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1.
The effects of external application of micromolar concentrations of toxin 1 of the scorpion, Androctonus australis Hector, on the sodium conductance of squid giant axons have been studied quantitatively using the voltage clamp technique. Toxin concentrations which induce long plateau action potentials under current clamp conditions were found to simultaneously decrease the peak conductance and increase the delayed sodium conductance. Return to holding potential level after step depolarizations was accompanied by large exponential tails of current. The toxin-induced maintained sodium conductance increased with membrane depolarization independently of the peak conductance. Depolarizing conditioning prepulses to - 30 mV were found to almost totally inactivate the peak sodium current but to leave the delayed conductance unaffected. This property was taken as an indication that the total current is made of the added contributions of two distinct populations on sodium channels : fast activating and inactivating channels and slow activating channels. These two channel populations were separated from each other and analysed. It was found that the fast channels were almost identical to normal channels whereas the slow channels had a much slower (nearly exponential) kinetics and activated for more positive values of membrane potential. These observations strongly support the second hypothesis of Gillespie and Meves (1980) that the peak conductance and maintained conductance reflect the existence of two separate populations of channels. They further indicate that slow channels probably originate from the modification by the toxin of normal voltage-sensitive channels.  相似文献   

2.
The membrane effects of 4 sea anemone and 6 scorpion toxins have been studied under current clamp and voltage clamp conditions. Micromolar concentrations of the purified toxins were applied externally on single giant axons of the american cockroach. Periplaneta americana in a double oil-gap arrangement and the effects on the resting potential, action potential and underlying currents analysed. The 4 sea anemone toxins (Condylactis toxin, Anemonia toxin 2, Anthopleurin toxin A and Parasicyonis toxin) were found to considerably prolong the action potential. This effect is frequency dependent and long plateau spikes (100-500 ms in duration) are consistently seen for frequencies lower than 0.2 Hz. This effect is due to a considerable delay in the turning-off of the sodium current during square membrane depolarizations associated, for large concentrations, with a decrease in the potassium conductance. Toxin effects on the sodium current are not prevented by pretreatment with STX. From the 4 purified toxins extracted from the venom of the scorpion, Androctonus australis Hector, 3 (Mammal toxins 1 and 2 and crustacean toxin) were found to have sea anemone toxin like effects and to induce long duration plateau action potentials. As for sea anemone toxins, this effect is due to a lengthening of the falling phase of the sodium current associated with a small decrease in the potassium conductance. The 4th toxin (insect toxin or ITAaH) depolarizes the membrane and induces repetitive firing of short action potentials.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Permeability changes associated with prolonged action potentials have been analyzed in procaine-treated crayfish abdominal muscle fibers. The effect of external Ca indicates that the increase in membrane conductance observed during the rising phase of the action potential is primarily due to a permeability increase for Ca. A remnant of the permeability increase may cause the succeeding plateau as shown by its high conductance and by the effect of low Mn. A delayed increase in conductance precedes the termination of the plateau phase. This is due to a delayed increase in permeability, probably for K, that is observed when depolarizing electrogenesis is eliminated. High external Ca reduces the action potential duration, the falling phase starting at a higher depolarization. These changes may be related to an earlier onset of the delayed increase in permeability, induced by a larger inside positivity in the presence of higher Ca. No "anomalous rectification" is seen in early or late I-V curves for small depolarizations. Ba may replace Ca in its role in depolarizing electrogenesis, and the first action potential induced in Ba saline has a large overshoot and a long duration. In higher Ba salines, action potentials are greatly prolonged. Long term soaking in Rb-containing or K-free saline also augments and prolongs the action potential. These changes are assumed to be related to depression of the K permeability of the membrane.  相似文献   

