Charybdotoxin, a protein inhibitor of single Ca2+-activated K+ channels from mammalian skeletal muscle
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Miller, Christopher
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Charybdotoxin, a protein inhibitor of single Ca2+-activated K+ channels from mammalian skeletal muscle
Abstract
The recent development of techniques for recording currents through single ionic channels1 has led to the identification of a K +-specific channel that is activated by cytoplasmic Ca2+ (refs 2-12). The channel has complex properties, being activated by depolarizing voltages and having a voltage-sensitivity that is modulated by cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels. The conduction behaviour of the channel is also unusual, its high ionic selectivity being displayed simultaneously with a very high unitary conductance2,4,12. Very little is known about the biochemistry of this channel, largely due to the lack of a suitable ligand for use as a biochemical probe for the channel. We describe here a protein inhibitor of single Ca2+-activated K+ channels of mammalian skeletal muscle. This inhibitor, a minor component of the venom of the Israeli scorpion, Leiurus quinquestriatus, reversibly blocks the large Ca 2+-activated K+ channel in a simple bimolecular reaction. We have partially purified the active compo
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/154177
DOI: 10.1038/313316a0
ISSN: 00280836
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Nature, Volumen 313, Issue 6000, 2018, Pages 316-318
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