Pj. Kemp et al., Re-evaluating the Na+ conductance of adult rat alveolar type II pneumocytes: evidence for the involvement of cGMP-activated cation channels, J PHYSL LON, 536(3), 2001, pp. 693-701
1. Alveolar epithelial type II pneumocytes were isolated and purified from
adult rat lung by elastase digestion and differential adhesion, and culture
d in serum-free medium for similar to2 days on glass coverslips for subsequ
ent patch-clamp studies employing symmetric also diumisethionate solutions.
2.Whole-cell Na(+)currents exhibited essentially linear current-voltage rel
ationships which were mildly inhibited (by similar to 25 %) by 10 muM amilo
ride. In contrast, 1 mM Zn2+ inhibited the currents by similar to 55 % with
an IC50 of similar to 134 muM and maximal blockade achieved between 5 and
10 mM. The effects of Zn2+ and amiloride were additive, and independent of
the order of blocker addition.
3. Gd2+, Zn2+ and La3+ at 10 mM were all effective at rapidly, reversibly a
nd significantly blocking the amiloride-insensitive currents by similar to
60%. In contrast, Ni2+ was a very weak inhibitor (30% inhibition at 10 rn N
i).
4. Pimozide (10 muM) caused inhibition of whole-cell cation conductance by
similar to 55 %. The inhibitory effect of pimozide was concentration depend
ent with an IC50 of -1 mum and was maximally effective between 10 and 30 mu
M. Sequential addition of Zn2+ and pimozide, in either order, revealed no o
verlapping inhibitory effect on the amiloride-insensitive conductance, and
supported the notion that the Zn--(2+) and pimozide-sensitive currents are
identical.
5. The amiloride-insensitive, Zn(-)(2+)blockable conductance was characteri
sed by a Na+/K+ permeability ratio (P-Na/P-K) of 0.73 +/- 0.02.
6. 8Br-cGMP (100 muM), a membrane-permeable analogue of cGMP, evoked a robu
st activation of whole-cell cation conductance to 220 % of control. This ac
tivation was apparent in either the absence or the presence of 10 muM, amil
oride, but was completely abolished in the presence of Zn2+.
7. These data support the in vivo and in situ observations of a substantial
amiloride-resistant Na+ conductance, demonstrate directly that cyclic nucl
eotide-gated non-selective cation channels are functionally expressed in al
veolar epithelial type II cells, and suggest that these channels may contri
bute to the fluid-reabsorptive driving force in adult lung.