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1.
Characteristics are reported for electrical activity of adult rat cardiomyocytes in long-term primary culture. Cells in vitro for 12 to 28 days have mean membrane potential of -53 mV, are electrically excitable, and some are spontaneously contractile. The action potential of these cells has a slow rate of depolarization and is abolished by methoxyverapamil (D-600) but not by tetrodotoxin (TTX). When cells are hyperpolarized by passage of an inward current, spontaneous action potentials cease and action potentials evoked by depolarizing pulses are then TTX sensitive. Fetal bovine serum is a constituent of the culture medium. Its temporary removal causes spontaneous contractility to cease but the cells remain electrically excitable.  相似文献   

2.
郑谦  东英穗 《生理学报》1989,41(6):543-554
用大鼠脑干脑片,给三叉神经中脑核79个神经元作了细胞内记录,测算了20个神经元膜的电学特性:静息电位-60.3±5.6mV;输入阻抗为10.5±5.4MΩ;时间常数1.3±0.5ms。电刺激可诱发动作电位,测算32个神经元的有关参数:阈电位-50—-55mV;波幅69.5±6.1mV;超射11.9±3.6mV;波宽0.8±0.2ms。TTX(0.3μmol/L)或无钠使之消失。通以长时程矩形波电流可引起200—250Hz的2—15个重复放电,但在通电停止前终止,TEA或4-AP可延长放电。膜电位-60—-55mV时在动作电位之后可看到阈下电位波动,它不受TTX的影响,无钙时消失,TEA或4-AP使波幅增大。静息电位去极化可使45个神经元中的40个发生外向整流作用,并被TEA,4-AP或无钙抑制,超极化则发生内向整流作用,Cs或无钠抑制之。灌流液中加入各种钾通道阻断药时神经元的稳态I-V曲线发生相应变化,提示I_(DR),l_A,I_(K(Ca))及I_Q可能都与静息时的膜电导有关。  相似文献   

3.
新生大鼠离体脊髓薄片侧角中间外侧核细胞的电生理特性   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
祝延  马如纯 《生理学报》1989,41(1):63-69
在新生大鼠离体脊髓薄片的中间外侧核作细胞内记录,研究细胞膜的静态与动态电生理特性。细胞的静息电位(RP)变动于-46—-70mV,膜的输入阻抗为108.3±67.9MΩ(X±SD,下同),时间常数9.9±5.6ms,膜电容138.6±124.2pF。用去极化电流进行细胞内刺激时,大部份细胞(85.4%)能产生高频率连续发放,其余细胞(15.6%)仅产生初始单个发放。胞内直接刺激引起的动作电位(AP)幅度为63.4±9.0mV,时程2.4±0.6ms,阈电位水平在RP基础上去极18.7±6.2mV。大部份细胞的锋电位后存在明显的超极化后电位,其幅度为5.1±2.7mV、持续90±31.8ms。刺激背根可在记录细胞引起EPSP或顺向AP,少数细胞尚出现IPSP。而刺激腹根则可引起逆向AP。  相似文献   

4.
After a contracture response, skeletal muscle fibers enter into a state of contractile refractoriness or inactivation. Contractile inactivation starts soon after membrane depolarization, and causes spontaneous relaxation from the contracture response. Here we demonstrate that contractile inactivation continues to develop for tens of seconds if the membrane remains in a depolarized state. We have studied this phenomenon using short (1.5 mm) frog muscle fibers dissected from the Lumbricalis brevis muscles of the frog, with a two-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique. After a contracture caused by membrane depolarization to 0 mV, from a holding potential of -100 mV, a second contracture can be developed only if the membrane is repolarized beyond a determined potential value for a certain period of time. We have used a repriming protocol of 1 or 2 s at -100 mV. After this repriming period a fiber, if depolarized again to 0 mV, may develop a second contracture, whose magnitude and time course will depend on the duration of the period during which the fiber was maintained at 0 mV before the repriming process. With this procedure it is possible to demonstrate that the inactivation process builds up with a very slow time course, with a half time of approximately 35 s and completion in greater than 100 s. After prolonged depolarizations (greater than 100 s), the repriming time course is slower and the inactivation curve (obtained by plotting the extent of repriming against the repriming membrane potential) is shifted toward more negative potentials by greater than 30 mV when compared with similar curves obtained after shorter depolarizing periods (10-30 s). These results indicate that important changes occur in the physical state of the molecular moiety that is responsible for the inactivation phenomenon. The shift of the inactivation curve can be partially reversed by a low concentration (50 microM) of lanthanum ions. In the presence of 0.5 mM caffeine, larger responses can be obtained even after prolonged depolarization periods, indicating that the fibers maintain their capacity to liberate calcium.  相似文献   

