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1.
Although we are used to attribute almost identical extracellular fluid (ECF) sodium concentrations in birds, amphibians, reptiles, and mammals to the composition of the primordial oceans in which, presumably, all life originated, this interpretation is not supported by geological data suggesting that the ocean salinity was never much lower than the present-day values, still four times higher than our plasma sodium.Here presented interpretation is that the similar ECF salt concentrations are dictated by the opposed Donnan effects on the cell membrane. The only way for the cell to reach the osmotic equilibrium is to alter cell volume, until concentration of nondiffusible intracellular ions (mainly charges on intracellular proteins) is equal to the ECF restricted ions (mainly Na+ ions, restricted by pumping out of cells).The achievement of electroneutrality requires that the sum of all anions equals concentration of positive ions in the cell (mainly K+). Negative charges on cytoplasmic proteins are the most stable component among ionized particles and other ions have to adapt to their concentration. Positive and negative soluble intracellular ions are all osmotically active and to achieve balance of osmotic forces on the cell membrane, the sum of their intracellular concentrations must equal the concentration of osmotically active extracellular particles. Since almost half the osmotically active ECF particles are sodium ions, the ECF sodium concentration seems related to concentration of charges on cytoplasmic proteins and concentration of intracellular phosphates.Our ancestors could not leave the salty ocean and move to brackish, or even fresh waters, without adequate regulation of their ECF sodium concentration and osmolality. Concentration of charges on cytoplasmic proteins or of intracellular phosphate buffers could not be altered, since this would compromise cell functioning. The remaining solution was to maintain the lowest ECF Na+ concentration effective in counteracting the average Donnan effect of charges on cytoplasmic proteins. When the optimal ECF sodium concentration had once become the reference point for osmoreceptors (controlling thirst and ADH secretion) and other regulatory mechanisms (secretion of renin/angiotensin/aldosterone, natriuretic factors), it made an important survival advantage that allowed spreading of animal life in fresh water and conquering of earth. The actual common value had to be a compromise that reduces the average osmotic burden on body cells to zero. Individual cells can reduce eventual residual osmotic forces on their membrane through altering cell volume by chloride shift, and by modulating the Na+K+-ATPase function.  相似文献   

2.
The changes in membrane potential of isolated, single crayfish giant axons following rapid shifts in external ion concentrations have been studied. At normal resting potential the immediate change in membrane potential after a variation in external potassium concentration is quite marked compared to the effect of an equivalent chloride change. If the membrane is depolarized by a maintained potassium elevation, the immediate potential change due to a chloride variation becomes comparable to that of an equivalent potassium change. There is no appreciable effect on membrane potential when external sodium is varied, at normal or at a depolarized membrane potential. Starting from the constant field equation, expressions for the permeability ratios P Cl/P K, P Na/P K, and for intracellular potassium and chloride concentrations are derived. At normal resting membrane potential, P Cl/P K is 0.13 but at a membrane potential of -53 mv (external potassium level increased about five times) it is 0.85. The intracellular concentrations of potassium and chloride are estimated to be 233 and 34 mM, respectively, and it is pointed out that this is not compatible with ions distributed in a Nernst equilibrium across the membrane. It is also stressed that the information given by a plot of membrane potential vs. the logarithm of external potassium concentrations is very limited and rests upon several important assumptions.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The nephridial nerve cells of the leech, Hirudo medicinalis, 34 sensory cells, each associated with one nephridium, are sensitive to changes in extracellular Cl- concentration, an important factor in ion homeostasis. Using single-electrode current- and voltage clamp and ion substitution techniques, the specificity and mechanism of Cl- sensitivity of the nephridial nerve cell was studied in isolated preparations. Increase of the normally low external Cl- concentration leads to immediate and sustained hyperpolarization, decrease of the frequency of bursts and decrease of membrane conductance. The response is halogen specific: Cl- can be replaced by Br, but not by organic mono- or divalent anions or inorganic divalent anions.At physiological Cl- concentrations (36mM extra-cellular Cl-), the nephridial nerve cell has a high resting conductance for Cl- and the membrane potential is governed by Cl-. In high extracellular Cl- concentrations (110–130 mM), membrane conductance is low, most likely due to the gating off of Cl- channels. Under these conditions, membrane potential is dominated by the K+ distribution and the nephridial nerve cell hyperpolarizes towards EK.Abbreviations NNC nephridial nerve cell - V m membrane potential - E Cl(k) equilibrium potential for Cl (K) - IV-curve current-voltage relationship  相似文献   