4.
At low concentrations (25–100 μM) methylmercury chloride caused a steady increase in the threshold for excitation and on eventual block of action potentials without changing the resting membrane potential in squid giant axons. In the axons exposed to 25 μM methylmercury chloride, peak transient and steady-state conductances were decreased by 58.8 ± 5.1% and 35.9 ± 4.3% (mean ± SEM, 4 axons), respectively and leakage conductance increased to about five times of the control value. Higher concentrations of methylmercury chloride decreased the resting membrane potential. A concentration of 0.5 mM depolarizing the nerve membrane by 16 ± 2 mV (mean ± SEM, 3 axons) in 40 minutes. These changes in ionic conductances and membrane potential were irreversible on washing the axon with drug-free sea water.  相似文献   

5.
Squid giant axons were internally perfused with tetrodotoxin and procaine, and excitability and electrical properties were studied by means of current-clamp and sucrose-gap voltage-clamp methods. Internally perfused tetrodotoxin was virtually without effect on the resting potential, the action potential, the early transient membrane ionic current, and the late steady-state membrane ionic current even at very high concentrations (1,000–10,000 nM) for a long period of time (up to 36 min). Externally applied tetrodotoxin at a concentration of 100 nM blocked the action potential and the early transient current in 2–3 min. Internally perfused procaine at concentrations of 1–10 mM reversibly depressed or blocked the action potential with an accompanying hyperpolarization of 2–4 mv, and inhibited both the early transient and late steady-state currents to the same extent. The time to peak early transient current was increased. The present results and the insolubility of tetrodotoxin in lipids have led to the conclusion that the gate controlling the flow of sodium ions through channels is located on the outer surface of the nerve membrane.  相似文献   

6.
A new dissection procedure for preparing Myxicola giant axons for observation under voltage clamp is described. Preparation time is generally 40–45 min. 65–70% of the preparations attempted may be brought through the entire procedure, including insertion of the long internal electrode, and support an initial action potential amplitude of 100 mv or greater. Mean values for axon diameter, resting membrane potential, action potential amplitude, maximum peak inward transient current, and resting membrane resistance are 560 µ, —66.5 mv, 112 mv, 0.87 ma/cm2 and 1.22 KΩ cm 2 respectively. Cut branches do not seem to be a problem in this preparation. Behavior under voltage clamp is reasonably stable over several hours. Reductions in maximum inward transient current of 10% and in steady-state current of 5–10% are expected in the absence of any particular treatment. Tetrodotoxin blocks the action potential and both the inward and outward transient current, but has no effect on either the resting membrane potential or the steady-state current. This selective action of tetrodotoxin on the transient current is taken as an indication that this current component is probably carried by Na.  相似文献   

7.
Crayfish giant axons remain viable following internal perfusion with a mixture of fluoride and citrate salts. The relative favorability of various internal anions, and the dependence of resting and action potentials on internal cations are both similar to results on internally perfused squid axons. TEA widens the falling phase of the spike only from inside the axon, while DDT is active from either side of the membrane. Records of impedance changes show that effects of TEA and DDT on components of ionic conductances are similar to those found in other axons by voltage clamp measurements. Tannic acid perfused internally at a concentration of the order of 10 μM produces spontaneous activity, and a progressive increase in spike width. After 30 minutes, action potentials are “cardiac” type and are up to several minutes in duration. Records of impedance changes, and data from rapid changes in external ionic concentrations, suggest that the plateau phase of the spike is due to a maintained increase in sodium conductance. Since tannic acid is capable of crosslinking proteins and “rigidifying” protein monolayers, it is suggested that its effects on the axon may be the result of an interference with a conformational change in a membrane protein or protein-phospholipid complex during excitation.  相似文献   