5.
Urinary bladder smooth muscle (UBSM) elicits depolarizing action potentials, which underlie contractile events of the urinary bladder. The resting membrane potential of UBSM is approximately -40 mV and is critical for action potential generation, with hyperpolarization reducing action potential frequency. We hypothesized that a tonic, depolarizing conductance was present in UBSM, functioning to maintain the membrane potential significantly positive to the equilibrium potential for K(+) (E(K); -85 mV) and thereby facilitate action potentials. Under conditions eliminating the contribution of K(+) and voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels, and with a clear separation of cation- and Cl(-)-selective conductances, we identified a novel background conductance (I(cat)) in mouse UBSM cells. I(cat) was mediated predominantly by the influx of Na(+), although a small inward Ca(2+) current was detectable with Ca(2+) as the sole cation in the bathing solution. Extracellular Ca(2+), Mg(2+), and Gd(3+) blocked I(cat) in a voltage-dependent manner, with K(i) values at -40 mV of 115, 133, and 1.3 microM, respectively. Although UBSM I(cat) is extensively blocked by physiological extracellular Ca(2+) and Mg(2+), a tonic, depolarizing I(cat) was detected at -40 mV. In addition, inhibition of I(cat) demonstrated a hyperpolarization of the UBSM membrane potential and decreased the amplitude of phasic contractions of isolated UBSM strips. We suggest that I(cat) contributes tonically to the depolarization of the UBSM resting membrane potential, facilitating action potential generation and thereby a maintenance of urinary bladder tone.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The intracellular activity of pyramidal tract neurons was studied during electrical stimulation of ventrolateral and ventroposterolateral thalamic nuclei in acute experiments on cats immobilized by myorelaxants. Somatic action potentials were observed and spontaneous spikes were also produced by single and rhythmic stimulation of the thalamic nuclei at the rate of 8–14 Hz, by iontophoretic application of strychnine, and by intracellular depolarizing current pulses. These potentials had a relatively low and variable amplitude of 5–60 mV and are presumed to be dendritic action potentials. It is postulated that these variable potentials arise in the dendrites of pyramidal neurons with multiple zones generating such activity. No interaction was observed where somatic and dendritic action potentials occur simultaneously. The possible functional role of dendritic action potentials is discussed.I. S. Beritashvili Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Georgian SSR, Tbilisi. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 18, No. 4, pp. 435–443, July–August, 1986.  相似文献   

8.
Short muscle fibers (approximately 1.5 mm) of Rana pipiens were voltage-clamped with a two-microelectrode technique at a holding potential of -100 mV. Using conditioning depolarizing ramps, with slopes greater than 0.2 mV/s, partially inactivated responses are obtained at threshold values between -55 and -35 mV. With slopes equal to or slower than 0.1 mV/s, one inactivates contraction without ever activating it. When the membrane potential is brought slowly to values more positive than about -40 mV, test pulses, applied on top of the ramps, bringing the membrane potential to values up to +100 mV, are ineffective in eliciting contractile responses, which indicates complete inactivation. After inactivation, contractile threshold is shifted by perhaps 10 mV, to about -40 mV. The sensitivity of fibers to depolarizing ramps is increased by D-600 (50 microM), dantrolene (50 microM), tetracaine (100 microM), and low calcium (10(-8) M). In the presence of these agents, complete inactivation was obtained using ramp slopes of 1, 0.8, 0.4, and 0.2 mV/s, respectively. Nifedipine was less effective. With D-600, once inactivation had been induced, no repriming occurred after repolarization to -100 mV, and partial recovery occurred after washing out the drug. With low calcium, tetracaine, and nifedipine, the tension-voltage relationship was not affected, whereas the steady state inactivation curve (obtained in repriming experiments) was shifted by 10-25 mV toward more negative potentials. With D-600, the activation curve was not modified, whereas the inactivation curve could not be obtained, because of repriming failure. With dantrolene, the inactivation curve was not affected, whereas the activation curve was shifted toward less negative potentials and peak tension diminished, depending on the pulse duration. The results indicate that it is possible to induce complete inactivation without activation, and to differentiate activation and inactivation parameters pharmacologically, which suggests that the two are separate processes.  相似文献   

