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1.
Summary Potassium (K-) contractures were recorded from slow-twitch (mouse soleus) and fast-twitch (mouse extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and rat sternomastoid) muscles. The mouse limb muscles responded to a maintained increase in external potassium concentration with a rapid increase in tension (fast contracture) which inactivated and was followed by a slow contracture. Rat sternomatoid muscles responded with fast contractures only. The threshold potassium concentration for contraction was higher in fast-twitch muscles than in soleus muscles, at 22 and at 37°C. After corrections had been made for the more rapid depolarization of soleus fibers, the threshold potential for soleus fiber contraction was 15 mV closer to the resting membrane potential than the threshold for fast-twitch fiber contraction. The K-contracture results were confirmed by two microelectrode voltage-clamp experiments. Activation of fast twitch fibers required depolarizing pulses that were 15 to 20 mV greater than the pulses required to activate soleus fibers. When the time courses of K-contractures were compared it was evident that inactivation with prolonged depolarization was much faster in the fast-twitch muscles than in the soleus muscles. The results suggest that the voltage dependence and kinetics of the process coupling T-tubule depolarization with calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum may depend on fiber type in mammalian skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

2.
Inactivation of excitation-contraction coupling was examined in extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and soleus muscle fibers from rats injected daily with tri-iodothyronine (T3, 150 micrograms/kg) for 10-14 d. Steady-state activation and inactivation curves for contraction were obtained from measurements of peak potassium contracture tension at different surface membrane potentials. The experiments tested the hypothesis that noninactivating tension is a "window" tension caused by the overlap of the activation and inactivation curves. Changes in the amplitude and voltage dependence of noninactivating tension should be predicted by the changes in the activation and inactivation curves, if noninactivating tension arises from their overlap. After T3 treatment, the area of overlap increased in EDL fibers and decreased in soleus fibers and the overlap region was shifted to more negative potentials in both muscles. Noninactivating tension also appeared at more negative membrane potentials after T3 treatment in both EDL and soleus fibers. The effects of T3 treatment were confirmed with a two microelectrode voltage-clamp technique: at the resting membrane potential (-80 mV) contraction in response to a brief test pulse required less than normal depolarization in EDL, but more than normal depolarization in soleus fibers. After T3 treatment, the increase in contraction threshold at depolarized holding potentials (attributed to inactivation) occurred at more depolarized holding potentials in EDL, or less depolarized holding potentials in soleus. The changes in contraction threshold could be accounted for by the effects of T3 on the activation and inactivation curves. In conclusion, (a) T3 appeared to affect the expression of both activation and inactivation characteristics, but the activation effects could not be cleanly distinguished from T3 effects on the sarcoplasmic reticulum and contractile proteins, and (b) the experiments provided evidence for the hypothesis that the noninactivating tension is a steady-state "window" tension.  相似文献   

3.
The effects on isometric tension of three divalent ions that block calcium channels, magnesium, cobalt, and cadmium, were tested in small bundles of rat soleus fibers. Cobalt, at a concentration of 2 or 6 mM, reversibly depressed twitch and tetanic tension and the depression was much greater in solutions containing no added calcium ions. Magnesium caused much less depression of tension than cobalt. The depression of tension was not accompanied by membrane depolarization or a reduction in the amplitude of action potentials. A reduction caused by 6 mM cobalt in the amplitude of 40 or 80 mM potassium contractures was not accompanied by a comparable reduction in tension during 200 mM potassium contractures, and could be explained by a shift in the potassium contracture tension-voltage curve to more positive potentials (by +7 mV on average). Similar effects were not seen with 2 or 6 mM magnesium. At a concentration of 20 mM, both cobalt and magnesium depressed twitch and tetanic tension, cobalt having greater effect than magnesium. Both ions shifted the potassium contracture tension-voltage curve to the right by +5 to +10 mV, caused a small depression of maximum tension, and slowed the time course of potassium contractures. Cadmium (3 mM) depressed twitch, tetanic, and potassium contracture tension by more than 6 mM cobalt, but experiments were complicated by the gradual appearance of large contractures that became even larger, and sometimes oscillatory, when the solution containing cadmium was washed out. It was concluded that divalent cations affect both activation and inactivation of tension in a manner that cannot be completely explained by a change in surface charge.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of diazepam on potassium contractures, contraction threshold, and resting tension have been examined in rat soleus muscle fibres. Two actions of the drug were defined that could not be attributed to changes in the resting membrane potential or depolarization in high potassium solutions. The major effect was an increase in the amplitude of submaximal tension during either twitches or potassium contractures and an increase in resting tension. At 400 microM diazepam, there was (a) a fourfold increase in 40 mM potassium contracture tension, (b) a negative shift of 8 mV in the membrane potential for half maximum tension estimated from the best fit of a Boltzmann-type equation to average potassium contracture data, (c) a negative shift of 8 mV in the threshold for contraction measured under voltage clamp conditions, and (d) a contracture of variable amplitude to a level that was occasionally equivalent to maximum tetanic tension. These potentiating actions of diazepam depended on drug concentration within the range of 100-800 microM. In contrast, the second effect of diazepam, depression of maximum tension by 10-15%, was independent of drug concentration between 100 and 400 microM. The results support the idea that diazepam produces an increase in resting myoplasmic calcium concentrations.  相似文献   

