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Patch clamp

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Patch clamp technique is a technique in electrophysiology that allows the study of individual ion channels in cells. The technique is used to study excitable cells such as neurons, muscle fibers and the beta cells of the pancreas. In classical patch clamp technique, the electrode used is a glass pipette, but planar patch clamp uses a flat surface punctured with tiny holes.

Patch clamp technique is a refinement of the voltage clamp. Erwin Neher and Bert Sakmann developed the patch clamp in the late 1970s and early 1980s. They received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1991 for this work.

Basic technique

The cell-attached patch clamp uses a micropipette attached to the cell membrane to allow recording from a single ion channel.
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The cell-attached patch clamp uses a micropipette attached to the cell membrane to allow recording from a single ion channel.
Patch clamp traditionally uses a glass pipette with a tip diameter of about one micrometre, and made such that the tip forms a smooth surfaced circle, rather than a sharp point.  This style of electrode is known as a "patch clamp electrode" as distinct from a "sharp microelectrode" used to impale cells in traditional intracellular recordings. The interior of the pipette is filled with a solution that approximates the intracellular fluid. A metal electrode in contact with this solution conducts the electrical changes to a voltage clamp amplifier. During the experiment, the researcher can manipulate the contents of this solution or add drugs to study the ion channels under different conditions. The patch clamp electrode is pressed against a cell membrane and suction is applied to the inside of the electrode to pull the cell's membrane inside the tip of the electrode.  The suction causes the cell to form a tight seal with the electrode (a so-called "gigaohm seal", since the electrical resistance of that seal is in excess of a gigaohm).  

Unlike traditional voltage clamp recordings, patch clamp recording uses a single electrode to voltage clamp a cell. This allows a researcher to keep the voltage constant while observing changes in current. Alternately, the cell can be current clamped, keeping current constant while observing changes in membrane voltage.

Variations

Several variations of the basic technique can be applied, depending on what the researcher wants to study. The inside-out and outside-out techniques are called "excised patch" techniques, because the patch is excised (removed) from the main body of the cell. Cell-attached and both excised patch techniques are used to study the behavior of ion channels on the section of membrane attached to the electrode, while whole-cell patch and perforated patch allow the researcher to study the electrical behavior of the entire cell.

See also

References

 


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