9.
The steady state nonlinear properties of the giant axon membrane of the cockroach Periplaneta americana were studied by means of intracellular electrodes. The resistivity of this membrane markedly decreases in response to small subthreshold depolarizations. The specific slope resistance is reduced by twofold at 5 mV depolarization and by a factor of 14 at 20 mV depolarization. As a result, the spatial decay, V(X), of depolarizing potentials is enhanced when compared with the passive (exponential) decay. This enhancement is maximal at a distance of 1-1.5 mm from a point of subthreshold (0-20 mV) depolarizing perturbation. At that distance, the difference between the actual potential and the potential expected in the passive axon is approximately 30%. The effects of membrane rectification on V(X) were analyzed quantitatively with a novel derivation based on Cole's theorem, which enables one to calculate V(X) directly from the input current-voltage (I0-V) relation of a long axon. It is shown that when the experimental I0-V curve is replotted as (I0Rin)-1 against V (where Rin is the input resistance at the resting potential), the integral between any two potentials (V1 greater than V2) on this curve is the distance, in units of the resting space constant, over which V1 attenuates to V2. Excellent agreement was found between the experimental V(X) and the predicted value based solely on the input I0-V relation. The results demonstrate that the rectifying properties of the giant axon membrane must be taken into account when the electrotonic spread of even small subthreshold potentials is studied, and that, in the steady state, this behavior can be extracted from measurements at a single point. The effect of rectification on synaptic efficacy is also discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of Bay K 8644 on the electrical activity of the smooth muscle cells in the main pulmonary artery of the rabbit was examined. In normal physiological solution, the resting membrane potential was -56 +/- 0.6 mV, and the cells were electrically quiescent. Tetraethylammonium (5 mM) depolarized the membrane to about -45 mV, and electrical stimulation elicited action potentials. To suppress contractile responses and thereby facilitate sustained impalements, the muscle strips were bathed with a hypertonic solution containing sucrose. The mean amplitude of the tetraethylammonium-induced action potentials in the hypertonic solution was 35 +/- 0.9 mV. The action potentials were dependent upon the extracellular Ca2+ concentration and were abolished by diltiazem (10(-6) M). Spontaneous action potentials were occasionally generated in the presence of tetraethylammonium alone and could be induced by the further addition of Ba2+ (0.5 mM). The Ca2+ agonist Bay K 8644 (10(-8) to 10(-6) M) had no effect on the resting membrane potential or excitability in normal solution. However, in the hypertonic solution containing tetraethylammonium, Bay K 8644 caused a further depolarization and oscillatory potential changes, which were not prevented by tetrodotoxin. The oscillations were suppressed or abolished by diltiazem or nilvadipine. Thus, active responses can occur in the normally quiescent smooth muscle cells of the rabbit pulmonary artery when the outward K+ current(s) are suppressed.  相似文献   