5.
After a contracture response, skeletal muscle fibers enter into a state of contractile refractoriness or inactivation. Contractile inactivation starts soon after membrane depolarization, and causes spontaneous relaxation from the contracture response. Here we demonstrate that contractile inactivation continues to develop for tens of seconds if the membrane remains in a depolarized state. We have studied this phenomenon using short (1.5 mm) frog muscle fibers dissected from the Lumbricalis brevis muscles of the frog, with a two-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique. After a contracture caused by membrane depolarization to 0 mV, from a holding potential of -100 mV, a second contracture can be developed only if the membrane is repolarized beyond a determined potential value for a certain period of time. We have used a repriming protocol of 1 or 2 s at -100 mV. After this repriming period a fiber, if depolarized again to 0 mV, may develop a second contracture, whose magnitude and time course will depend on the duration of the period during which the fiber was maintained at 0 mV before the repriming process. With this procedure it is possible to demonstrate that the inactivation process builds up with a very slow time course, with a half time of approximately 35 s and completion in greater than 100 s. After prolonged depolarizations (greater than 100 s), the repriming time course is slower and the inactivation curve (obtained by plotting the extent of repriming against the repriming membrane potential) is shifted toward more negative potentials by greater than 30 mV when compared with similar curves obtained after shorter depolarizing periods (10-30 s). These results indicate that important changes occur in the physical state of the molecular moiety that is responsible for the inactivation phenomenon. The shift of the inactivation curve can be partially reversed by a low concentration (50 microM) of lanthanum ions. In the presence of 0.5 mM caffeine, larger responses can be obtained even after prolonged depolarization periods, indicating that the fibers maintain their capacity to liberate calcium.  相似文献   

6.
Rabbit right ventricular papillary muscles were cooled from 30 to approximately 1 degree C immediately after discontinuing electrical stimulation (0.5 Hz). This produced a contracture that was 30-50% of the preceding twitch magnitude and required 20-30 s to develop. The contractures were identical in cooling solutions with normal (144 mM) or low (2.0 mM) Na. They were therefore not Na-withdrawal contractures. Contracture activation was considerably slower than muscle cooling (approximately 2.5 s to cool below 2 degrees C). Cooling contractures were suppressed by caffeine treatment (10.0 mM). Rapid cooling did not cause sufficient membrane depolarization (16.5 +/- 1.2 mV after 30 s of cooling) to produce either a voltage-dependent activation of contracture or a gated entry of Ca from the extracellular space. Contractures induced by treating resting muscles with 5 X 10(-5) M strophanthidin at 30 degrees C exhibited pronounced tension noise. The Fourier spectrum of this noise revealed a periodic component (2-3 Hz) that disappeared when the muscle was cooled. Cooling contractures decayed with rest (t1/2 = 71.0 +/- 9.3 s). This decay accelerated in the presence of 10.0 mM caffeine and was prevented and to some extent reversed when extracellular Na was reduced to 2.0 mM. 20 min of rest resulted in a net decline in intracellular Ca content of 1.29 +/- 0.38 mmol/kg dry wt. I infer that cooling contractures are principally activated by Ca from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). The properties of these contractures suggest that they may provide a convenient relative index of the availability of SR Ca for contraction. The rest decay of cooling contractures (and hence the decay in the availability of activating Ca) is consistent with the measured loss in analytic Ca during rest. The results suggest that contraction in heart muscle can be regulated by an interaction between sarcolemmal and SR Ca transport.  相似文献   