4.
Summary Like most other red cells, the giant erythrocytes ofAmphiuma means possess a system for rapid exchange of chloride across the membrane. Also, there are indications that the net transport of chloride in these cells is slow. The size ofAmphiuma erythrocytes allows direct measurements of membrane potential with microelectrodes. The present work exploits the possibility that such measurements can be used to give a quantitative estimate of the chloride conductance (G Cl) of the Amphiuma red cell membrane. The membrane potential was measured as a function of extracellular chloride concentration (5–120mM), using an impermeant anion (Para-amino-hippurate) as a substitute. Furthermore, the effect of different pH values (6.0–7.2) was studied. For each extracellular chloride concentration the membrane potential was determined at a pH at which hydroxyl, hydrogen, and bicarbonate ions were in electrochemical equilibrium. From these membrane potentials and the corresponding chloride concentrations in the medium (at constant intracellular ion concentrations), theG Cl of the membrane was calculated to be 3.9×10–7 {ie27-1} cm–2. This value is some six orders of magnitude smaller than that calculated from the rate of tracer exchange under equilibrium conditions. The experimental strategy used gives the value for a partial transference number which takes into account only ions which arenot in electrochemical equilibrium. Whereas this approach gives a value forG Cl, it does not permit calculation of the overall membrane conductance. From the calculated value ofG Cl it is possible to estimate that the maximal value of the combined conductances of hydroxyl (or proton) and bicarbonate ions is 0.6×10–7 {ie27-2} cm–2. The large discrepancy between the rate of exchange of chloride and its conductance is in agreement with measurements on human and sheep red cells employing the ionophore valinomycin to increase the potassium conductance of the membrane. The results in the present study were, however, obtained without valinomycin and an accompanying assumption of a constant field in the membrane. Therefore, the present measurements give independent support to the above mentioned conclusions.  相似文献   

5.
Voltage clamp measurements of the sodium potential have been made on the resting squid giant axon to study the effect of variations in external divalent ion concentration upon net sodium flux. From these measurements the intracellular sodium concentration and the net sodium inflow were calculated using the Nernst relation and constant activity coefficients. While an axon bathed in artificial sea water shows a slow increase in internal sodium concentration, the rate of sodium accumulation is increased about two times by reducing external calcium and magnesium concentrations to 0.1 times their normal values. The mean inward net sodium flux increases from a mean control value of 97 pmole/cm2 sec. to 186 pmole/cm2 sec. in low divalent solution. Associated with these effects of external divalent ion reduction are a marked decrease in action potential amplitude, little or no change in resting potential, and a shift along the voltage axis of the curve relating peak sodium conductance to membrane potential similar to that obtained by Frankenhaeuser and Hodgkin (1957). These results implicate divalent ions in long term (minutes to hours) sodium permeability.  相似文献   

6.
The electrical potential difference across the human red cell membrane has been measured directly. A biological amplifier with neutralized input capacity was used. Human red cells in modified Ringer solution were impaled individually with 3 M KCl-filled glass microelectrodes. Movements of the microelectrodes were effected by Leitz micromanipulators. Results showed a potential difference of -8.0 ± 0.21 (SEM) mv, the inside being negative with respect to the outside. This value is approximately that calculated by using the Nernst equation considering the intracellular and extracellular chloride concentrations.

As a control, similar measurements were made on nylon microcapsules containing hemoglobin. The measured potential of -0.52 ± 0.02 (SEM) mv, which agreed very well with the value calculated on the basis of Donnan equilibrium, was much smaller in magnitude as compared to the results for the red cell, and there was evidence of fixed charges on the microcapsule membrane. There was no evidence of this in the case of the red cell.

  相似文献   

7.
A mathematical model of the transport of basic ions (K+, Na+, Cl) across the hepatocyte membrane has been created using the previously constructed models of active ion transport in biomembranes. The dependence of the resting potential on extracellular ion concentration has been established. Using the model, it is possible to independently calculate the resting potential at the biomembrane and the concentrations of sodium, potassium, and chlorine ions in the cell. The calculated internal concentrations of the ions are in good agreement with the corresponding experimental values.  相似文献   

