June 1998
Volume 39, Issue 7
Free
Articles  |   June 1998
Properties of whole-cell ionic currents in cultured human corneal epithelial cells.
Author Affiliations
  • C S Bockman
    Department of Pharmacology, Creighton University School of Medicine, Omaha, Nebraska, USA.
  • M Griffith
    Department of Pharmacology, Creighton University School of Medicine, Omaha, Nebraska, USA.
  • M A Watsky
    Department of Pharmacology, Creighton University School of Medicine, Omaha, Nebraska, USA.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science June 1998, Vol.39, 1143-1151. doi:
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      C S Bockman, M Griffith, M A Watsky; Properties of whole-cell ionic currents in cultured human corneal epithelial cells.. Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 1998;39(7):1143-1151.

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Abstract

PURPOSE: To identify and partially characterize the ionic currents contributing to the whole-cell conductance of cultured human corneal epithelial cells. METHODS: Epithelial cells were scraped from human donor corneas and cultured for use in patch-clamp experiments. Amphotericin B and the perforated-patch configuration were used to measure whole-cell currents in cells isolated from confluent monolayers. RESULTS: Cell monolayers exhibited cobblestone morphology and were immunopositive for corneal epithelium-specific cytokeratin. Single cells had a capacitance of 21 +/- 2 pF and expressed similar types of ionic currents regardless of passage number. In descending order of frequency of occurrence, cells exhibited a nonselective cation current active at depolarized voltages and insensitive to Ba2+ and Gd3+; an outwardly rectifying K+ current active at depolarized voltages, stimulated by flufenamic acid and inhibited by tetraethylammonium; a voltage-gated inward Na+ current; an outwardly rectifying K+ current active at hyperpolarized voltages, stimulated by flufenamic acid, blocked by Ba2+, and insensitive to diltiazem; an inwardly rectifying K+ current; and a nonselective cation current inhibited by flufenamic acid. CONCLUSIONS: Our results are consistent with those in previous studies of noncultured epithelia from rabbit and human corneas showing an outwardly rectifying K+ current active at hyperpolarized voltages and a nonselective cation current active at depolarized voltages and insensitive to Ba2+. These data suggest cultured cells may be useful in determining the physiological role of ion channels in corneal epithelia and may aid in the development of a cell-based model for the examination of the effects of wounding and toxic agents on the human cornea.

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