11.
Parasympathetic nerve (PSN) innervates taste cells of the frog taste disk, and electrical stimulation of PSN elicited a slow hyperpolarizing potential (HP) in taste cells. Here we report that gustatory receptor potentials in frog taste cells are depressed by PSN-induced slow HPs. When PSN was stimulated at 30 Hz during generation of taste cell responses, the large amplitude of depolarizing receptor potential for 1 M NaCl and 1 mM acetic acid was depressed by approximately 40% by slow HPs, but the small amplitude of the depolarizing receptor potential for 10 mM quinine-HCl (Q-HCl) and 1 M sucrose was completely depressed by slow HPs and furthermore changed to the hyperpolarizing direction. The duration of the depolarizing receptor potentials depressed by slow HPs prolonged with increasing period of PSN stimulation. As tastant-induced depolarizing receptor potentials were increased, the amplitude of PSN-induced slow HPs inhibiting the receptor potentials gradually decreased. The mean reversal potentials of the slow HPs were approximately -1 mV under NaCl and acetic acid stimulations, but approximately -14 mV under Q-HCl and sucrose stimulations. This implies that when a slow HP was evoked on the same amplitude of depolarizing receptor potentials, the depression of the NaCl and acetic acid responses in taste cells was larger than that of Q-HCl and sucrose responses. It is concluded that slow HP-induced depression of gustatory depolarizing receptor potentials derives from the interaction between gustatory receptor current and slow hyperpolarizing current in frog taste cells and that the interaction is stronger for NaCl and acetic acid stimulations than for Q-HCl and sucrose stimulations.  相似文献   

12.
The membrane properties of individual skeletal muscle cells were studied with intracellular microelectrodes as the fibers developed, in vitro, from mononucleated precursor cells. Passive membrane constants were determined from analysis of transmembrane potential responses to pulses of current assuming the myotubes could be represented as sealed, finite cylinders. Resting membrane potentials increased from 10–15 mV in the shortest, youngest myotubes to ca. 60 mV in the longest, most mature fibers. The increase in membrane potential was not associated with a change in membrane resistivity. Action potentials occurred spontaneously in the most mature cells and repetitive spikes could be evoked by depolarizing current pulses. Spikes and twitches could be evoked in young myotubes provided the membrane was first hyperpolarized to 60–70 mV. Apparently the membrane potential is the rate limiting factor in the maturation of excitation-contraction mechanisms.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Prey capture by a tentacle of the ctenophore Pleurobrachia elicits a reversal of beat direction and increase in beat frequency of comb plates in rows adjacent to the catching tentacle (Tamm and Moss 1985). These ciliary motor responses were elicited in intact animals by repetitive electrical stimulation of a tentacle or the midsubtentacular body surface with a suction electrode. An isolated split-comb row preparation allowed stable intracellular recording from comb plate cells during electrically stimulated motor responses of the comb plates, which were imaged by high-speed video microscopy. During normal beating in the absence of electrical stimulation, comb plate cells showed no changes in the resting membrane potential, which was typically about -60 mV. Trains of electrical impulses (5/s, 5 ms duration, at 5-15 V) delivered by an extracellular suction electrode elicited summing facilitating synaptic potentials which gave rise to graded regenerative responses. High K+ artificial seawater caused progressive depolarization of the polster cells which led to volleys of action potentials. Current injection (depolarizing or release from hyperpolarizing current) also elicited regenerative responses; the rate of rise and the peak amplitude were graded with intensity of stimulus current beyond a threshold value of about -40 mV. Increasing levels of subthreshold depolarization were correlated with increasing rates of beating in the normal direction. Action potentials were accompanied by laydown (upward curvature of nonbeating plates), reversed beating at high frequency, and intermediate beat patterns. TEA increased the summed depolarization elicited by pulse train stimulation, as well as the size and duration of the action potentials. TEA-enhanced single action potentials evoked a sudden arrest, laydown and brief bout of reversed beating. Dual electrode impalements showed that cells in the same comb plate ridge experienced similar but not identical electrical activity, even though all of their cilia beat synchronously. The large number of cells making up a comb plate, their highly asymmetric shape, and their complex innervation and electrical characteristics present interesting features of bioelectric control not found in other cilia.  相似文献   