8.
1. It is shown that when part of the gelatin in a solution of gelatin chloride is replaced by particles of powdered gelatin (without change of pH) the membrane potential of the solution is influenced comparatively little. 2. A measurement of the hydrogen ion concentration of the gelatin chloride solution and the outside aqueous solution with which the gelatin solution is in osmotic equilibrium, shows that the membrane potential can be calculated from this difference of hydrogen ion concentration with an accuracy of half a millivolt. This proves that the membrane potential is due to the establishment of a membrane equilibrium and that the powdered particles participate in this membrane equilibrium. 3. It is shown that a Donnan equilibrium is established between powdered particles of gelatin chloride and not too strong a solution of gelatin chloride. This is due to the fact that the powdered gelatin particles may be considered as a solid solution of gelatin with a higher concentration than that of the weak gelatin solution in which they are suspended. It follows from the theory of membrane equilibria that this difference in concentration of protein ions must give rise to potential differences between the solid particles and the weaker gelatin solution. 4. The writer had shown previously that when the gelatin in a solution of gelatin chloride is replaced by powdered gelatin (without a change in pH), the osmotic pressure of the solution is lowered the more the more dissolved gelatin is replaced by powdered gelatin. It is therefore obvious that the powdered particles of gelatin do not participate in the osmotic pressure of the solution in spite of the fact that they participate in the establishment of the Donnan equilibrium and in the membrane potentials. 5. This paradoxical phenomenon finds its explanation in the fact that as a consequence of the participation of each particle in the Donnan equilibrium, a special osmotic pressure is set up in each individual particle of powdered gelatin which leads to a swelling of that particle, and this osmotic pressure is measured by the increase in the cohesion pressure of the powdered particles required to balance the osmotic pressure inside each particle. 6. In a mixture of protein in solution and powdered protein (or protein micellæ) we have therefore two kinds of osmotic pressure, the hydrostatic pressure of the protein which is in true solution, and the cohesion pressure of the aggregates. Since only the former is noticeable in the hydrostatic pressure which serves as a measure of the osmotic pressure of a solution, it is clear why the osmotic pressure of a protein solution must be diminished when part of the protein in true solution is replaced by aggregates.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract. Slightly vacuolated cells, i.e. microalgae and meristematic cells of vascular plants, maintain low Cl? and Na+ concentrations even when exposed to a highly saline environment. The factors regulating the internal ion concentration are the relative rate of volume expansion, the membrane permeability to ions, the electrical potential, and the active ion fluxes. For ion species which are not actively transported, a formula is developed which relates the internal concentration to the rate of expansion of cell volume, the permeability of membranes to that ion, and the electrical potential. For example, when the external concentration of Cl? is high, and Cl? influx is probably mainly passive, the formula predicts that rapid growth keeps the internal Cl? concentration lower than that in a non-growing cell with the same electrical potential; this effect is substantial if the plasmalemma has a low permeability to Cl?. For ion species which are actively transported, the rate of pumping must be considered. For instance Na+ concentrations are kept low mainly by an efficient Na+ extrusion pump which works against the electric field across the membrane. The requirement for Na+ extrusion is related to the external Na+ concentration, the rate of expansion of cell volume, the membrane permeability, and the electrical potential. It is possible that microalgae have a more positive electrical potential than many other plant cells; if so, requirements for high rates of active Na+ extrusion will be lower. The required rates of Na+ extrusion are lower during rapid growth, provided that the permeability of the plasmalemma to Na+ is low. The energy required for the regulation of Cl? and Na+ concentrations is low, especially in rapidly expanding cells where Na+ extrusion requires only 1–2% of the energy normally produced in respiration. The exclusion of these ions, however, must be accompanied by the synthesis of enough organic compounds to provide adequate osmotic solutes for the increases in volume accompanying growth. This process reduces the substrates available for respiration and synthesis of cell constituents, but the reduction is not prohibitively large—even for cells growing in 750 mol m?3 NaCl, the carbohydrate accumulated as osmotic solute is only 10% of that consumed in respiration.  相似文献   