7.
We have studied the effects of the sulfhydryl reagents on contractile responses, using either electrically stimulated single muscle fibers or short muscle fibers that were voltage-clamped with a two-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique that allows the fiber tension in response to membrane depolarization to be recorded. The sulfhydryl inhibitors para- chloromercuribenzoic acid (PCMB) and parahydroximercuriphenyl sulfonic acid (PHMPS), at concentrations from 0.5 to 2 mM, cause loss of the contractile ability; however, before this effect is completed, they change the fiber contractile behavior in a complex way. After relatively short exposure to the compounds, < 20 min, before the fibers lose their contractile capacity, secondary tension responses may appear after electrically elicited twitches or tetani. After losing their ability to contract in response to electrical stimulation, the fibers maintain their capacity to develop caffeine contractures, even after prolonged periods (120 min) of exposure to PHMPS. In fibers under voltage-clamp conditions, contractility is also lost; however, before this happens, long-lasting (i.e., minutes) episodes of spontaneous contractile activity may occur with the membrane polarized at -100 mV. After more prolonged exposure (> 30 min), the responses to membrane depolarization are reduced and eventually disappear. The agent DTT at a concentration of 2 mM appears to protect the fibers from the effects of PCMB and PHMPS. Furthermore, after loss of the contractile responses by the action of PCMB or PHMPS, addition of 2 mM DTT causes recovery of tension development capacity.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of subthreshold depolarization on mechanical threshold was investigated in tetrodotoxin-poisoned mammalian and amphibian skeletal muscle fibers using a two-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique. Mechanical threshold was determined with a 2-ms test pulse. The immediate effect of depolarization was inhibition of the mechanical system. The consequent increase in the test pulse threshold was linearly related to the size of the depolarization and there was, on the average, a 10% increase in threshold for a 10-mV depolarization in mammalian fibers. The duration of the inhibitory period was also related to the size of the depolarization. Inhibition was interrupted by the onset of activation (seen as a reduction in the test pulse threshold), and in rat soleus fibers this occurred within 100 ms with a 20-mV depolarization, inhibition decayed within 10 ms. The decay of activation after brief conditioning pulses was initially rapid (on the average, the test pulse threshold recovered to 80% of its control value within 1 ms) and then slow (full recovery took 100-500 ms). After long conditioning pulses, activation often decayed into a period of inhibition. When depolarization (of 20 mV or more) was maintained for several seconds, the fibers became inactivated. Rat extensor digitorum longus and sternomastoid fibers were strongly inactivated by depolarization to -40 mV and the test pulse to +40 mV did not cause contraction.  相似文献   

