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1.
The myelinated giant nerve fiber of the shrimp, Penaeus japonicus, is known to have the fastest velocity of saltatory impulse conduction among all nerve fibers so far studied, owing to its long distances between nodal regions and large diameter. For a better understanding of the basis of this fast conduction, a medial giant fiber of the ventral nerve cord of the shrimp was isolated, and ionic currents of its presynaptic membrane (a functional node) were examined using the sucrose-gap voltage-clamp method. Inward currents induced by depolarizing voltage pulses had a maximum value of 0.5 microA and a reversal potential of 120 mV. These currents were completely suppressed by tetrodotoxin and greatly prolonged by scorpion toxin, suggesting that they are the Na current. Both activation and inactivation kinetics of the Na current were unusually rapid in comparison with those of vertebrate nodes. According to a rough estimation of the excitable area, the density of Na current reached 500 mA/cm2. In many cases, the late outward currents were induced only by depolarizing pulses larger than 50 mV in amplitude. The slope conductance measured from late currents were mostly smaller than that measured from the Na current, suggesting a low density of K channels in the synaptic membrane. These characteristics are in good harmony with the fact that the presynaptic membrane plays a role as functional node in the fastest impulse conduction of this nerve fiber.  相似文献   

2.
Gating currents in the node of Ranvier: voltage and time dependence.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Like the axolemma of the giant nerve fibre of the squid, the nodal membrane of frog myelinated nerve fibres after blocking transmembrane ionic currents exhibits asymmetrical displacement currents during and after hyperpolarizing and depolarizing voltage clamp pulses of equal size. The steady-state distribution of charges as a function of membrane potential is consistent with Boltzmanns law (midpoint potential minus 33.7 mV; saturation value 17200 charges/mum-2). The time course of the asymmetry current and the voltage dependence of its time constant are consistent with the notion that due to a sudden change in membrane potential the charges undergo a first order transition between two configurations. Size and voltage dependence of the time constant are similar to those of the activation of the sodium conductance assuming m-2h kinetics. The results suggest that the presence of ten times more sodium channels (5000/mum-2) in the node of Ranvier than in the squid giant axon with similar sodium conductance per channel (2-3 pS).  相似文献   

3.
Giant nerve fibers of the shrimp family Penaeidae conduct impulses at the velocity highest among all animal species (∼210 m/s; highest in mammals = 120 m/s). We examined these giant and other small nerve fibers morphologically using a differential interference contrast microscope as well as an electron microscope, and found a very specialized form of excitable membrane that functions as a node for saltatory conduction of the impulse. This node appeared under the light microscope as a characteristic pattern of concentrically aligned rings in a very small spot of the myelin sheath. The diameter of the innermost ring of the node was about 5 μm, and the distance between these nodes was as long as 12 mm. Via an electron microscope, these nodes were characterized by a complete lack of the myelin sheath, forming a fenestration that has a tight junction with an axonal membrane. Voltage clamp measurements by a sucrose gap technique demonstrated that the axonal membrane at these fenestration nodes is exclusively excitable and that the large submyelinic space is a unique conductive pathway for loop currents for saltatory conduction through such fenestration nodes. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
It was shown by means of a mathematical model of a myelinated nerve fiber (Frankenhaeuser — Huxley) that an increase in threshold and decrease in the amplitude of the action potential (AP) during the relative refractory period are due mainly to sodium inactivation. The contribution of increased potassium permeability to these changes is small, for the chief component of the outgoing ionic current in the node of Ranvier is not the potassium current, but the leak current. Given the ratio between these currents the increase in threshold and graduation of the action potential in the node membrane are less marked than in the membrane of the squid giant axon. At the beginning of the relative refractory period the AP evoked by strong stimulation is conducted only to the next node. Later in the refractory period impulses are conducted incrementally, and the threshold for the spreading impulse is higher than the threshold for spike excitation in the stimulated node. Delay in impulse conduction between refractory nodes leads to the formation of a retrograde depolarization wave. The reasons for differences in the mechanisms of impulse conduction along unmyelinated and myelinated refractory fibers are discussed.Vishnevskii Institute of Surgery, Academy of Medical Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 4, No. 2, pp. 201–207, March–April, 1972.  相似文献   

