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1 e pore, in the toxin-bound channel, with the external solution.
2 n ion into the pipet and its egress into the external solution.
3 2 raises vestibular tonicity relative to the external solution.
4 between these sites, to the heme and to the external solution.
5 ation and accelerates Mg2+(o) unblock to the external solution.
6 fter removing glutamate and glycine from the external solution.
7 locations that are relatively exposed to the external solution.
8 s channel connecting the binding site to the external solution.
9 ure, cisternae communicate with salts in the external solution.
10 till be triggered by TLC-S in a calcium-free external solution.
11 channel when 1 mm Ca(2+) was present in the external solution.
12 its depletion from, and accumulation in, the external solution.
13 A entrapped and the opposite molecule in the external solution.
14 posed to thapsigargin/ionomycin in Ca2+-free external solution.
15 re to thapsigargin/ionomycin in calcium-free external solution.
16 se cells even with 10 mM Ca2+ or Ba2+ in the external solution.
17 ocated at the cell edge, even in Ca(2+)-free external solution.
18 within the protein in excess of that in the external solution.
19 t a holding potential of -60 mV in high K(+) external solution.
20 Ca) and STIC tau was not altered in Cl--free external solution.
21 hing of the neurons with nominally Pb2+-free external solution.
22 where little current was evident in control external solution.
23 filling solution inside a nanopipet and the external solution.
24 ntaminating glutamate measured in our normal external solutions.
25 ) was compared in various calcium-containing external solutions.
26 ric field" of Kv1.2 between the internal and external solutions.
27 nward Ca2+ current, but without changing the external solution, a mutation, E736K, was introduced int
30 ne of two micropipets ("generator") into the external solution and collected at the second pipet ("co
31 an accept a H(+) and transfer it between the external solution and the central Cl(-) binding site, co
32 m (2 mM Cao2+) or high calcium (10 mM Cao2+) external solutions, application of CCCP (1-2 microM) evo
34 with an oocyte protein whose exposure to the external solution changes during channel gating and whic
35 e of the response was nearly the same in the external solution containing a low Ca2+ concentration; h
38 ly significant difference among calcium-free external solutions containing different impermeant anion
41 usion of 1 mM BAPTA in nominally Ca(2+)-free external solution, Icat could still be evoked by noradre
45 reversible in divalent cation-free (0 Ba2+) external solutions in which current was carried by MA+.
46 minobenzoates was modulated by the pH of the external solution; increasing the pH from 7.4 to 10.0 gr
48 als, water and protons from the internal and external solutions must be separated by a narrow barrier
51 ased when Ca2+ was replaced with Ba2+ in the external solution or 5 mM BAPTA was added to the pipette
53 3 internalization was blocked in Ca(2+)-free external solution, or by strong buffering of internal Ca
54 Moreover, upon switching to divalent free external solutions, Orai3 currents were considerably mor
57 a nanowire network/agarose gel sample during external solution pH changes, and (ii) characterizing th
58 e etched electrode was immersed in a dry (no external solution) pool of mercury to produce a TLC.
59 ed by a voltage step, rapid acidification of external solution produced an inward H+ current which ra
61 t remained after washing of the neurons with external solution suggested that Pb2+ acted via an intra
65 urrents were recorded while manipulating the external solution to alter either the total or free prot
67 p mode with quasi-physiological internal and external solutions, voltage steps from the holding poten
68 hanged when the concentration of Ca2+ in the external solution was decreased from 2 mM to 0.2 mM.
70 r exposure of the neurons to Pb2+-containing external solution, was not related to changes in Na+-cha
72 sed by exposing the ATPS GVs to a hypertonic external solution, which draws water out of the vesicles