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1.
Voltage clamp experiments were performed to analyse the influence of the slow inward current (isi) on the repolarisation process in frog atrium. MnCl2 was used as isi blocker. The action potential was prolonged by depolarising pulses applied during the plateau. This was an expected result considering that, at positive potentials the time constant for isi inactivation increases. This effect was abolished by Mn ions which in turn block isi. The results suggest that inactivation of isi is of primary importance in determining the repolarisation rate. The action of Mn was not selective, since it reduced the background K current. This effect seems to be related to the decrease in Ca influx.  相似文献   

2.
The new nonhormonal activator of adenylate cyclase forskolin was studied on frog atrial trabeculae by current clamp and voltage clamp methods using a double sucrose gap technique. Forskolin (5 X 10(-6) M to 2 X 10(-5) M) dose-dependently increased action potential duration, the height of the plateau and twitch tension. The time constant for inactivation of the slow inward current and the steady state kinetic variables of calcium channels d infinity and f infinity remained uneffected. Forskolin increased the amplitude of slow inward calcium current isi and of the phasic tension related to it. The maximal conductance gsi increased. These effects were indistinguishable from those obtained earlier on cardiac fibers with hormonal and nonhormonal activators of cyclic AMP-dependent phosphorylation. The beta-adrenoreceptor antagonist propranolol 10(-6)M did not decrease the effect of forskolin. Forskolin had no effect when slow inward current was previously increased by saturating concentrations of the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol (10(-4)M). Our results are in favour of the hypothesis that cyclic AMP-dependent phosphorylation of membrane proteins modulates the Ca-entry in the heart cells through the membrane slow calcium channels.  相似文献   

3.
Electrical and mechanical responses of frog atrial trabeculae were studied simultaneously using the double-sucrose gap method. Action potentials and twitch tension could be successively generated in fibers in which the slow inward calcium channel current was not observed. As a rule, this could be obtained in the course of a long experiment (3 to 4 hours). Peak tension was shown to increase monotonically with membrane potential in these preparations. In preparations with the slow inward current the total peak tension could be separated into two components. The first component (tonic) monotonically increased with the membrane potential and was probably related to Na/Ca exchange (Horackova 1984). The potential dependency of the second (phasic) component correlated with that of the slow inward calcium current. Only the tonic but not the phasic component could be observed in preparations without the presence of the slow inward calcium current. The tonic component prevailed when both the slow inward current and phasic tension were greatly reduced by nifedipine. Long experiments, long depolarizing clamp pulses, a metabolic inhibitor 2,4-dinitrophenol, inhibitors of Na/K pump ouabain and AR-L57, toxins promoting intracellular sodium accumulation (aconitine, scorpion toxin) were all shown to increase the tonic tension, but not the slow inward current; they induced a transition from biphasic tension-voltage curve into a monotonically increasing one. We concluded that these procedures and agents greatly stimulate Ca influx via Na/Ca exchange. These results show that Na/Ca exchange can function as a reserve system of Ca2+ used for contraction, thus supporting the heart function, especially under unfavourable metabolic conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Voltage clamp currents from medium sized ganglion cells of Helix pomatia have a fast transient outward current component in addition to the usually observed inward and outward currents. This component is inactivated at normal resting potential. The current, which is carried by K+ ions, may surpass leakage currents by a factor of 100 after inactivation has been removed by hyperpolarizing conditioning pulses. Its kinetics are similar to those of the inward current, except that it has a longer time constant of inactivation. It has a threshold close to resting potential. This additional component is also present in giant cells, where however, it is less prominent. Pacemaker activity is controlled by this current. It was found that inward currents have a slow inactivating process in addition to a fast, Hodgkin-Huxley type inactivation. The time constants of the slow process are similar to those of slow outward current inactivation.  相似文献   

