Chondrocytes are highly sensitive to variations in extracellular glucose and oxygen levels in the extracellular matrix. As such, they must possess a number of mechanisms to detect and respond to alterations in the metabolic state of cartilage. In other organs such as the pancreas, heart and brain, such detection is partly mediated by a family of potassium channels known as K ATP (adenosine 5′-triphosphate-sensitive potassium) channels. Here we investigate whether chondrocytes too express functional K ATP channels, which might, potentially, serve to couple metabolic state with cell activity.Immunohistochemistry was used to explore K ATP channel expression in equine and human chondrocytes. Biophysical properties of equine chondrocyte K ATP channels were investigated with patch-clamp electrophysiology.Polyclonal antibodies directed against the K ATP Kir6.1 subunit revealed high levels of expression in human and equine chondrocytes mainly in superficial and middle zones of normal cartilage. Kir6.1 was also detected in superficial chondrocytes in osteoarthritic (OA) cartilage. In single-channel electrophysiological studies of equine chondrocytes, we found K ATP channels to have a maximum unitary conductance of 47±9pS (n=5) and a density of expression comparable to that seen in excitable cells.We have shown, for the first time, functional K ATP channels in chondrocytes. This suggests that K ATP channels are involved in coupling metabolic and electrical activities in chondrocytes through sensing of extracellular glucose and intracellular adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels. Altered K ATP channel expression in OA chondrocytes may result in impaired intracellular ATP sensing and optimal metabolic regulation.