10.
G. O. Kirst 《Oecologia》1977,28(2):177-189
Summary Ion compositions (K+, Na+ Mg2+, Ca2+, Cl-, phosphate) of the euryhaline algae, Platymonas subcordiformis, Chlorella salina, grown in media with a salinity range from 0.1 to 0.6 M NaCl and of the fresh-water algae, Ankistrodesmus braunii and Scenedesmus obliquus, were compared. Enhancement of ion concentrations with increasing salinity in Platymonas was attributed largely to decreasing cell volume. In both the euryhaline algae, Na+ and — partially — Cl- content per cell increased significantly with rising salinity. The contents per cell of the other ions were not affected. Considering the relevance of ions and mannitol (Platymonas) and proline (Chlorella) as osmotically active particles, it was found that the ions alone maintained osmotic balance with low external salinity. With increasing salinity the organic compounds contributed up to 20–30% of the cellular solute potential. The main cation, K+, was the main contributor to the osmotic balance; the accumulation of organic compounds as well as of Na+ and Cl- contributes further to the ability of the algae to adapt to high salinity. The results confirm the hypothesis of low Cl- concentrations in nonvacuolate cells in comparison to vacuolate cells.  相似文献   

11.
Solute Accumulation in Tobacco Cells Adapted to NaCl   总被引:18,自引:9,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Cells of Nicotiana tabacum L. var Wisconsin 38 adapted to NaCl (up to 428 millimolar) which have undergone extensive osmotic adjustment accumulated Na+ and Cl as principal solutes for this adjustment. Although the intracellular concentrations of Na+ and Cl correlated well with the level of adaptation, these ions apparently did not contribute to the osmotic adjustment which occurred during a culture growth cycle, because the concentrations of Na+ and Cl did not increase during the period of most active osmotic adjustment. The average intracellular concentrations of soluble sugars and total free amino acids increased as a function of the level of adaptation; however, the levels of these solutes did not approach those observed for Na+ and Cl. The concentration of proline was positively correlated with cell osmotic potential, accumulating to an average concentration of 129 millimolar in cells adapted to 428 millimolar NaCl and representing about 80% of the total free amino acid pool as compared to an average of 0.29 millimolar and about 4% of the pool in unadapted cells. These results indicate that although Na+ and Cl are principal components of osmotic adjustment, organic solutes also may make significant contributions.  相似文献   

12.
Maureen A. Dewar  J. Barber 《Planta》1974,117(2):163-172
Summary Anacystis nidulans will take up and accumulate chloride ions. When the external concentration was 0.2 mM Cl- the level in the cells was 2.8 mM Cl- and under these conditions the flux across the cell surface was in the region of 10-13equiv Cl-·sec-1·cm-2. It is suggested that this Cl- influx is active and operates against an electrochemical potential gradient estimated to be 117 mV or 2.68 kcal/mole. The uptake of 36Cl was inhibited by low temperatures and there was a net loss of Cl- from the cells with the level decreasing towards the equilibrium value as estimated from K+ distribution. Although the active influx of Cl- was often stimulated by light this was not always the case. Dark storage treatment and regulation of the chlorophyll a/phycocyanin ratios as well as total pigment content of the cells did not clarify the conditions which brought about light stimulation. Moreover, the metabolic inhibitors CCCP and CMU and also the use of anaerobic conditions did not clearly indicate the relationship between the influx mechanism and light-dark metabolism and no firm conclusions could be made about the nature of the energy source. The variation in the degree of light stimulation probably reflects the fact that in this procaryotic organism the photosynthetic and respiratory units are located on the same membrane systems and are in very close proximity to the probable site of the Cl- pump, the plasmalemma.Abbreviations CCCP carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - CMU 3-(4-chlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea  相似文献   

13.
K. Raschke  P. Dittrich 《Planta》1977,135(1):69-75
Following small hypo-osmotic shocks, ion concentrations (Na+, K+, Cl-) in Platymonas subcordiformis decreased; this was due mainly to an increase of cell volume. With larger hypo-osmotic stresses, the decrease of ion concentration continued and, additionally, extrusion of mannitol was observed. The ion and mannitol concentrations were not regained after 240 min. In contrast, following hyperosmotic shocks, the ion concentrations increased transitorily during the first 20–40 min. The same was true for K+ following small hyperosmotic stresses and for Na+ and — partially — Cl- with larger shocks. Large hyperosmotic stresses caused permanent accumulation of mannitol, which levelled off after 60–80 min. Thus the transient increase of ions bridged the concentration gap until mannitol was accumulated to a high enough concentration to account for the osmotic adaptation of Platymonas, together with a basal level of the ions K+, Na+, Cl-.Abbreviations PS photosynthesis - Resp respiration  相似文献   