5.
Smooth muscle cells normally do not possess fast Na+ channels, but inward current is carried through two types of Ca2+ channels: slow (L type) Ca2+ channels and fast (T type) Ca2+ channels. Whole-cell voltage clamp was done on single smooth muscle cells isolated from the longitudinal layer of the 18-day pregnant rat uterus. Depolarizing pulses, applied from a holding potential of -90 mV, evoked two types of inward current, fast and slow. The fast inward current decayed within 30 ms, depended on [Na]o, and was inhibited by tetrodotoxin (TTX) (K0.5 = 27 nM). The slow inward current decayed slowly, was dependent on [Ca]o (or Ba2+), and was inhibited by nifedipine. These results suggest that the fast inward current is a fast Na+ channel current and that the slow inward current is a Ca2+ slow channel current. A fast-inactivating Ca2+ channel current was not evident. We conclude that the ion channels that generate inward currents in pregnant rat uterine cells are TTX-sensitive fast Na+ channels and dihydropyridine-sensitive slow Ca2+ channels. The number of fast Na+ channels increased during gestation. The averaged current density increased from 0 on day 5, to 0.19 on day 9, to 0.56 on day 14, to 0.90 on day 18, and to 0.86 pA/pF on day 21. This almost linear increase occurs because of an increase in the fraction of cells that possess fast Na+ channels. The Ca2+ channel current density was also higher during the latter half of gestation. These results indicate that the fast Na+ channels and Ca2+ slow channels in myometrium become more numerous as term approaches, and we suggest that the fast Na+ current may be involved in spread of excitation. Isoproterenol (beta-agonist) did not affect either ICa(s) or INa(f), whereas Mg2+ (K0.5 = 12 mM) and nifedipine (K0.5 = 3.3 nM) depressed ICa(s). Oxytocin had no effect on INa(f) and actually depressed ICa(s) to a small extent. Therefore, the tocolytic action of beta-agonists cannot be explained by an inhibition of ICa(s), whereas that of Mg2+ can be so explained. The stimulating action of oxytocin on uterine contractions cannot be explained by a stimulation of ICa(s).  相似文献   

6.
In the isolated sensory epithelium of the Plotosus electroreceptor, the receptor current has been dissected into inward Ca current, ICa, and superimposed outward transient of Ca-gated K current, IK(Ca). In control saline (170 mM/liter Na), with IK(Ca) abolished by K blockers, ICa declined in two successive exponential phases with voltage-dependent time constants. Double-pulse experiments revealed that the test ICa was partially depressed by prepulses, maximally near voltage levels for the control ICa maximum, which suggests current-dependent inactivation. In low Na saline (80 mM/liter), ICa declined in a single phase with time constants similar to those of the slower phase in control saline. The test ICa was then unaffected by prepulses. The implied presence of two Ca current components, the fast and slow ICa's, were further examined. In control saline, the PSP externally recorded from the afferent nerve showed a fast peak and a slow tonic phase. The double-pulse experiments revealed that IK(Ca) and the peak PSP were similarly depressed, i.e., secondarily to inactivation of the peak current. The steady inward current, however, was unaffected by prolonged prepulses that were stepped to 0 mV, the in situ DC level. Therefore, the fast ICa seems to initiate IK(Ca) and phasic release of transmitter, which serves for phasic receptor responses. The slow ICa may provide persistent active current, which has been shown to maintain tonic receptor operation.  相似文献   

7.
Membrane slow inward currents of 3-day-old embryonic chick single heart cells were investigated using the whole-cell patch clamp technique. In a solution containing only Na+ ions and in the presence of tetrodotoxin and Mn2+, the inward current-voltage relationship presented two maxima, confirming the existence of two different voltage-dependent slow inward currents. The first type, a fast transient slow inward current (Isi (ft], was activated from a holding potential of -80 mV and showed fast activation and inactivation. This current was highly sensitive to melittin (10(-8) M) and insensitive to low concentrations of desmethoxyverapamil [-)D888, 10(-9)-10(-6) M). Depolarizing voltage steps from a holding a potential of -50 mV activated two components of the slow inward current, i.e., a slow and a sustained current (Isi(sts] that showed a slow inactivation followed by a slow inactivation and a sustained component. Melittin at a high concentration (10(-4)M) completely blocked the slow transient component (Isi(st] and left unblocked the sustained component (Isi(s]. Both components (Isi(st) and Isi(s] were blocked by verapamil (10(-5)M) and low concentrations of (-)D888 (10(-8)-10(-6)M).  相似文献   