8.
The voltage dependent ionic conductances were studied by analysing the phase plane trajectories of action potentials evoked by electrical stimulation of the sartorius muscles of the frog (Rana esculenta). The delayed outward potassium current was measured also under voltage clamp conditions on muscle fibres of either the frog (Rana esculenta) or Xenopus laevis. On analysing the effect of physostigmine decreasing the peak amplitude, the rate of both the rising and falling phases of the action potentials, it was revealed that the alkaloid at a concentration of 1 mmol/l reduced significantly both the delayed potassium conductance and the outward ionic current values during the action potentials. The inhibition of sodium conductance and inward ionic current was less expressed. The maximum value of delayed potassium conductance measured under voltage clamp conditions was decreased by 1 mmol/l physostigmine. The time constant determined from the development of delayed potassium conductance was increased at a given membrane potential. The voltage vs. n relationship describing the membrane potential dependence of the delayed rectifier was not influenced by physostigmine. It has been concluded that physostigmine changes the time course of the action potentials by decreasing the value of both voltage dependent ionic conductances and by slowing down their kinetics. It is discussed that results obtained from the phase plane analysis of complex pharmacological effects can only be accepted with some restrictions.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of lidocaine, tetracaine, procaine and bupivacaine (less than 1000 microM) on the Chara corallina internodal cell were studied. These local anesthetics depolarized the membrane at rest, while they affected the rising phase and the peak level of action potential not appreciably. Instead, they prolonged the time course of the falling phase of action potential as slowly as the repolarization was imperfect, even after enough lapse beyond the refractory period. Consequently, an action potential appeared to enhance the degree of depolarization at rest. Such a depolarization with stimulus/excitation was named use-dependent depolarization, while the depolarization without excitation, the resting one. The order of the potency of the use-dependent depolarization almost coincided with that of the nerve-blocking potency. During depolarization the change in membrane conductance was not simple. However, the conductance-voltage (Gm-Vm) relationship curve in the presence of local anesthetic suggested that depolarization was due to, not only the decrease in the electrogenic H(+)-pump, but also the increase in the diffusion conductance.  相似文献   

10.
1. Intracellular injection of tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA) into a giant axon of the squid prolongs the duration of the action potential without changing the resting potential (Fig. 3). The prolongation is sometimes 100-fold or more. 2. The action potential of a giant axon treated with TEA has an initial peak followed by a plateau (Fig. 3). The membrane resistance during the plateau is practically normal (Fig. 4). Near the end of the action potential, there is an apparent increase in the membrane resistance (Fig. 5D and Fig. 6, right). 3. The phenomenon of abolition of action potentials was demonstrated in the squid giant axon treated with TEA (Fig. 7). Following an action potential abolished in its early phase, there is no refractoriness (Fig. 8). 4. By the method of voltage clamp, the voltage-current relation was investigated on normal squid axons as well as on axons treated with TEA (Figs. 9 and 10). 5. The presence of stable states of the membrane was demonstrated by clamping the membrane potential with two voltage steps (Fig. 11). Experimental evidence was presented showing that, in an "unstable" state, the membrane conductance is not uniquely determined by the membrane potential. 6. The effect of low sodium water was investigated in the axon treated with TEA (Fig. 12). 7. The similarity between the action potential of a squid axon under TEA and that of the vertebrate cardiac muscle was stressed. The experimental results were interpreted as supporting the view that there are two stable states in the membrane. Initiation and abolition of an action potential were explained as transitions between the two states.  相似文献   

11.
The properties of acetylcholine-activated excitatory currents on the gm1 muscle of three marine decapod crustaceans, the spiny lobsters Panulirus argus and interruptus, and the crab Cancer borealis, were examined using either noise analysis, analysis of synaptic current decays, or analysis of the voltage dependence of ionophoretically activated cholinergic conductance increases. The apparent mean channel open time (tau n) obtained from noise analysis at -80 mV and 12 degrees C was approximately 13 ms; tau n was prolonged e-fold for about every 100-mV hyperpolarization in membrane potential; tau n was prolonged e- fold for every 10 degrees C decrease in temperature. Gamma, the single- channel conductance, at 12 degrees C was approximately 18 pS and was not affected by voltage; gamma was increased approximately 2.5-fold for every 10 degrees C increase in temperature. Synaptic currents decayed with a single exponential time course, and at -80 mV and 12 degrees C, the time constant of decay of synaptic currents, tau ejc, was approximately 14-15 ms and was prolonged e-fold about every 140-mV hyperpolarization; tau ejc was prolonged about e-fold for every 10 degrees C decrease in temperature. The voltage dependence of the amplitude of steady-state cholinergic currents suggests that the total conductance increase produced by cholinergic agonists is increased with hyperpolarization. Compared with glutamate channels found on similar decapod muscles (see the following article), the acetylcholine channels stay open longer, conduct ions more slowly, and are more sensitive to changes in the membrane potential.  相似文献   