15.
The electrical properties of neurons in the supraoptic nucleus (so.n.) have been studied in the hypothalamic slice preparation by intracellular and extracellular recording techniques, with Lucifer Yellow CH dye injection to mark the recording site as being the so.n. Intracellular recordings from so.n. neurons revealed them to have an average membrane potential of -67 +/- 0.8 mV (mean +/- s.e.m.), membrane resistance of 145 +/- 9 M omega with linear current-voltage relations from 40 mV in the hyperpolarizing direction to the level of spike threshold in the depolarizing direction. Average cell time constant was 14 +/- 2.2 ms. So.n. action potentials ranged in amplitude from 55 to 95 mV, with a mean of 76 +/- 2 mV, and a spike width of 2.6 +/- 0.5 ms at 30% of maximal spike height. Both single spikes and trains of spikes were followed by a strong, long-lasting hyperpolarization with a decay fitted by a single exponential having a time constant of 8.6 +/- 1.8 ms. Action potentials could be blocked by 10(-6) M tetrodotoxin. Spontaneously active so.n. neurons were characterized by synaptic input in the form of excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic potentials, the latter being apparently blocked when 4 M KCl electrodes were used. Both forms of synaptic activity were blocked by application of divalent cations such as Mg2+, Mn2+ or Co2+. 74% of so.n. neurons fired spontaneously at rates exceeding 0.1 spikes per second, with a mean for all cells of 2.9 +/- 0.2 s-1. Of these cells, 21% fired slowly and continuously at 0.1 - 1.0 s-1, 45% fired continuously at greater than 1 Hz, and the remaining 34% fired phasically in bursts of activity followed by silence or low frequency firing. Spontaneously firing phasic cells showed a mean burst length of 16.7 +/- 4.5 s and a silent period of 28.2 +/- 4.2 s. Intracellular recordings revealed the presence of slow variations in membrane potential which modified the neuron's proximity to spike threshold, and controlled phasic firing. Variations in synaptic input were not observed to influence firing in phasic cells.  相似文献   

16.
The intracellular recording of CA1 neurons in mouse hippocampal slice preparation was used to study the properties of depolarizing responses to iontophoretically applied GABA to their apical dendrites. Reversal potential of depolarizing responses was dependent on parameters of injecting current. It was about -60 mV and - (45-55) mV when iontophoretic currents 40-60 nA and 8-20 nA were used respectively. Application of tetrodotoxin (0.1-0.5 microM) resulted in decrease in amplitude of depolarizing responses evoked by weak currents, increase in slope of plot, reflecting relationship between response amplitude and membrane potential, and hyperpolarizing shift of reversal potential. Blocking++ of synaptic transmission with low calcium solution did not produce such changes. These results suggest that GABA depolarizing responses have a potential-sensitive component due to activation of sodium channels.  相似文献   

17.
Short muscle fibers (1.5 mm) were dissected from hindlimb muscles of frogs and voltage clamped with two microelectrodes to study phenomena related to depolarization-contraction coupling. Isometric myograms obtained in response to depolarizing pulses of durations between 10 and 500 ms and amplitudes up to 140 mV had the following properties. For suprathreshold pulses of fixed duration (in the range of 20-100 ms), the peak tension achieved, the time to peak tension, and contraction duration increased as the internal potential was made progressively more positive. Peak tension eventually saturates with increasing internal potentials. For pulse durations of greater than or equal to 50 ms, the rate of tension development becomes constant for increasing internal potentials when peak tensions become greater than one-third of the maximum tension possible. Both threshold and maximum steepness of the relation between internal potential and peak tension depend on pulse duration. The relation between the tension-time integral and the stimulus amplitude-duration product was examined. The utility of this relation for excitation-contraction studies is based on the observation that once a depolarizing pulse configuration has elicited maximum tension, further increases in either stimulus duration or amplitude only prolong the contractile response, while the major portion of the relaxation phase after the end of a pulse is exponential, with a time constant that is not significantly affected by either the amplitude or the duration of the pulse. Hence, the area under the tension-response curve provides a measure of the availability to troponin of the calcium released from the sarcoplasmic reticulum in response to membrane depolarization. The results from this work complement those obtained in experiments in which intramembrane charge movements related to contractile activation were studied and those in which intracellular Ca++ transients were measured.  相似文献   

