| Electrochemical Properties of Hydrated Cation-Selective Glass Membrane Biophysical Journal, Volume 14, Issue 1, 1 January 1974, Pages 46-68 Chin Ok Lee and Harry A. Fozzard Abstract Electrochemical properties of cation-selective glass microelectrodes made from NAS were studied. There was a marked fall in electrical resistance of the microelectrodes stored in 3 M KCl solution (aging). The resistance was in the range of 2×10 to 10 Ω, which were much lower than those estimated from the electrical resistivity of dry glass for the equivalent dimensions of microelectrode working tips. This fall in resistance was accompanied by an increase in microelectrode selectivity for K. The low resistance and increased K selectivity are desirable features that make the microelectrode more suitable for application to biologic studies. The changes in microelectrode resistance and selectivity were interpreted to be due to hydration of the entire thickness of the glass membrane, resulting in a change in the field strength of anionic sites and formation of ionic channels in the glass membrane. Thus, the fall in resistance is explained by decrease in energy barrier, which is equivalent to the activation energy of interaction between the cations and anionic sites in the glass membrane. Some of the microelectrodes showed a transient depolarization that resembled the action potential of a biological membrane. This transient depolarization was associated with the changes in microelectrode resistance and selectivity. The transient depolarizations suggest the temporary development of wide channels in the membrane permitting free movement of hydrated cations according to the bulk electrochemical gradient. Abstract | PDF (1668 kb) |
| Intracellular microelectrode measurements in small cells evaluated with the patch clamp technique Biophysical Journal, Volume 50, Issue 6, 1 December 1986, Pages 1203-1209 C. Ince, E. van Bavel, B. van Duijn, K. Donkersloot, A. Coremans, D.L. Ypey and A.A. Verveen Abstract Microelectrode penetration of small cells leads to a sustained depolarization of the resting membrane potential due to a transmembrane shunt resistance (Rs) introduced by the microelectrode. This has led to underestimation of the resting membrane potential of various cell types. However, measurement of the fast potential transient occurring within the first few milliseconds after microelectrode penetration can provide information about pre-impalement membrane electrophysiological properties. We have analyzed an equivalent circuit of a microelectrode measurement to establish the conditions under which the peak of the impalement transients (Ep) approaches the pre-impalement resting membrane potential (Em) of small cells most closely. The simulation studies showed that this is the case when the capacitance of the microelectrode is low and the membrane capacitance of the cell high. In experiments performed to assess the reliability of Ep as a measure of Em, whole-cell patch clamp measurements were performed in the current clamp mode to monitor, free from the effects of Rs, Em in cultured human monocytes. Microelectrode impalement of such patch clamped cells and measurement of Ep made it possible to detect correlation between Ep and Em and showed that for small cells such as human monocytes Ep is on average 6 mV less negative than the resting membrane potential. Abstract | PDF (876 kb) |
| Resistive artifacts in liquid-ion exchanger microelectrode estimates of Na+ activity in epithelial cells Biophysical Journal, Volume 31, Issue 1, 1 July 1980, Pages 127-138 S.A. Lewis and N.K. Wills Abstract In experiments on the rabbit urinary bladder epithelium we have identified an electrical artifact in certain liquid ion-sensitive microelectrodes. This artifact arises from the high electrical resistance of the ion-sensitive resins which in some cases are comparable to the resistance of the microelectrode glass wall. For Na+-sensitive microelectrodes this situation led to shunting of the exchanger potential and consequently artifactually high calculations of intracellular Na+ in the rabbit urinary bladder epithelium. A method for minimizing this shunting effect is described. After reduction of the shunt the frequency response of the Na+-sensitive microelectrode was increased and the estimated ai Na+ was decreased to 7 mM. Abstract | PDF (672 kb) |
Copyright © 1996 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 71, Issue 1, 394-402, 1 July 1996
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(96)79240-8
Research Article
W. Nett and J.W. Deitmer
Abteilung für Allgemeine Zoologie, FB Biologie, Universität Kaiserslautern, Germany.
We have employed two independent techniques to measure the intracellular pH (pHi) in giant glial cells of the leech Hirudo medicinalis, using the fluorescent dye 2',7'-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5,6-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF) and double-barreled neutral-carrier, pH-sensitive microelectrodes, which also record the membrane potential. We have compared two procedures for calibrating the ratio of the BCECF signal, excited at 440 nm and 495 nm: 1) the cell membrane was H(+)-permeabilized with nigericin in high-K+ saline at different external pH (pHo) values, and 2) the pHi of intact cells was perturbed in CO2/HCO3(-) -buffered saline of different pH, and the BCECF ratio was calibrated according to a simultaneous microelectrode pH reading. As indicated by the microelectrode measurements, the pHi did not fully equilibrate to the pHo values in nigericin-containing, high-K+ saline, but deviated by -0.12 +/- 0.02 (mean +/- SEM, n = 37) pH units. In intact cells, the microelectrode readings yielded up to 0.15 pH unit lower values than the calibrated BCECF signal. In addition, larger dye injections into the cells (> 100 microM) caused an irreversible membrane potential loss indicative of some damage to the cells. The amplitude and kinetics of slow pHi changes were equally followed by both sensors, and the dye ratio recorded slightly higher amplitudes during faster pHi shifts as induced by the addition and removal of NH4+.