5.
Na+ currents were measured during 0.4-s depolarizing pulses using the cell-attached variation of the patch-clamp technique. Patches on Cs-dialyzed segments of sartorius muscle of Rana pipiens contained an estimated 25-500 Na+ channels. Three distinct types of current were observed after the pulse onset: a large initial surge of inward current that decayed within 10 ms (early currents), a steady "drizzle" of isolated, brief, inward unitary currents (background currents), and occasional "cloudbursts" of tens to hundreds of sequential unitary inward currents (bursts). Average late currents (background plus bursts) were 0.12% of peak early current amplitude at -20 mV. 85% of the late currents were carried by bursting channels. The unit current amplitude was the same for all three types of current, with a conductance of 10.5 pS and a reversal potential of +74 mV. The magnitudes of the three current components were correlated from patch to patch, and all were eliminated by slow inactivation. We conclude that all three components were due to Na+ channel activity. The mean open time of the background currents was approximately 0.25 ms, and the channels averaged 1.2 openings for each event. Neither the open time nor the number of openings of background currents was strongly sensitive to membrane potential. We estimated that background openings occurred at a rate of 0.25 Hz for each channel. Bursts occurred once each 2,000 pulses for each channel (assuming identical channels). The open time during bursts increased with depolarization to 1-2 ms at -20 mV, whereas the closed time decreased to less than 20 ms. The fractional open time during bursts was fitted with m infinity 3 using standard Na+ channel models. We conclude that background currents are caused by a return of normal Na+ channels from inactivation, while bursts are instances where the channel's inactivation gate spontaneously loses its function for prolonged periods.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Membrane ionic currents were measured in pregnant rat uterine smooth muscle under voltage clamp conditions by utilizing the double sucrose gap method, and the effects of conditioning pre-pulses on these currents were investigated. With depolarizing pulses, the early inward current was followed by a late outward current. Cobalt (1mm) abolished the inward current and did not affect the late outward currentper se, but produced changes in the current pattern, suggesting that the inward current overlaps with the initial part of the late outward current. After correction for this overlap, the inward current reached its maximum at about +10 mV and its reversal potential was estimated to be +62 mV. Tetraethylammonium (TEA) suppressed the outward currents and increased the apparent inward current. The increase in the inward current by TEA thus could be due to a suppression of the outward current. The reversal potential for the outward current was estimated to be –87 mV. Conditioning depolarization and hyperpolarization both produced a decrease in the inward current. Complete depolarization block occurred at a membrane potential of –20 mV. Conditioning hyperpolarization experiments in the presence of cobalt and/or TEA revealed that the decrease in the inward current caused by conditioning hyperpolarization was a result of an increase in the outward current overlapping with the inward current. It appears that a part of the potassium channel population is inactivated at the resting membrane potential and that this inactivation is removed by hyperpolarization.  相似文献   

7.
Calcium entry in squid axons during voltage clamp pulses   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Squid giant axons were injected with aequorin and tetraethylammonium and were impaled with sodium ion sensitive, current and voltage electrodes. The axons were usually bathed in a solution of varying Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]o) containing 150mM each of Na+, K+ and an inert cation such as Li+, Tris or N-methylglucamine and had ionic currents pharmacologically blocked. Voltage clamp pulses were repeatedly delivered to the extent necessary to induce a change in the aequorin light emission, a measure of axoplasmic Ca2+ level, [Ca2+]i. The effect of membrane voltage on [Ca2+]i was found to depend on the concentration of internal Na+ ([Na+]i). Voltage clamp hyperpolarizing pulses were found to cause a reduction of [Ca2+]i. For depolarizing pulses a relationship between [Ca2+]i gain and [Na+]i indicates that Ca2+ entry is sigmoid with a half maximal response at 22 mM Na+. This Ca2+ entry is a steep function of [Na+]i suggesting that 4 Na+ ions are required to promote the influx of 1 Ca2+. There was little change in Ca2+ entry with depolarizing pulses when [Ca2+]o is varied from 1 to 10mM, while at 50mM [Ca2+]o calcium entry clearly increases suggesting an alternate pathway from that of Na+/Ca2+ exchange. This entry of Ca2+ at high [Ca2+]o, however, was not blocked by Cs+o. The results obtained lend further support to the notion that Na+/Ca2+ exchange in squid giant axon is sensitive to membrane voltage no matter whether this is applied as a constant change in membrane potential or as an intermittent one.  相似文献   