12.
Charge transfer through the receptor membrane of the nonmyelinated ending of Pacinian corpuscles is markedly affected by temperature. The rate of rise and the amplitude of the generator potential in response to a constant mechanical stimulus increase with temperature coefficients of 2.5 and 2.0 respectively. The duration of the falling phase, presumably a purely passive component, and the rise time of the generator potential are but little affected by temperature. The following interpretation is offered: Mechanical stimulation causes the conductance of the receptor membrane to increase and ions to flow along their electrochemical gradients. An energy barrier of about 16,000 cal/mole limits the conductance change. The latter increases, thus, steeply with temperature, causing both the rate of rise and the intensity of the generator current to increase. The membrane of the adjacent Ranvier node behaves in a distinctly different manner. The amplitude of the nodal action potential is little changed over a wide range of temperature, while the durations of its rising and falling phases increase markedly. The electrical threshold of the nodal membrane is rather constant between 40 and 12°C. Below 12°C the threshold rises, and the mechanically elicited generator current fails to meet the threshold requirements of the first node. Cold block of nerve impulse initiation then ensues, although the receptor membrane still continues to produce generator potentials in response to mechanical stimulation.  相似文献   

13.
The influence of voltage-dependent conductances on the receptor potential of Limulus ventral photoreceptors was investigated. During prolonged, bright illumination, the receptor potential consists of an initial transient phase followed by a smaller plateau phase. Generally, a spike appears on the rising edge of the transient phase, and often a dip occurs between the transient and plateau. Block of the rapidly inactivating outward current, iA, by 4-aminopyridine eliminates the dip under some conditions. Block of maintained outward current by internal tetraethylammonium increases the height of the plateau phase, but does not eliminate the dip. Block of the voltage-dependent Na+ and Ca2+ current by external Ni2+ eliminates the spike. The voltage-dependent Ca2+ conductance also influences the sensitivity of the photoreceptor to light as indicated by the following evidence: depolarizing voltage- clamp pulses reduce sensitivity to light. This reduction is blocked by removal of external Ca2+ or by block of inward Ca2+ current with Ni2+. The reduction of sensitivity depends on the amplitude of the pulse, reaching a maximum at or approximately +15 mV. The voltage dependence is consistent with the hypothesis that the desensitization results from passive Ca2+ entry through a voltage-dependent conductance.  相似文献   

14.
Lobster muscle fibers develop hyperpolarizing responses when subjected to sufficiently strong hyperpolarizing currents. In contrast to axons of frog, toad, and squid, the muscle fibers produce their responses without the need for prior depolarization in high external K+. Responses begin at a threshold polarization (50 to 70 mv), the potential reaching 150 to 200 mv hyperpolarization while the current remains constant. The increased polarization develops at first slowly, then becomes rapid. It usually subsides from its peak spontaneously, falling temporarily to a potential less hyperpolarized than at threshold for the response. As long as current is applied there can be oscillatory behavior with sequential rise and subsidence of the polarization, repeating a number of times. Withdrawal of current leads to rapid return of the potential to the resting level and a small, brief depolarization. Associated with the latter, but of longer duration, is an increased conductance whose magnitude and duration increase with the antecedent current. Hyperpolarizing responses of lobster muscle fibers are due to increased membrane resistance caused by hyperpolarizing K inactivation. The oscillatory characteristic of the response is due to a delayed superimposed and prolonged increase in membrane permeability, probably for Na+ and for either K+ or Cl-. The hyperpolarizing responses of other tissues also appear to result from hyperpolarizing K inactivation, on which is superimposed an increased conductance for some other ion or ions.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of aging on cardiac membrane currents remains unclear. This study examined the inward rectifier K(+) current (I(K1)), the transient outward K(+) current (I(to)), and the L-type Ca(2+) channel current (I(Ca,L)) in ventricular myocytes isolated from young adult (6 mo) and aged (>27 mo) Fischer 344 rats using whole cell patch-clamp techniques. Along with an increase in the cell size and membrane capacitance, aged myocytes had the same magnitude of peak I(K1) with a greater slope conductance but displayed smaller steady-state I(K1). Aged myocytes also had a greater I(to) with an increased rate of activation, but the I(to) inactivation kinetics, steady-state inactivation, and responsiveness to L-phenylephrine, an alpha(1)-adrenergic agonist, were unaltered. The magnitude of peak I(Ca,L) in aged myocytes was decreased and accompanied by a slower inactivation, but the I(Ca,L) steady-state inactivation was unaltered. Action potential duration in aged myocytes was prolonged only at 90% of full repolarization (APD(90)) when compared with the action potential duration of young adult myocytes. Aged myocytes from Long-Evans rats showed similar changes in I(to) and I(Ca,L) but an increased I(K1). These results demonstrate aging-associated changes in action potential, in morphology, and in I(K1), I(to), and I(Ca,L) of rat ventricular myocytes that possibly contribute to the decreased cardiac function of aged hearts.  相似文献   