18.
The electrical excitability of maturing Rana pipiens oocytes was studied using intracellular recording and voltage-clamp techniques. Naturally ovulated oocytes, removed from the body cavity within a few hours after ovulation, possess voltage-sensitive Na and Cl channels that can produce action potentials (ap's). Young oocytes (sometime during metaphase I to first polar body stage) can generate trains of spontaneous action potentials: no chemical treatment or current injection is required. This is the first report of spontaneous repetitive firing in an egg cell membrane. As the oocyte matures, the duration of each ap increases because the outward Cl- current decreases. Middle-aged oocytes (about first polar body stage to metaphase II) have continuously positive membrane potentials (Vm's). Mature, activatable (metaphase II) oocytes have negative Vm's when impaled but can produce a long-lived ap when depolarizing current is injected. The ap's differ fundamentally from ap's in other excitable cells, including eggs: the Na+ current develops slowly and does not inactivate; most of the outward current is carried by Cl-, not by K+; the Cl channel is lost or is rendered insensitive to voltage as the oocyte matures.  相似文献   

19.
Intracellular recordings were made from human oviduct smooth muscle maintained in cell culture. Solitary cells isolated from one another and cells in contact with one another retained electrical properties of smooth muscle in vivo. Membrane potential of solitary cells and connected cells was -35 mV. Connected cells formed electrotonic junctions which transmitted current from one cell to another. This current spread was responsible for differences in input resistance and time constant in solitary cells, 66 Momega and 96 msec, compared to connected cells, 26 Momega and 56 msec. All cells expressed delayed rectification to depolarizing current pulses. Some cells generated action potentials spontaneously or in response to intracellular current pulses. Action potentials were abolished by cobalt or by EGTA. Slow wave potentials, 5 . 20 mV in amplitude, occurred continuously once every 15 to 45 seconds in connected cells.  相似文献   

20.
Patch-clamp studies were carried out in villus enterocytes isolated from the guinea pig proximal small intestine. In the whole-cell mode, outward K+ currents were found to be activated by depolarizing command pulses to -45 mV. The activation followed fourth order kinetics. The time constant of K+ current activation was voltage-dependent, decreasing from approximately 3 ms at -10 mV to 1 ms at +50 mV. The K+ current inactivated during maintained depolarizations by a voltage- independent, monoexponential process with a time constant of approximately 470 ms. If the interpulse interval was shorter than 30 s, cumulative inactivation was observed upon repeated stimulations. The steady state inactivation was voltage-dependent over the voltage range from -70 to -30 mV with a half inactivation voltage of -46 mV. The steady state activation was also voltage-dependent with a half- activation voltage of -22 mV. The K+ current profiles were not affected by chelation of cytosolic Ca2+. The K+ current induced by a depolarizing pulse was suppressed by extracellular application of TEA+, Ba2+, 4-aminopyridine or quinine with half-maximal inhibitory concentrations of 8.9 mM, 4.6 mM, 86 microM and 26 microM, respectively. The inactivation time course was accelerated by quinine but decelerated by TEA+, when applied to the extracellular (but not the intracellular) solution. Extracellular (but not intracellular) applications of verapamil and nifedipine also quickened the inactivation time course with 50% effective concentrations of 3 and 17 microM, respectively. Quinine, verapamil and nifedipine shifted the steady state inactivation curve towards more negative potentials. Outward single K+ channel events with a unitary conductance of approximately 8.4 pS were observed in excised inside-out patches of the basolateral membrane, when the patch was depolarized to -40 mV. The ensemble current rapidly activated and thereafter slowly inactivated with similar time constants to those of whole-cell K+ currents. It is concluded that the basolateral membrane of guinea pig villus enterocytes has a voltage-gated, time-dependent, Ca(2+)-insensitive, small-conductance K+ channel. Quinine, verapamil, and nifedipine accelerate the inactivation time course by affecting the inactivation gate from the external side of the cell membrane.  相似文献   

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