8.
Recent experimental evidence suggesting that presynaptic depolarization can evoke transmitter release without calcium influx has been re-examined. The presynaptic terminal of the squid giant synapse can be depolarized by variable amounts while recording presynaptic calcium current under voltage clamp and postsynaptic responses. Small depolarizations open few calcium channels with large single channel currents. Large depolarizations approaching the calcium equilibrium potential open many channels with small single channel currents. When responses to small and large depolarizations eliciting similar total macroscopic calcium currents are compared, the large pulses evoke more transmitter release. This apparent voltage-dependence of transmitter release may be explained by the greater overlap of calcium concentration domains surrounding single open calcium channels when many closely apposed channels open at large depolarizations. This channel domain overlap leads to higher calcium concentrations at transmitter release sites and more release for large depolarizations than for small depolarizations which open few widely dispersed channels. At neuromuscular junctions, a subthreshold depolarizing pulse to motor nerve terminals may release over a thousand times as much transmitter if it follows a brief train of presynaptic action potentials than if it occurs in isolation. This huge synaptic facilitation has been taken as indicative of a direct effect of voltage which is manifest only when prior activity raises presynaptic resting calcium levels. This large facilitation is actually due to a post-tetanic supernormal excitability in motor nerve terminals, causing the previously subthreshold test pulse to become suprathreshold and elicit a presynaptic action potential. When motor nerve terminals are depolarized by two pulses, as the first pulse increases above a certain level it evokes more transmitter release but less facilitation of the response to the second pulse.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Voltage-dependent membrane currents of cells dissociated from tongues of larval tiger salamanders (Ambystoma tigrinum) were studied using whole-cell and single-channel patch-clamp techniques. Nongustatory epithelial cells displayed only passive membrane properties. Cells dissociated from taste buds, presumed to be gustatory receptor cells, generated both inward and outward currents in response to depolarizing voltage steps from a holding potential of -60 or -80 mV. Almost all taste cells displayed a transient inward current that activated at -30 mV, reached a peak between 0 and +10 mV and rapidly inactivated. This inward current was blocked by tetrodotoxin (TTX) or by substitution of choline for Na+ in the bath solution, indicating that it was a Na+ current. Approximately 60% of the taste cells also displayed a sustained inward current which activated slowly at about -30 mV and reached a peak at 0 to +10 mV. The amplitude of the slow inward current was larger when Ca2+ was replaced by Ba2+ and it was blocked by bath applied CO2+, indicating it was a Ca2+ current. Delayed outward K+ currents were observed in all taste cells although in about 10% of the cells, they were small and activated only at voltages more depolarized than +10 mV. Normally, K+ currents activated at -40 mV and usually showed some inactivation during a 25-ms voltage step. The inactivating component of outward current was not observed at holding potentials more depolarized -40 mV. The outward currents were blocked by tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA) and BaCl2 in the bath or by substitution of Cs+ for K+ in the pipette solution. Both transient and noninactivating components of outward current were partially suppressed by CO2+, suggesting the presence of a Ca2(+)-activated K+ current component. Single-channel currents were recorded in cell-attached and outside-out patches of taste cell membranes. Two types of K+ channels were partially characterized, one having a mean unitary conductance of 21 pS, and the other, a conductance of 148 pS. These experiments demonstrate that tiger salamander taste cells have a variety of voltage- and ion-dependent currents including Na+ currents, Ca2+ currents and three types of K+ currents. One or more of these conductances may be modulated either directly by taste stimuli or indirectly by stimulus-regulated second messenger systems to give rise to stimulus-activated receptor potentials. Others may play a role in modulation of neurotransmitter release at synapses with taste nerve fibers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Phasic ("use-dependent") inhibition of sodium currents by the tertiary amine local anesthetics, lidocaine and bupivacaine, was observed in voltage-clamped node of Ranvier of the toad, Bufo marinus. Local anesthetics were assumed to inhibit sodium channels through occupation of a binding site with 1:1 stoichiometry. A three-parameter empirical model for state-dependent anesthetic binding to the Na channel is presented: this model includes two discrete parameters that represent the time integrals of binding and unbinding reactions during a depolarizing pulse, and one continuous parameter that represents the rate of unbinding of drug between pulses. The change in magnitude of peak sodium current during a train of depolarizing pulses to 0 mV was used as an assay of the extent of anesthetic binding at discrete intervals; estimates of model parameters were made by applying a nonlinear least-squares algorithm to the inhibition of currents obtained at two or more depolarizing pulse rates. Increasing the concentration of drug increased the rate of binding but had little or no effect on unbinding, as expected for a simple bimolecular reaction. The dependence of the model parameters on pulse duration was assessed for both drugs: as the duration of depolarizing pulses was increased, the fraction of channels binding drug during each pulse became significantly larger, whereas the fraction of occupied channels unbinding drug remained relatively constant. The rate of recovery from block between pulses was unaffected by pulse duration or magnitude. The separate contributions of open (O) and inactivated (I) channel binding of drug to the net increase in block per pulse were assessed at 0 mV: for lidocaine, the forward binding rate ko was 1.3 x 10(5) M-1 s-1, kl was 2.4 x 10(4) M-1 s-1; for bupivacaine, ko was 2.5 x 10(5) M-1 s-1, kl was 4.4 x 10(4) M-1 s-1. These binding rates were similar to those derived from time-dependent block of maintained Na currents in nodes where inactivation was incomplete due to treatment with chloramine-T. The dependence of model parameters on the potential between pulses (holding potential) was examined. All three parameters were found to be nearly independent of holding potential from -70 to -100 mV. These results are discussed with respect to established models of dynamic local anesthetic-Na channel interactions.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The change in membrane capacitance and conductance of squid giant axons during hyper- and depolarizations was investigated. The measurements of capacitance and conductance were performed using an admittance bridge with resting, hyperpolarized and depolarized membranes. The duration of DC pulses is 20–40 msec and is long enough to permit the admittance measurements between 1 and 50 kHz. The amplitudes of DC pulses were varied between 0 and 40mV for both depolarization and hyperpolarization. Within these limited experimental conditions, we found a substantial increase in membrane capacitance with depolarization and a decrease with hyperpolarization. Our results indicate that the change in membrane capacitance will increase further if low frequencies are used with larger depolarizing pulses. The change in membrane capacitance is frequency dependent and it increases with decreasing frequencies. The analyses based on an equivalent circuit (vide infra) gives rise to a time constant of active membrane capacitance close to that of sodium currents. This result indicates that the observed capacitance changes may arise from sodium channels. A brief discussion is given on the nature of frequency-dependent membrane capacitance of nerve axons.  相似文献   