16.
Depolarization-activated outward K+ currents in isolated adult rat ventricular myocytes were characterized using the whole-cell variation of the patch-clamp recording technique. During brief depolarizations to potentials positive to -40 mV, Ca(2+)-independent outward K+ currents in these cells rise to a transient peak, followed by a slower decay to an apparent plateau. The analyses completed here reveal that the observed outward current waveforms result from the activation of two kinetically distinct voltage-dependent K+ currents: one that activates and inactivates rapidly, and one that activates and inactivates slowly, on membrane depolarization. These currents are referred to here as Ito (transient outward) and IK (delayed rectifier), respectively, because their properties are similar (although not identical) to these K+ current types in other cells. Although the voltage dependences of Ito and IK activation are similar, Ito activates approximately 10-fold and inactivates approximately 30-fold more rapidly than IK at all test potentials. In the composite current waveforms measured during brief depolarizations, therefore, the peak current predominantly reflects Ito, whereas IK is the primary determinant of the plateau. There are also marked differences in the voltage dependences of steady-state inactivation of these two K+ currents: IK undergoes steady-state inactivation at all potentials positive to -120 mV, and is 50% inactivated at -69 mV; Ito, in contrast, is insensitive to steady-state inactivation at membrane potentials negative to -50 mV. In addition, Ito recovers from steady-state inactivation faster than IK: at -90 mV, for example, approximately 70% recovery from the inactivation produced at -20 mV is observed within 20 ms for Ito; IK recovers approximately 25-fold more slowly. The pharmacological properties of Ito and IK are also distinct: 4-aminopyridine preferentially attenuates Ito, and tetraethylammonium suppresses predominantly IK. The voltage- and time-dependent properties of these currents are interpreted here in terms of a model in which Ito underlies the initial, rapid repolarization phase of the action potential (AP), and IK is responsible for the slower phase of AP repolarization back to the resting membrane potential, in adult rat ventricular myocytes.  相似文献   

17.
Connexin40 (Cx40) is abundantly expressed in the atrial myocardium, ventricular conduction system, and vascular endothelial and smooth muscle cells of the mammalian cardiovascular system. Rapid conduction through cardiac tissues depends on electrotonic transfer of the action potential between neighboring cells. To determine whether transjunctional voltages (Vj) elicited by an action potential can modulate conductance of Cx40 gap junctions, simulated myocardial action potentials were applied as voltage-clamp waveforms to Cx40 gap junctions expressed in mouse neuro2A (N2A) cells. Junctional currents resembled the action potential morphology but declined by >50% from peak to near-constant plateau values. Kinetics of Cx40 voltage gating were examined at peak voltages > or =100 mV, and decay time constants changed e-fold per 17.6 mV for Vj > +/-40 mV. Junctional conductance recovered during phase 3 repolarization and early diastole to initial values. These phasic changes in junctional conductance were due to rapid decay kinetics, increasing to tens of milliseconds at peak Vj of 130 mV, and the increase in the steady-state conductance curve as Vj returned toward 0 mV. Time-dependent conductance curves for Cx40 were modeled with one inactivation and two recovery Vj-dependent components. There was a temporal correlation between development of conduction delay or block and the inactivation phase of junctional conductance. Likewise, recovery of junctional conductance was coincident with recovery from refractoriness, suggesting that gap junctions may play a role in the genesis and propagation of cardiac arrhythmias.  相似文献   