14.
The Membrane Potential of Acetabularia mediterranea   总被引:8,自引:1,他引:7  
The cytoplasm of an Acetabularia cell is normally at a potential of about -170 mv relative to the external solution; the vacuole is also at this potential. Although there is strict flux equilibrium for all ions, the potential is more negative than the Nernst potentials of any of the permeating ions. Darkness, CCCP, low temperature, and reducing [Cl-]o by a factor of 25 all rapidly depolarize the membrane and inhibit Cl- influx. Some of these treatments do not inhibit the effluxes of K+ and Na+. Increasing [K+]o also depolarizes the membrane both under normal conditions and at low temperature; in the latter case the membrane is partially depolarized in normal seawater (low [K+]o) and in high [K+]o positive potentials of up to +15 mv are attained. It is concluded that the membrane potential is controlled by the electrogenic influx of Cl-, and also, at least in some circumstances, by the diffusion of K+. In addition, it is suggested that electrogenic efflux of H+ may be important in transient nonequilibrium situations. An Appendix deals with the interpretation of simple nonsteady-state tracer kinetic data.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The intracellular distribution of Na+, K+, Cl and water has been studied in the Ehrlich ascites tumor cell. Comparison of the ion and water contents of whole cells with those of cells exposed to La3+ and mechanical stress indicated that La3+ treatment results in selective damage to the cell membrane and permits evaluation of cytoplasmic and nuclear ion concentrations. The results show that Na+ is sequestered within the nucleus, while K+ and Cl are more highly concentrated in the cell cytoplasm. Reduction of the [Na+] of the incubation medium by replacement with K+ results in reduced cytoplasmic [Na+], increased [Cl] and no change in [K+]. Nuclear concentrations of these ions are virtually insensitive to the cation composition of the medium. Concomitant measurements of the membrane potential were made. The potential in control cells was –13.7 mV. Reduction of [Na+] in the medium caused significant depolarization. The measured potential is describable by the Cl equilibrium potential and can be accounted for in terms of cation distributions and permeabilities. The energetic implications of the intracellular compartmentation of ions are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of several ions on the membrane potential of the somatic muscle of Ascaris has been investigated by changing their concentration in the surrounding solution. When [K]o is increased at the expense of [Na]o leaving [Cl]o constant, the membrane potential is first seen to increase. [K]o higher than 45 mM reduces the membrane potential with a slope of 23 mv for a tenfold change in [K]o. However, when [K]o is increased keeping [Na]o and [Cl]o low and constant, the line relating the membrane potential with log [K]o has a slope of almost 50 mv. If [Cl]o is reduced in the absence of external Na, after the [K]o is increased to 45 mM, the membrane potential decreases with a slope of 59 mv per tenfold change in [Cl]o in close agreement with the Nernst equation. If Cl- is replaced by SO4 2-, a depolarization is produced, while chloride replacement by NO3 -, Br-, and I- results in a hyperpolarization of the membrane. Removal of the external Na+ ions increases the average membrane potential by 17 mv.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract: A new combined turgor/membrane potential probe (T-EP probe) monitored cell turgor and membrane potential simultaneously in single giant cells. The new probe consisted of a silicone oil-filled micropipette (oil-microelectrode), which conducted electric current. Measurements of turgor and hydraulic conductivity were performed as with the conventional cell pressure probe besides the membrane potential. In internodal cells of Chara corallina, steady state turgor (0.5-0.7 MPa) and resting potentials (-200 to ?220 mV) in APW, and hydraulic conductivity (0.07 to 0.21 × 10~5 m s?1 MPa?1) were measured with the new probe, and cells exhibited healthy cytoplasmic streaming for at least 24 h during measurements. When internodal cells of Chara corallina were treated with 30, 20, 10, and 5 mM KCI, turgor responded immediately to all concentrations, and the osmotic changes in the medium were measured. Action potentials, which brought the membrane potential to a steady depolarization that measured the concentration difference of K+ in the medium, were induced in a concentration — dependent delay and occurred only 30, 20, and 10 mM of KCl. When the solution was changed back to APW, the repolarization of membrane potential consisted of a quick and a following slow phase. During the quick phase, which took place immediately and lasted 1 to 3 min, the plasma membrane remained activated. The membrane was gradually deactivated in the slow phase, and entirely deactivated when the membrane potential recovered to the resting potential in APW. Although the activated plasma membrane was permeable to K+, no major ion channels were activated on the tonoplast, and therefore, internodal cells of Chara corallina did not regulate turgor when osmotic potential changed in the surrounding medium.  相似文献   