12.
Membrane properties of isolated mudpuppy taste cells   总被引:13,自引:3,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
The voltage-dependent currents of isolated Necturus lingual cells were studied using the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. Nongustatory surface epithelial cells had only passive membrane properties. Small, spherical cells resembling basal cells responded to depolarizing voltage steps with predominantly outward K+ currents. Taste receptor cells generated both outward and inward currents in response to depolarizing voltage steps. Outward K+ currents activated at approximately 0 mV and increased almost linearly with increasing depolarization. The K+ current did not inactivate and was partially Ca++ dependent. One inward current activated at -40 mV, reached a peak at -20 mV, and rapidly inactivated. This transient inward current was blocked by tetrodotoxin (TTX), which indicates that it is an Na+ current. The other inward current activated at 0 mV, peaked at 30 mV, and slowly inactivated. This more sustained inward current had the kinetic and pharmacological properties of a slow Ca++ current. In addition, most taste cells had inwardly rectifying K+ currents. Sour taste stimuli (weak acids) decreased outward K+ currents and slightly reduced inward currents; bitter taste stimuli (quinine) reduced inward currents to a greater extent than outward currents. It is concluded that sour and bitter taste stimuli produce depolarizing receptor potentials, at least in part, by reducing the voltage-dependent K+ conductance.  相似文献   

