| Gating current kinetics in Myxicola giant axons. Order of the back transition rate constants Biophysical Journal, Volume 59, Issue 3, 1 March 1991, Pages 574-589 L. Goldman Abstract Gating current, Ig, was recorded in Myxicola axons with series resistance compensation and higher time resolution than in previous studies. Ig at ON decays as two exponentials with time constants, tau ON-F and tau ON-S, very similar to squid values. No indication of an additional very fast relaxation was detected, but could be still unresolved. Ig at OFF also displays two exponentials, neither reflecting recovery from charge immobilization. Deactivation of the two I(ON) components may proceed with well-separated exponentials at -100 mV. INa tail currents at OFF also display two exponentials plus a third very slow relaxation of 5–9% of the total tail current. The very slow component is probably deactivation of a very small subpopulation of TTX sensitive channels. A -100 mV, means for INa tail component time constants (four axons) are 76 microseconds (range: 53–89 microseconds) and 344 microseconds (range: 312–387 microseconds), and for IOFF (six axons) 62 microseconds (range: 34–87 microseconds) and 291 microseconds (range: 204–456 microseconds) in reasonable agreement. INa ON activation time constant, tau A, is clearly slower than tau ON-F at all potentials. Except for the interval -30 to -15 mV, tau A is clearly faster than tau ON-S, and has a different dependency on potential. tau ON-S is several fold smaller than tau h. Computations with a closed2----closed1----open activation model indicated Na tail currents are consistent with a closed1----open rate constant greater than the closed2----closed1. Abstract | PDF (1657 kb) |
| Nanopores and nucleic acids: prospects for ultrarapid sequencing Trends in Biotechnology, Volume 18, Issue 4, 1 April 2000, Pages 147-151 David W Deamer and Mark Akeson Abstract DNA and RNA molecules can be detected as they are driven through a nanopore by an applied electric field at rates ranging from several hundred microseconds to a few milliseconds per molecule. The nanopore can rapidly discriminate between pyrimidine and purine segments along a single-stranded nucleic acid molecule. Nanopore detection and characterization of single molecules represents a new method for directly reading information encoded in linear polymers. If single-nucleotide resolution can be achieved, it is possible that nucleic acid sequences can be determined at rates exceeding a thousand bases per second. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (366 kb) |
| Near-IR absorbance changes and electrogenic reactions in the microsecond-to-second time domain in Photosystem I Biophysical Journal, Volume 72, Issue 1, 1 January 1997, Pages 301-315 I.R. Vassiliev, Y.S. Jung, M.D. Mamedov, Semenov AYu and J.H. Golbeck Abstract The back-reaction kinetics in Photosystem I (PS I) were studied on the microsecond-to-s time scale in cyanobacterial preparations, which differed in the number of iron-sulfur clusters to assess the contributions of particular components to the reduction of P700+. In membrane fragments and in trimeric P700-FA/FB complexes, the major contribution to the absorbance change at 820 nm (delta A820) was the back-reaction of FA- and/or FB- with lifetimes of approximately 10 and 80 ms (approximately 10% and 40% relative amplitude). The decay of photoinduced electric potential (delta psi) across a membrane with directionally incorporated P700-FA/FB complexes had similar kinetics. HgCl2-treated PS I complexes, which contain FA but no FB, retain both of these kinetic components, indicating that neither can be assigned uniquely to a specific acceptor. These results suggest that FA- reduces P700+ directly and argue for a rapid electron equilibration between FA and FB, which would eliminate their kinetic distinction in a back-reaction. In PsaC-depleted P700-Fx cores, as well as in P700-FA/FB complexes with chemically reduced FA and FB, the major contribution to the delta A820 and the delta psi decay is a biphasic back-reaction of F-X (approximately 400 microseconds and 1.5 ms) with some contribution from A-1 (approximately 10 microseconds and 100 microseconds), the latter of which is variable depending on experimental conditions. The delta A820 decay in a P700-A1 core devoid of all iron-sulfur clusters comprises two phases with lifetimes of 10 microseconds and 130 microseconds (2.7:1 ratio). The biexponential back-reaction kinetics found for each of the electron acceptors may be related to existence of different conformational states of the PS I complex. In all preparations studied, excitation at 532 nm with flash energies exceeding 10 mJ gives rise to formation of antenna 3Chl, which also contributes to delta A820 decay on the tens-of-microsecond time scale. A distinction between delta A820 components related to back-reactions and to 3Chl decay can be made by analysis of flash saturation dependencies and by measurements of kinetics with preoxidized P700. Abstract | PDF (1720 kb) |
Copyright © 1987 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 52, Issue 6, 1055-1064, 1 December 1987
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(87)83299-X
Research Article
F.J. Sigworth, D.W. Urry and K.U. Prasad
Department of Physiology, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510.
Using a technique for high-resolution recording of currents from lipid bilayers, we have measured the current fluctuations in open channels formed by gramicidin A (GA) and the four analogues L-Ala7-GA, L-Leu5-GA, con D-Leu5a-L-Ala5b-GA and, des-L-Val7-D-Val8-GA. Over the frequency range 40 Hz-20 kHz the fluctuations in each type of channel showed flat (frequency independent) spectral densities which ranged from 1.1 to 2.4 times the value expected from shot noise. Larger values were obtained at 200 mV membrane potential than at 100 mV, and with 200 mM CsCl than with 1 M CsCl as the bath solution. A likely explanation for the excess noise would be the existence of brief interruptions in the channel current lasting less than 3 microseconds.