9.
Short muscle fibers (less than 1.5 mm) from the m. lumbricalis IV digiti of Rana pipiens were voltage-clamped at -100 mV with a two-microelectrode technique, in normal Ringer's solution containing 10(-6) g/ml tetrodotoxin. The activation curve relating peak tension to membrane potential could be shifted toward more negative or less negative potential values by hyperpolarizing or depolarizing the fiber membrane to -130, -120, or -70 mV, respectively, which indicates that contractile threshold depends on the fiber membrane potential. Long (greater than 5 s) depolarizing (90 mV) pulses induce prolonged contractile responses showing a plateau and a rapid relaxation phase similar to K contractures. Conditioning hyperpolarizations prolong the time course of these responses, while conditioning depolarizations shorten it. The shortening of the response time course, which results in a decrease of the area under the response, is dependent on the amplitude and duration of the conditioning depolarization. Depending on the magnitude and duration, a conditioning depolarization may also reduce peak tension. When the area under the response is reduced by 50%, the level of membrane potential also affects the repriming rate. During repriming, peak tension is restored before the contracture area. Thus, when peak tension is reprimed to 80%, the area is reprimed by 50% of its normal value. Repriming has a marked temperature dependency with a Q10 higher than 4. These results are compatible with the idea that an inactivation process, voltage and time dependent, regulates the release of calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum during these responses.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of 5 weeks treadmill-exercise training on isometric tension and contractile proteins were studied in intact and skinned isolated small bundles of rat skeletal soleus and extensor digitorum longus (edl) fibers. In soleus and edl muscles, 5 weeks exercise training: (i) increased twitch amplitude by 25% and 8%, respectively, without modification in the time-to-peak tension and the time constant of relaxation, (ii) increased the amplitude of K(+) contracture by 93% and 88%, respectively, and accelerated its relaxation by 17% and 43%, respectively, and (iii) increased the amplitude of caffeine contractures (soleus: 0.5 mM: 86%, 10 mM: 77%; edl: 0.5 mM: 89%, 10 mM: 87%). In conclusion, changes in contractile responses were associated with shifts in the steady state inactivation curves and in the voltage-dependent activation curve to a more negative potential, with increases in soleus and edl caffeine sensitivity, without changes in the Ca(2+) sensitivity of contractile proteins and myosin heavy chain isoforms.  相似文献   

11.
Potassium (K+) contracture tension, measured in small bundles of rat soleus muscle fibers during maintained depolarization, increases to a peak value and then decays either to the baseline or to a pedestal level. We have tested the hypothesis that the rise and fall of tension are determined by independent activation and inactivation processes. If the “Independence” hypothesis is correct, tension during the decay of K+ contractures should equal tension predicted from the product of the activation and inactivation parameters determined from the same K+ contractures. Both the measured and predicted tensions decayed to a pedestal level that was increased in amplitude in the presence of perchlorate ions. However, the measured tensions in normal solutions and in the presence of perchlorate were three to five times smaller than the predicted tensions. This result indicates that the activation and inactivation of processes controlling the rise and decay of K+ contracture tension are not independent.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of LCB29 was tested on twitch characteristics, tetanic tension, and K+ and voltage-clamp contractures of rat soleus muscle fibers. In concentrations ranging from 10(-6) to 5 x 10(-4) M, LCB29 simultaneously inhibited the twitch amplitude, the maximum rate of tension development, and the maximum rate of relaxation. In concentrations ranging from 10(-5) to 10(-4) M, tetanic tension (100 Hz, 1 s) was inhibited by the same amount. The effect of 5 x 10(-5) M LCB29 was studied on K+ contractures and contractures induced, under voltage-clamp conditions, by long-lasting depolarizations. Its effect was significantly stronger than those on twitch and tetanic tension. In addition, LCB29 had a dual effect on strength--duration curves for mechanical threshold. It increased both the rheobasic potential and the steepness of the curve. It is concluded that LCB29 exerts a direct myorelaxant effect on rat soleus muscle; two sites of action are probably involved.  相似文献   