8.
The contribution of axonal activity to the ionic currents which generate bursting pacemaker activity was studied by using the two-electrode voltage-clamp technique in Aplysia bursting neuron somata in conjunction with intraaxonal voltage recordings. Depolarizing voltage-clamp pulses applied to bursting cell somata triggered axonal action potentials. The voltage-clamp current recording exhibited transient inward current "notches" corresponding to each of the axonal spikes. The addition of 50 microM tetrodotoxin (TTX) to the bathing medium blocked the fast axonal spikes and current notches, revealing a slower axonal spike which was blocked by the replacement of external Ca2+ with Co2+. The inward current evoked by applying a depolarizing voltage-clamp pulse in the soma is distorted by the occurrence of the axonal Ca2+ spike. Elimination of the axonal spike, by injecting hyperpolarizing current into the axon, changes both the time course and the magnitude of the inward current. The axonal Ca2+ spikes are followed by a series of Ca2+-dependent afterpotentials: a rapid postspike hyperpolarization, a depolarizing afterpotential (DAP) and, finally, a long-lasting postburst hyperpolarization. The long-lasting hyperpolarization is not blocked by 50 mM external tetraethyl ammonium, an effective blocker of Ca2+-activated K+ current [IK(Ca)], and does not appear to reverse at EK. Hence, the axonal long-lasting hyperpolarization may not be due to IK(Ca). Somatic voltage-clamp pulses in bursting neurons are followed by a slow inward tail current, which is sometimes coincident with a DAP in the axon. In some cells, the amplitude of the slow inward tail current is greatly reduced if axonal spikes and DAPs are prevented by hyperpolarization of the axon, while, in other cells, elimination of axonal activity has little effect. Therefore, the slow inward tail current is not necessarily an artifact of poor voltage-clamp control over the axonal membrane potential but probably results from the activation of an ionic conductance mechanism located partly in the axon and partly in the soma.  相似文献   

9.
Membrane current following prolonged periods of rapid stimulation was examined in short (less than 1.5 mm) canine cardiac Purkinje fibers of radius less than 0.15 mm. The Purkinje fibers were repetitively stimulated by delivering trains of depolarizing voltage clamp pulses at rapid frequencies. The slowly decaying outward current following repetitive stimulation ("post-drive" current) is eliminated by the addition of 10(-5) M dihydro-ouabain. The post-drive current is attributed to enhanced Na/K exchange caused by Na loading during the overdrive. Depolarizing voltage clamp pulses initiated from negative (- 80 mV) or depolarized (-50 mV) holding potentials can give rise to post- drive current because of activation of tetrodotoxin-sensitive or D600- sensitive channels. The magnitude of the post-drive current depends on the frequency of voltage clamp pulses, the duration of each pulse, and the duration of the repetitive stimulation. The time constant of decay of the post-drive current depends on extracellular [K] in accordance with Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The Km is 1.2 mM bulk [K], [K]B. The mean time constant in 4 mM [K]B is 83 s. Epinephrine (10(-5) M) decreases the time constant by 20%. The time constant is increased by lowering [Ca]o between 4 and 1 mM. Lowering [Ca]o further, to 0.1 mM, eliminates post-drive current following repetitive stimulation initiated from depolarized potentials. The latter result suggests that slow inward Ca2+ current may increase [Na]i via Na/Ca exchange.  相似文献   

10.
Ca2+ current and tension have been simultaneously recorded from single twitch fibres of the semi-tendinosus of Rana esculenta in a medium containing a physiological Ca2+ concentration (1.8 mM). Under appropriate conditions it can be shown that tension develops in two phases. The first is rapid and reaches its maximum before activation of the inward Ca2+ current. The second phase is slower and with a time course which appears to be correlated with that of the inward current. Nifedipine, a specific Ca2+ channel inhibitor greatly reduced ICa2+ and the slower component of tension. Bay K8644 a Ca2+ channel activator, which has receptors on T-tubule, increased ICa2+ and the slow component of tension. These results indicate that a slow component of skeletal muscle contraction is related to the inward Ca2+ current flowing through dihydropyridine sensitive voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels.  相似文献   