13.
I Llano  N Leresche  A Marty 《Neuron》1991,6(4):565-574
The sensitivity to GABA of Purkinje cells in thin cerebellar slices was examined by recording either spontaneous inhibitory synaptic currents or ionic currents elicited by local GABA applications. The effects of Ca2+ entry induced by depolarizing voltage pulses were opposite for the two types of currents. Currents due to exogenous GABA applications were increased by a train of voltage pulses. This potentiation was transient with an average half recovery period of 3.7 min. Spontaneous synaptic currents were reduced by depolarizing voltage pulses, with a half recovery time of about 20 s. The inhibition was largely explained by a decrease of the frequency of synaptic events, suggesting that the primary location of the effect was presynaptic. Thus, a Ca2+ rise increases the sensitivity of Purkinje cells to GABA and induces a retrograde inhibition of presynaptic terminals. The latter effect may be due to a diffusible Ca2(+)-dependent messenger.  相似文献   

14.
The hatchetfish, Gasteropelecus, possesses large pectoral fin adductor muscles whose simultaneous contraction enables the fish to dart upwards at the approach of a predator. These muscles can be excited by either Mauthner fiber. In the medulla, each Mauthner fiber forms axo-axonic synapses on four "giant fibers," two on each side of the midline. Each pair of giant fibers innervates ipsilateral motoneurons controlling the pectoral fin adductor muscles. Mauthner fibers and giant fibers can be penetrated simultaneously by microelectrodes close to the synapses between them. Electrophysiological evidence indicates that transmission from Mauthner to giant fiber is chemically mediated. Under some conditions miniature postsynaptic potentials (PSP's) are observed, suggesting quantal release of transmitter. However, relatively high frequency stimulation reduces PSP amplitude below that of the miniature potentials, but causes no complete failures of PSP's. Thus quantum size is reduced or postsynaptic membrane is desensitized. Ramp currents in Mauthner fibers that rise too slowly to initiate spikes can evoke responses in giant fibers that appear to be asynchronous PSP's. Probably both spikes and ramp currents act on the same secretory mechanism. A single Mauthner fiber spike is followed by prolonged depression of transmission; also PSP amplitude is little affected by current pulses that markedly alter presynaptic spike height. These findings suggest that even a small spike releases most of an immediately available store of transmitter. If so, the probability of release by a single spike is high for any quantum of transmitter within this store.  相似文献   

15.
Kainate, a conformational analogue of glutamate, blocks synaptic transmission across the giant synapse of the squid. In the presence of blocking doses of kainate, impulses continue to propagate into the nerve terminal, but action potentials are slightly reduced in size and the subsequent hyperpolarization is greatly diminished. Kainate depolarizes the postsynaptic axon. Since the depolarizing action of kainate is confined to the postsynaptic membrane, it appears that kainate can combine with the receptors which are normally activated by the transmitter. This results in a diminished effect of the transmitter released by a presynaptic nerve impulse.  相似文献   

16.
Patch-clamp single-channel current recording experiments have been carried out on intact insulin-secreting RINm5F cells. Voltage-activation of high-conductance K+ channels were studied by selectively depolarizing the electrically isolated patch membrane under conditions with normal Ca2+ concentration in the bath solution but with or without Ca2+ in the patch pipette solution. When Ca2+ was present in the pipette, 40 mV to 120 mV depolarizing pulses (100 ms) from the normal resting potential (-70 mV) regularly evoked tetraethylammonium-sensitive large outward single-channel currents and the average open state probability during the pulses varied from about 0.015 (40 mV pulses) to 0.1 (120 mV pulses). In the absence of Ca2+ in the pipette solution the same protocol resulted in fewer and shorter K+ channel openings and the open-state probability varied from about 0.0015 (40 mV pulses) to about 0.03 (120 mV pulses). It is concluded that Ca2+ entering voltage-gated channels raises [Ca2+]i locally and thereby markedly enhances the open-state probability of tetraethylammonium-sensitive voltage-gated high-conductance K+ channels.  相似文献   