18.
Effects of monovalent cations and some anions on the electrical properties of the barnacle muscle fiber membrane were studied when the intra- or extracellular concentrations of those ions were altered by longitudinal intra-cellular injection. The resting potential of the normal fiber decreases linearly with increase of logarithm of [K+]out and the decrement for a tenfold increase in [K+]out is 58 mv when the product, [K+]out ·[Cl-]out, is kept constant. It also decreases with decreasing [K+]in but is always less than expected theoretically. The deviation becomes larger as [K+]in increases and the resting potential finally starts to decrease with increasing [K+]in for [K+]in > 250 mM. When the internal K+ concentration is decreased the overshoot of the spike potential increases and the time course of the spike potential becomes more prolonged. In substituting for the internal K+, Na+ and sucrose affect the resting and spike potentials similarly. Some organic cations (guanidine, choline, tris, and TMA) behave like sucrose while some other organic cations (TEA, TPA, and TBA) have a specific effect and prolong the spike potential if they are applied intracellularly or extracellularly. In all cases the active membrane potential increases linearly with the logarithm of [Ca++]out/[K+]in and the increment is about 29 mv for tenfold increase in this ratio. The fiber membrane is permeable to Cl- and other smaller anions (Br- and I-) but not to acetate- and larger anions (citrate-, sulfate-, and methanesulfonate-).  相似文献   

19.
A pH-sensitive electrode was applied to measure activity of H+ ions in the medium surrounding excitable cells of pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo L.) seedlings during cooling-induced generation of action potential (AP). Reversible alkalization shifts were found to occur synchronously with AP, which could be due to the influx of H+ ions from external medium into excitable cells. Ethacrynic acid (an anion channel blocker) reduced the AP amplitude but had no effect on the transient alkalization of the medium. An inhibitor of plasma membrane H+-ATPase, N,N’-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide suppressed both the AP amplitude and the extent of alkalization. In experiments with plasma membrane vesicles, the hydrolytic H+-ATPase activity was subjected to inhibition by Ca2+ concentrations in the range characteristic of cytosolic changes during AP generation. The addition of a calcium channel blocker verapamil and a chelating agent EGTA to inhibit Ca2+ influx from the medium eliminated the AP spike and diminished reversible alkalization of the external solution. An inhibitor of protein kinase, H-7 alleviated the inhibitory effect of Ca2+ on hydrolytic H+-ATPase activity in plasma membrane vesicles and suppressed the reversible alkalization of the medium during AP generation. The results provide evidence that the depolarization phase of AP is associated not only with activation of chloride channels and Cl? efflux but also with temporary suppression of plasma membrane H+-ATPase manifested as H+ influx. The Ca2+-induced inhibition of the plasma membrane H+-ATPase is supposedly mediated by protein kinases.  相似文献   

20.
Bioelectric effects of ions microinjected into the giant axon of Loligo   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
1. A technique is described for recording the bioelectric activity of the squid giant axon during and following alteration of the internal axonal composition with respect to ions or other substances. 2. Experimental evidence indicates that the technique as described is capable of measuring changes in local bioelectric activity with an accuracy of 10 to 15 per cent or higher. 3. Alterations of the internal K+ or Cl- concentrations do not cause the change in resting potential expected on the basis of a Donnan mechanism. 4. The general effect of microinjection of K+ Rb+, Na+, Li+, Ba++, Ca++, Mg++, or Sr++ is to cause decrease in spike amplitude, followed by propagation block. 5. The resting potential decreases when the amplitude of the spike becomes low and block is incipient. 6. The decrease in resting potential and spike amplitude may be confined to the immediate vicinity of the injection. 7. At block, the resting potential decreases up to 50 per cent, but injection of small quantities of divalent cations may cause much larger localized depolarization. 8. The blocking effectiveness of K+, Na+, and Ca++ expressed as reciprocals of the relative amounts needed to cause block is approximately 1:5:100. Rb+ has the same low effectiveness as does K+. Li+ resembles Na+. Ba++ and Mg++ are approximately as effective as Ca++. 9. Microinjection of Na+ may cause marked prolongation of the spike at the injection site as well as decrease in its amplitude. 10. The anions used (Cl-, HCO3-, NO3-, SO4-, aspartate, and glutamate) do not seem to exert specific effects. 11. A tentative explanation is offered for the insensitivity of the resting potential to changes in the axonal ionic composition. 12. New data are presented on the range of variation, in a large sample, of the magnitude of the resting potential and spike amplitude.  相似文献   

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