18.
In the dark, the ventral photoreceptor of Limulus exhibits time-variant currents under voltage-clamp conditions; that is, if the membrane potential of the cell is clamped to a depolarized value there is an initial large outward current which slowly declines to a steady level. The current-voltage relation of the cell in the dark is nonlinear. The only ion tested which has any effect on the current-voltage relation is potassium; high potassium shifts the reversal potential towards zero and introduces a negative slope-conductance region. When the cell is illuminated under voltage-clamp conditions, an additional current, the light-induced current, flows across the cell membrane. The time course of this current mimics the time course of the light response (receptor potential) in the unclamped cell; namely, an initial transient phase is followed by a steady-state phase. The amplitude of the peak transient current can be as large as 60 times the amplitude of the steady-state current, while in the unclamped cell the amplitude of the peak transient voltage never exceeds 4 times the amplitude of the steady-state voltage. The current-voltage relations of the additional light-induced current obtained for different instants of time are also nonlinear, but differ from the current-voltage relations of the dark current. The ions tested which have the greatest effect on the light-induced current are sodium and calcium; low sodium decreases the current, while low calcium increases the current. The data strongly support the hypothesis that two systems of electric current exist in the membrane. Thus the total ionic current which flows in the membrane is accounted for as the sum of a dark current and a light-induced current.  相似文献   

19.
We have studied the effects of the potassium-blocking agent 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) on the action potential and membrane currents of the sheep cardiac Purkinje fiber. 4-AP slowed the rate of phase 1 repolarization and shifted the plateau of the action potential to less negative potentials. In the presence of 4-AP, the substitution of sodium methylsulfate or methanesulfonate for the NaCl of Tyrode's solution further slowed the rate of phase 1 repolarization, even though chloride replacement has no effect on the untreated preparation. In voltage clamp experiments, 4-AP rapidly and reversibly reduced the early peak of outward current that is seen when the Purkinje fiber membrane is voltage-clamped to potentials positive to -20 mV. In addition, 4-AP reduced the steady outward current seen at the end of clamp steps positive to -40 mV. 4-AP did not appear to change the slow inward current observed over the range of -60 to -40 mV, nor did it greatly change the current tails that have been used as a measure of the slow inward conductance at more positive potentials. 4-AP did not block the inward rectifying potassium currents, IK1 and IK2. A phasic outward current component that was insensitive to 4-AP was reduced by chloride replacement. We conclude that the early outward current has two components: a chloride-sensitive component plus a 4-AP-sensitive component. Since a portion of the steady-state current was sensitive to 4-AP, the early outward current either does not fully inactivate or 4-AP blocks a component of time-independent background current.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of proteolytic enzymes on ionic conductances of squid axon membranes have been studied by means of the voltage clamp technique. When perfused internally alpha-chymotrypsin (1 mg/ml) increased and prolonged the depolarizing after-potential. Sodium inactivation was partially inhibited causing a prolonged sodium current, and peak sodium and steady-state potassium currents were suppressed. The time for sodium current to reach its peak was not affected. Leakage conductance increased later. On the other hand, carboxypeptidases A and B, both at 1mg/ml, suppressed the sodium and potassium conductance increases with little or no change in sodium inactivation. The mechanism that controls sodium inactivation appears to be associated with the structure of membrane proteins which is modified by alpha-chymotrypsin but not by carboxypeptidases and is located in a position accessible to alpha-chymotrypsin only from inside the membrane.  相似文献   

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