17.
Electrical activity in the fertilized egg of the tunicate Clavelina was studied with microelectrode recording and voltage clamp techniques. The resting potential could assume either of two stable values (approximately ?70 or ?30 mV) and could be shifted between these values by direct current stimulation. Spontaneous shifts between two stable resting potentials were also seen. Egg cells produced action potentials spontaneously and in response to depolarizing stimuli. Inward currents were carried by both Na and Ca ions and a prominent outward potassium current was seen with depolarization to voltages above ?15 mV. The steady-state current-voltage relationship (I–V curve) of the membrane showed two voltages where the net membrane current equaled zero: approximately ?35 and ?70 mV. Between these two voltages, membrane current was inward and carried by noninactivating Na and Ca currents. Inward rectification, which was blocked by external Rb, occurred at voltages below ?70 mV. The voltage dependence of inward rectification is thought by the authors to be important for establishing the more negative resting potential; it is also thought the presence of inward current which does not inactivate completely at voltages more negative than about ?20 mV is an important determinant of the more depolarized resting potential.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of serotonin on the electrical properties of swim-gating neurons (cell 204) were examined in leech (Hirudo medicinalis) nerve cords. Exposure to serotonin decreased the threshold current required to elicit swim episodes by prolonged depolarization of an individual cell 204 in isolated nerve cords. This effect was correlated with a more rapid depolarization and an increased impulse frequency of cell 204 in the first second of stimulation. In normal leech saline, brief depolarizing current pulses (1 s) injected into cell 204 failed to elicit swim episodes. Following exposure to serotonin, however, identical pulses consistently evoked swim episodes. Thus, serotonin appears to transform cell 204 from a gating to a trigger cell.Serotonin had little effect on the steady-state currentvoltage relation of cell 204. However, serotonin altered the membrane potential trajectories in response to injected current pulses and increased the amplitude of rebound responses occurring at the offset of current pulses. These changes suggest that serotonin modulates one or more voltage dependent conductances in cell 204, resulting in a more rapid depolarization and greater firing rate in response to injected currents. Thus, modulation of intrinsic ionic conductances in cell 204 may account in part for the increased probability of swimming behavior induced by serotonin in intact leeches.Abbreviations AHP afterhyperpolarizing potential - DCC discontinuous current clamp - DP dorsal posterior nerve - G2 segmental ganglion 2 - PIR postinhibitory rebound - RMP resting membrane potential  相似文献   

19.
The membrane properties of dark-adapted green sensitive photoreceptors of adult and nymphal desert locust (Schistocerca gregaria) were investigated in situ with single electrode (discontinuous) current and voltage clamp techniques. The photoreceptors had a resting potential of about -70 mV. The membrane rectified strongly in response to depolarizing current pulses at and above the resting potential. Two outward currents could be distinguished on the basis of different kinetics. The first, a transient current, was inactivating between-40 mV and -100 mV, and activated above -90 mV. The second, a sustained current had a similar activation range. The inactivating current could be blocked by application of 50 mM TEA into the retinal extracellular space. Both currents were expressed in nymphal photoreceptors already in the 1st instar larva and have similar properties as in the adults, although the behaviour of adults and nymphs is different. The conductances underlying these currents could be shown to modify the frequency response of the photoreceptor membrane.The work was started in the Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.  相似文献   

20.
Glucagon-secreting alpha 2 cells were isolated from guinea pig pancreatic islets and used for electrophysiological studies of voltage- activated ionic conductances using the patch-clamp technique. The alpha 2 cells differed from beta cells in producing action potentials in the absence of glucose. The frequency of these potentials increased after addition of 10 mM arginine but remained unaffected in the presence of 5- 20 mM glucose. When studying the conductances underlying the action potentials, we identified a delayed rectifying K+ current, an Na+ current, and a Ca2+ current. The K+ current activated above -20 mV and then increased with the applied voltage. The Na+ current developed at potentials above -50 mV and reached a maximal peak amplitude of 550 pA during depolarizing pulses to -15 mV. The Na+ current inactivated rapidly (tau h approximately 0.7 ms at 0 mV). Half-maximal steady state inactivation was attained at -58 mV, and currents could no longer be elicited after conditioning pulses to potentials above -40 mV. The Ca2+ current first became detectable at -50 mV and reached a maximal amplitude of 90 pA (in extracellular [Ca2+] = 2.6 mM) at about -10 mV. Unlike the Na+ current, it inactivated little or not at all. Membrane potential measurements demonstrated that both the Ca2+ and Na+ currents contribute to the generation of the action potential. Whereas there was an absolute requirement of extracellular Ca2+ for action potentials to be elicited at all, suppression of the much larger Na+ current only reduced the upstroke velocity of the spikes. It is suggested that this behavior reflects the participation of a low-threshold Ca2+ conductance in the pacemaking of alpha 2 cells.  相似文献   

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