of Michigan) and Kazuo
Kawasaki for critical comments, Mari Goto for technical assistance, and
the Kanazawa City Meat Inspection Office for donation of bovine eyes.
 |
Footnotes
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Supported by Grant-in-Aid 09771414 and 11771043 from the Ministry of
Education, Japan (MT).
Submitted for publication October 6, 2000; revised February 27, 2001;
accepted March 9, 2001.
Commercial relationships policy: N.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page
charge payment. This article must therefore be marked
"advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734
solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Masayuki Takahira, Takara-Machi 13-1, Department
of Ophthalmology, Kanazawa University School of Medicine, Kanazawa
920-8640, Japan. takahira{at}kenroku.kanazawa-u.ac.jp
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