Abstract: | In concentrations having no effect on the evoked alpha-A fiber spike, adenosine triphosphate (ATP), adenosine monophosphate (AMP) and several other nucleotides produced antagonism of spontaneous impulses in isolated desheathed frog nerve soaked in Ca free solution. ATP was only slightly more potent than AMP, indicating that high-energy phosphate bonds and Ca complexing are not important for stabilizing action. Furthermore, sub-effective concentrations of Ca potentiated the stabilizing action of ATP to a minimal degree and that of AMP not at all, suggesting a direct action of the nucleotide per se rather than a Ca-nucleotide complex. Ca45 washout experiments showed that the nucleotides did not depress efflux of Ca from nerve axons but, in fact, caused release of Ca. It was proposed that nucleotide stabilization is associated with replacement of nucleotide lost from the excitable membrane into the Ca free medium. |