13.
In frog twitch muscle fibres, Na-octanoate (NaC8) shifted the relation between potassium induced tension and membrane potential to the right. The present study has been carried out to investigate the effect of this fatty acid on frog tonic fibres. Potassium contractures measured on bundles of 30-40 fibres of ileofibularis muscles were less decreased by NaC8 (2.5-10 mmol/l) than those of twitch fibre bundles. In denervated muscles the sensitivity to NaC8 was increased, probably due to the development of sodium channels in the membranes. Experiments with mixed fibre bundles also showed a lower influence of NaC8 on potassium contracture of tonic fibres. On the other hand, tonic fibres showed a lower threshold of the potassium induced tension as well as a lower K+ concentration for maximal activation. This lower threshold was further lowered by NaC8, corresponding to a shift of the relation between potassium concentration and tension to the left. The membrane resting potentials were -58 +/- 9 mV in tonic fibres and -83 +/- 5 mV in twitch fibres. Five mmol/l NaC8 only induced depolarization of the membrane of tonic fibres. This depolarization (by about 20 mV) may be responsible for the threshold shift to lower K+ concentration in NaC8-exposed tonic fibres. In addition to the effects of NaC8 on sodium channels, interactions with Ca2+ binding sites are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of Ba2+ ions on twitches, K+-induced contractures, and on intracellularly recorded membrane potentials (Em) and depolarizations of frog skeletal muscle fibres were investigated. Exposure of toe muscles to choline--Ringer's solution with 10(-3) M Ba2+ with Ca2+ (1.08 mM) eliminated or very greatly reduced contractures produced by 60 mM K+. In contrast, not only did the same concentration of Ba2+ ions fail to depress the twitch tension of isolated semitendinosus fibres when added to Ringer's with Ca2+, but it even restored twitches that had been eliminated in a zero Ca2+ Ringer's solution. The resting Em of sartorius muscle fibres in choline--Ringer's solution was reduced about 20 mV by 10(-3) M Ba2+. This Ba2+ ion concentration also antagonized the K+-induced depolarization. Thus in the presence of 1 mM Ba2+, 20 mM K+ hyperpolarized rather than depolarized the fibres and 60 or 123 mM K+ produced only very slowly developing, small depolarizations. These results suggest that the loss of the K+-induced contracture in choline-Ringer's caused by Ba2+ ions is due to an inhibition of the K+-induced depolarization. The latter result is consistent with previous findings of other workers that Ba2+ ions block membrane K+ channels.  相似文献   

15.
The potential, Vt, at which a brief test depolarization first elicited movement was determined using two-microelectrode point voltage clamp. We expected that inactivation of excitation-contraction coupling at conditioning potentials between ?60 and 0 mV would shift Vt to more positive potentials, and that fibers would become inactivatable with less conditioning depolarization in EDL than soleus. The curve relating Vt to conditioning potential had a negative slope (which was insensitive to addition of 1 mm cobalt or replacement of calcium with 20 mm CaEGTA) between ?60 and ?35 mV and a steep positive slope with further depolarization. Unexpectedly, fibers became inactivatable with less conditioning depolarization in soleus than in EDL when Vt was measured with 50 msec test pulses. However, the positive shift in Vt became less steep as test pulse duration lengthened in soleus fibers. When Vt obtained with test pulses approaching rheobase (10 msec in EDL and 500 msec in soleus) was compared, EDL fibers became inactive with less conditioning depolarization than soleus fibers. The increase in Vt became steeper with 1 mm cobalt or 20 mm CaEGTA and was shifted to more positive potentials by denervation in soleus fibers. We conclude that inactivation (i) does not strongly influence threshold contractions at conditioning potentials between ?60 and ?40 mV and (ii) influences Vt between ?40 and 0 mV in a manner that depends on test pulse duration.  相似文献   

