The patch-clamp method, which was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1991, is a well-established and indispensable method to study ion channels in living cells and to biophysically characterize non-voltage-gated ion channels, which comprise about 70% of all ion channels in the human genome. To investigate the biophysical properties of non-voltage-gated ion channels, whole-cell measurements with application of continuous voltage ramps are routinely conducted to obtain current-voltage (IV) relationships. However, adequate tools for detailed and quantitative analysis of IV curves are still missing.
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