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. 2010 Apr 12;285(23):17425–17431. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M109.091561

FIGURE 1.

FIGURE 1.

Extracellular Cl does not affect pH sensitivity or selectivity of ASIC1a. A, representative currents evoked by stepping from pH 8 to the indicated pH test solutions in CHO cells transfected with ASIC1a. Solutions consisted of high (131–148 mm) or low (11 mm) Cl (Cl was replaced with MeSO3). Plot at right is the mean current density evoked by pH 5 for groups of cells (n = 42–49). B, pH dose-response curves for activation in the above solutions. Data are acquired by stepping from pH 8 to the indicated test solutions and are normalized to the peak currents evoked by pH 5 (n ≥ 10). A similar result was obtained in solutions containing 0 mm Cl (data not shown). Note the asymmetry of the curves; thus they did not fit well to the Hill equation. C, pH dose-response curves for steady-state desensitization in the above solutions. Data are acquired by varying the conditioning pH and then stepping to pH 5 test solutions and are normalized to the currents evoked by stepping from pH 8 to pH 5 (n ≥ 5). Lines are fits of the Hill equation. D, overlay of currents evoked by pH 6 during steps to various membrane potentials in extracellular NaCl or NaMeSO3 solutions. The internal solution was KCl. E, current versus voltage curves for the data in D. Data obtained in MeSO3 lie on top of those obtained in Cl. The reversal potential for both curves is ∼50 mV, indicating Na+ selective permeability over K+ (n = 4).