11.
The interaction of large depolarization and dihydropyridine Ca2+ agonists, both of which are known to enhance L-type Ca2+ channel current, was examined using a conventional whole-cell clamp technique. In guinea pig detrusor cells, only L-type Ca2+ channels occur. A second open state (long open state: O2) of the Ca2+ channels develops during large depolarization (at +80 mV, without Ca2+ agonists). This was judged from lack of inactivation of the Ca2+ channel current during the large depolarizing steps (5 s) and slowly deactivating inward tail currents (= 10-15 ms) upon repolarization of the cell membrane to the holding potential (-60 mV). Application of Bay K 8644 (in 2.4 mM Ca(2+)- containing solutions) increased the amplitude of the Ca2+ currents evoked by simple depolarizations, and made it possible to observe inward tail currents (= 2.5-5 ms at -60 mV). The open state induced by large depolarization (O2*) in the Bay K 8644 also seemed hardly to inactivate. After preconditioning with large depolarizing steps, the decay time course of the inward tail currents upon repolarization to the holding potential (-60 mV) was significantly slowed, and could be fitted reasonably with two exponentials. The fast and slow time constants were 10 and 45 ms, respectively, after 2 s preconditioning depolarizations. Qualitatively the same results were obtained using Ba2+ as a charge carrier. Although the amplitudes of the inward currents observed in the test step and the subsequent repolarization to the holding potential were decreased in the same manner by additional application of nifedipine (in the presence of Bay K 8644), the very slow deactivation time course of the tail current was little changed. The additive enhancement by large depolarization and Ca2+ agonists of the inward tail current implies that two mechanisms separately induce long opening of the Ca2+ channels: i.e., that there are four open states.  相似文献   

12.
A novel voltage-clamp protocol was developed to test whether slow inactivation of Ca2+ current occurs during bursting in insulin-secreting cells. Single insulin-secreting HIT cells were patch-clamped and their Ca2+ currents were isolated pharmacologically. A computed beta-cell burst was used as a voltage-clamp command and the net Ca2+ current elicited was determined as a cadmium difference current. Ca2+ current rapidly activated during the computed plateau and spike depolarizations and then slowly decayed. Integration of this Ca2+ current yielded an estimate of total Ca influx. To further analyze Ca2+ current inactivation during a burst, repetitive test pulses to + 10 mV were added to the voltage command. Current elicited by these pulses was constant during the interburst, but then slowly and reversibly decreased during the depolarizing plateau. This inactivation was reduced by replacing external Ca2+ with Ba2+ as a charge carrier, and in some cells inactivation was slower in Ba2+. Experimental results were compared with the predictions of the Keizer-Smolen mathematical model of bursting, after subjecting model equations to identical voltage commands. In this model, bursting is driven by the slow, voltage-dependent inactivation of Ca current during the plateau active phase. The K-S model could account for the slope of the slow decay of spike-elicited Ca current, the waveform of individual Ca current spikes, and the suppression of test pulse-elicited Ca current during a burst command. However, the extent and rate of fast inactivation were underestimated by the model.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Calcium currents in bullfrog sympathetic neurons. II. Inactivation   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Calcium currents in bullfrog sympathetic neurons inactivate slowly and partially during depolarizations lasting 0.5-1 s. There is also a slower (minutes) inactivation process with a broad voltage dependence. An irreversible loss of current (rundown) is prominent with low concentrations of intracellular Ca2+ buffers, with either Ca2+ or Ba2+ as the charge carrier. The extent and rate of the more rapid inactivation process are maximal near the voltage at which the peak inward current is generated, suggesting that inactivation might be Ca2+ dependent. However, inactivation occurs with either Ca2+ or Ba2+ as the charge carrier, is not prevented by strong buffering of intracellular Ca2+ with 10 mM BAPTA, and varies little as the peak current is changed 10-fold by changing the divalent ion concentration. That is, rapid inactivation is not explained by simple versions of voltage, Ca2+- or current-dependent inactivation models. A model in which ion binding within the channel allows a slower, rate-limiting inactivation process fits some but not all of the observed features of inactivation. A purely voltage-dependent three-state cyclic model fits the data if microscopic inactivation is favored by hyperpolarization.  相似文献   

