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The Journal of Neuroscience logoLink to The Journal of Neuroscience
. 1991 Nov 1;11(11):3624–3629. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.11-11-03624.1991

Calcium-activated chloride conductance in frog olfactory cilia

SJ Kleene 1, RC Gesteland 1
PMCID: PMC6575529  PMID: 1941099

Abstract

We have measured the effects of cytoplasmic Ca2+ on the conductance of single cilia excised from frog olfactory receptor neurons. When free cytoplasmic Ca2+ is buffered at 0.1 microM, ciliary conductance is low. As Ca2+ is increased, ciliary conductance increases. Maximal conductance averages sevenfold higher than that measured in the absence of Ca2+. We estimate that the K1/2 for Ca2+ activation is 5 microM; the dose-response curve indicates some positive cooperativity of Ca2+ binding. Activation by Ca2+ is rapid and fully reversible. Most of the Ca(2+)-activated current is carried by Cl- and persists in the absence of Na+ and K+. The Cl- channel inhibitor 3′,5-dichlorodiphenylamine-2- carboxylate (300 microM) reduces the Ca(2+)-activated current by 90%. Odorants induce a Ca2+ influx in some olfactory receptor neurons, but the consequences of this influx for neuronal function are not well understood. Our findings allow us to predict that a Ca2+ influx would increase the permeability of the olfactory cilia to Cl-. How this would affect the neuronal potential is uncertain, since the equilibrium potential for Cl- in olfactory receptor neurons is unknown.


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