16.
N Gilles  E Leipold  H Chen  S H Heinemann  D Gordon 《Biochemistry》2001,40(48):14576-14584
Binding of scorpion alpha-toxins to receptor site 3 on voltage-gated sodium channels inhibits sodium current inactivation and is voltage-dependent. To reveal the direct effect of depolarization, we analyzed binding kinetics of the alpha-toxin Lqh-II (from Leiurus quinquestriatus hebraeus) to rat brain synaptosomes and effects on rat brain II (rBII) channels expressed in mammalian cells. Our results indicated that the 33-fold decrease in toxin affinity for depolarized (0 mV, 90 mM [K(+)](out), K(d) = 5.85 +/- 0.5 nM) versus polarized (-55 mV, 5 mM [K(+)](out), K(d) = 0.18 +/- 0.04 nM) synaptosomes at steady state results from a 48-fold reduction in the association rate (k(on) at 5 mM [K(+)] = (12.0 +/- 4) x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1) and (0.25 +/- 0.03) x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1) at 90 mM [K(+)](out)) with nearly no change in the dissociation rate. Electrophysiological analyses of rBII channels expressed in mammalian cells revealed that approximately 75% and 40% of rBII occupied fast- and slow-inactivated states, respectively, at resting membrane potential of synaptosomes (-55 mV), and Lqh-II markedly increased the steady-state fast and slow inactivation. To mimic electrophysiological conditions we induced fast depolarization of toxin-bound synaptosomes, which generated a biphasic unbinding of Lqh-II from toxin-receptor complexes. The first fast off rate closely resembled values determined electrophysiologically for rBII in mammalian cells. The second off rate was similar to the voltage-independent steady-state value, attributed to binding to the slow-inactivated channel states. Thus, the Lqh-II voltage-dependent affinity highlights two independent mechanisms representing conformational changes of sodium channels associated with transitions among electrically visible and invisible inactivated states.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of caffeine on tension, membrane potential, membrane currents, and intracellular [Ca2+], measured as the light emitted by the Ca2+-activated photoprotein aequorin, were studied in canine cardiac Purkinje fibers. An initial, transient, positive inotropic effect of caffeine was accompanied by a transient increase in the second component of the aequorin signal (L2) but not the first (L1). In the steady state, 4 or 10 mM caffeine always decreased twitch tension and greatly reduced both L1 and L2. At a concentration of 2 mM, caffeine usually reduced but occasionally increased the steady state twitch tension. However, 2 mM caffeine always reduced both L1 and L2. Caffeine eliminated the diastolic oscillations of intracellular [Ca2+] induced by high extracellular [Ca2+]. In voltage-clamp experiments, 10 mM caffeine reduced the transient outward current and the peak tension elicited by step depolarization from a holding potential of -45 mV. In the presence of 20 mM Cs+, 10 mM caffeine reduced slow inward current. However, the time course of this reduction was far slower than that in tension and light observed in separate experiments. The simplest explanation of the results is that caffeine inhibits the sequestration of Ca2+ by the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The results also suggest that in Purkinje fibers caffeine increases the sensitivity of the myofilaments to Ca2+.  相似文献   

18.
We have studied the effects of changes in the resting membrane potential (Vm) and T-tubules on caffeine contracture (25 mM) elicited in rat soleus muscle in vitro at 34 degrees C. In high [K]o (30-140 mM, [K]o X [Cl]o constant) caffeine contractures were reduced by about 40-50% and had a faster time course than in normal Krebs ([K]o = 5 mM). Detubulation of the muscles by an osmotic treatment produces a reduction of about 30% in the caffeine contracture tension. Our results with high K solutions suggest a reduced sensitivity of the myofibrils to calcium released by caffeine. The effects of detubulation on caffeine contracture suggest that caffeine may have a direct effect on sarcolemma in addition to its well known action on the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). However, a depletion of the calcium content in the SR of depolarized muscle fibres as well as an anatomical damage produced by the osmotic treatment can not be ruled out as an explanation for the reduced caffeine contracture.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Raising extracellular K+ concentration ([K+](o)) around mesenteric resistance arteries reverses depolarization and contraction to phenylephrine. As smooth muscle depolarizes and intracellular Ca(2+) and tension increase, this effect of K+ is suppressed, whereas efflux of cellular K+ through Ca(2+)-activated K+ (K(Ca)) channels is increased. We investigated whether K+ efflux through K(Ca) suppresses the action of exogenous K+ and whether it prestimulates smooth muscle Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase. Under isometric conditions, 10.8 mM [K+](o) had no effect on arteries contracted >10 mN, unless 100 nM iberiotoxin (IbTX), 100 nM charybdotoxin (ChTX), and/or 50 nM apamin were present. Simultaneous measurements of membrane potential and tension showed that phenylephrine depolarized and contracted arteries to -32.2 +/- 2.3 mV and 13.8 +/- 1.6 mN (n = 5) after blockade of K(Ca), but 10.8 mM K+ reversed fully the responses (107.6 +/- 8.6 and 98.8 +/- 0.6%, respectively). Under isobaric conditions and preconstriction with phenylephrine, 10.7 mM [K+](o) reversed contraction at both 50 mmHg (77.0 +/- 8.5%, n = 9) and 80 mmHg (83.7 +/- 5.5%, n = 5). However, in four additional vessels at 80 mmHg, raising K+ failed to reverse contraction unless ChTX was present. Increases in isometric and decreases in isobaric tension with phenylephrine were augmented by either ChTX or ouabain (100 microM), whereas neither inhibitor altered tension under resting conditions. Inhibition of cellular K+ efflux facilitates hyperpolarization and relaxation to exogenous K+, possibly by indirectly reducing the background activation of Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

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