14.
Two-microelectrode voltage clamp studies were performed on the somata of Hermissenda Type B photoreceptors that had been isolated by axotomy from all synaptic interaction as well as any impulse-generating (i.e., active) membrane. In the presence of 2-10 mM 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) and 100 mM tetraethylammonium ion (TEA), which eliminated two previously described voltage-dependent potassium currents (IA and the delayed rectifier), a voltage-dependent outward current was apparent in the steady state responses to command voltage steps more positive than -40 mV (absolute). This current increased with increasing external Ca++. The magnitude of the outward current decreased and an inward current became apparent following EGTA injection. Substitution of external Ba++ for Ca++ also made the inward current more apparent. This inward current, which was almost eliminated after being exposed for approximately 5 min to a solution in which external Ca++ was replaced with Cd++, was maximally activated at approximately 0 mV. Elevation of external potassium allowed the calcium (ICa++) and calcium-dependent K+ (IC) currents to be substantially separated. Command pulses to 0 mV elicited maximal ICa++ but no IC because no K+ currents flowed at their new reversal potential (0 mV) in 300 mM K+. At a holding potential of -60 mV, which was now more negative than the potassium equilibrium potential, EK+, in 300 mM K+, IC appeared as an inward tail current after positive command steps. The voltage dependence of ICa++ was demonstrated with positive steps in 100 mM Ba++, 4-AP, and TEA. Other data indicated that in 10 mM Ca++, IC underwent pronounced and prolonged inactivation whereas ICa++ did not. When the photoreceptor was stimulated with a light step (with the membrane potential held at -60 mV), there was also a prolonged inactivation of IC. In elevated external Ca++, ICa++ also showed similar inactivation. These data suggest that IC may undergo prolonged inactivation due to a direct effect of elevated intracellular Ca++, as was previously shown for a voltage-dependent potassium current, IA. These results are discussed in relation to the production of training-induced changes of membrane currents on retention days of associative learning.  相似文献   

15.
The recently cloned epithelial Ca(2+) channel, ECaC, which is expressed in the apical membrane of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3)-responsible epithelia, was characterized in Xenopus laevis oocytes by measuring the Ca(2+)-activated Cl(-) current which is a sensitive read-out of the Ca(2+) influx. ECaC-expressing oocytes responded to a voltage ramp with a maximal inward current of -2.1 +/- 0.3 microA at a holding potential of -99 +/- 1 mV. The inward current decreased progressively at less negative potentials and at +50 mV a small Ca(2+)-induced outward current was observed. The Ca(2+) influx-evoked current at a hyperpolarizing pulse to -100 mV displayed a fast activation followed by a rapid but partial inactivation. Loading of the oocytes with the Ca(2+) chelator BAPTA delayed the activation and blocked the inactivation of ECaC. When a series of brief hyperpolarizing pulses were given a significant decline in the peak response and subsequent plateau phase was observed. In conclusion, the distinct electrophysiological features of ECaC are hyperpolarization-dependent activation, Ca(2+)-dependent regulation of channel conductance and desensitization during repetitive stimulation.  相似文献   

16.
Inactivation of a dihydropyridine-sensitive calcium current was studied in a cell line (A7r5) derived from smooth muscle of the rat thoracic aorta. Inactivation is faster with extracellular Ca2+ than with Ba2+. In Ba2+, inactivation increases monotonically with depolarization. In Ca2+, inactivation is related to the amount of inward current, so that little inactivation is seen in Ca2+ for brief depolarizations approaching the reversal potential. Longer depolarizations in Ca2+ reveal two components of inactivation, the slower component behaving like that observed in Ba2+. Furthermore, lowering extracellular Ca2+ slows inactivation. These results are consistent with the coexistence of two inactivation processes, a slow voltage-dependent inactivation, and a more rapid current-dependent inactivation which is observable only with Ca2+. Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation is decreased but not eliminated when intracellular Ca2+ is buffered by 10 mM BAPTA, suggesting that Ca2+ acts at a site on or near the channel. We also studied recovery from inactivation after either a short pulse (able to produce significant inactivation only in Ca2+) or a long pulse (giving similar inactivation with either cation). Surprisingly, recovery from Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation was voltage dependent. This suggests that the pathways for recovery from inactivation are similar regardless of how inactivation is generated. We propose a model where Ca(2+)- and voltage-dependent inactivation occur independently.  相似文献   

17.
Inactivation of slow Ca2+ channels was studied in intact twitch skeletal muscle fibers of the frog by using the three-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique. Hypertonic sucrose solutions were used to abolish contraction. The rate constant of decay of the slow Ca2+ current (ICa) remained practically unchanged when the recording solution containing 10 mM Ca2+ was replaced by a Ca2+-buffered solution (126 mM Ca-maleate). The rate constant of decay of ICa monotonically increased with depolarization although the corresponding time integral of ICa followed a bell-shaped function. The replacement of Ca2+ by Ba2+ did not result in a slowing of the rate of decay of the inward current nor did it reduce the degree of steady-state inactivation. The voltage dependence of the steady-state inactivation curve was steeper in the presence of Ba2+. In two-pulse experiments with large conditioning depolarizations ICa inactivation remained unchanged although Ca2+ influx during the prepulse greatly decreased. Dantrolene (12 microM) increased mechanical threshold at all pulse durations tested, the effect being more prominent for short pulses. Dantrolene did not significantly modify ICa decay and the voltage dependence of inactivation. These results indicate that in intact muscle fibers Ca2+ channels inactivate in a voltage-dependent manner through a mechanism that does not require Ca2+ entry into the cell.  相似文献   

