Patch Clamp: The First Four Decades of a Technique That Revolutionized Electrophysiology and Beyond

Rev Physiol Biochem Pharmacol. 2023:186:1-28. doi: 10.1007/112_2022_71.

Abstract

Forty years ago, the introduction of a new electrophysiological technique, the patch clamp, revolutionized the fields of Cellular Physiology and Biophysics, providing for the first time the possibility of describing the behavior of a single protein, an ion-permeable channel of the cell plasma membrane, in its physiological environment. The new approach was actually much more potent and versatile than initially envisaged, and it has evolved into several different modalities that have radically changed our knowledge of how cells (not only the classical "electrically excitable "ones, such as nerves and muscles) use electrical signaling to modulate and organize their activity. This review aims at telling the history of the background from which the new technique evolved and at analyzing some of its more recent developments.

Keywords: Biophysics; Electrophysiology; Ionic channels; Nobel Prize; Patch clamp.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Cardiac Electrophysiology
  • Cell Membrane / metabolism
  • Electrophysiological Phenomena*
  • Electrophysiology / methods
  • Humans
  • Ion Channels* / physiology

Substances

  • Ion Channels