Abstract: | The effect of primycin, a guanidine-type antibiotic was studied on the electric properties and 42K+ uptake of the frog sartorius and semitendinosus muscle. Both in normal and choline chloride Ringer solution, primycin evoked a concentration and time dependent depolarization of the surface membrane of the muscle. This depolarization was significantly increased by Na ions. Primycin treatment was shown to evoke a dose-dependent decrease of the depolarization induced by 20 mM K+-Ringer. When the muscles were incubated in a Ringer solution containing choline chloride, during an incubation period of 30 min the uptake of 42K+ was decreased to 12% upon the exposure to 5 x 10(-6) mol primycin as compared to the control value. As the primycin-induced depolarization increased, the shape and amplitude of the action potentials elicited by square-wave electric impulses were altered and decreased, respectively. In sodium isaethionate Ringer 1--2 x 10(-6) M primycin induced a slow depolarization resulting in firing potentials. The results suggest that primycin depolarizes the surface membrane exclusively through the blockade of the resting K+ channels, the other phenomena being the results of this depolarizing effect. |