18.
Taste buds were isolated from the fungiform papilla of the rat tongue and the receptor cells (TRCs) were patch clamped. Seals were obtained on the basolateral membrane of 281 TRCs, protruding from the intact taste buds or isolated by micro-dissection. In whole-cell configuration 72% of the cells had a TTX blockable transient Na inward current (mean peak amplitude 0.74 nA). All cells had outward K currents. Their activation was slower than for the Na current and a slow inactivation was also noticeable. The K currents were blocked by tetraethylammonium, Ba, and 4-aminopyridine, and were absent when the pipette contained Cs instead of K. With 100 mM Ba or 100 mM Ca in the bath, two types of inward current were observed. An L-type Ca current (ICaL) activated at -20 mV had a mean peak amplitude of 440 pA and inactivated very slowly. At 3 mM Ca the activation threshold of ICaL was near -40 mV. A transient T-type current (ICaT) activated at -50 mV had an average peak amplitude of 53 pA and inactivated with a time constant of 36 ms at -30 mV. ICaL was blocked more efficiently by Cd and D600 than ICaT. ICaT was blocked by 0.2 mM Ni and half blocked by 200 microM amiloride. In whole-cell voltage clamp, Na-saccharin caused (in 34% of 55 cells tested) a decrease in outward K currents by 21%, which may be expected to depolarize the TRCs. Also, Na-saccharin caused some taste cells to fire action potentials (on-cell, 7 out of 24 cells; whole-cell, 2 out of 38 cells responding to saccharin) of amplitudes sufficient to activate ICaL. Thus the action potentials will cause Ca inflow, which may trigger release of transmitter.  相似文献   

19.
We used the two-microelectrode voltage clamp technique and tetrodotoxin (TTX) to investigate the possible occurrence of slow inactivation of sodium channels in canine cardiac Purkinje fibers under physiologic conditions. The increase in net outward current during prolonged (5-20 s) step depolarizations (range -70 to +5 mV) following the application of TTX is time dependent, being maximal immediately following depolarization, and declining thereafter towards a steady value. To eliminate the possibility that this time-dependent current was due to inadequate voltage control of these multicellular preparations early during square clamp pulses, we also used slowly depolarizing voltage clamp ramps (range 5-100 mV/s) to ensure control of membrane potential. TTX-sensitive current also was observed with these voltage ramps; the time dependence of this current was demonstrated by the reduction of the peak current magnitude as the ramp speed was reduced. Reducing the holding potential within the voltage range of sodium channel inactivation also decreased the TTX-sensitive current observed with identical speed ramps. These results suggest that the TTX-sensitive time-dependent current is a direct measure of slow inactivation of canine cardiac sodium channels. This current may play an important role in modulating the action potential duration.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of bethanidine sulphate, a pharmacological analog of the cardiac antibrillatory drug, bretylium tosylate, were studied on action potentials (APs) and K+, Na+, and Ca2+ currents of single cultured embryonic chick heart cells using the whole-cell current clamp and voltage clamp technique. Extracellular application of bethanidine (3 X 10(-4) M) increased the overshoot and the duration of the APs and greatly decreased the outward K+ current (IK) and potentiated the inward fast Na+ currents (INa) and the inward slow calcium current (ICa). However, intracellular introduction of bethanidine (10(-4) M) blocked INa. In isolated atria of rat, bethanidine increased the force of contraction in a dose-dependent manner. These findings suggest that when applied extracellularly, bethanidine exerts a potentiating effect on the myocardial fast Na+ current and slow Ca2+ current and an inhibitory effect of IK. The positive inotropic effect of bethanidine could be due, at least in part, to an increase of Ca2+ influx via the slow Ca2+ channel and the Na-Ca exchange. It is suggested that the decrease of IK by bethanidine may account for its antifibrillatory action.  相似文献   

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