Comparison of steady-state electrophysiological properties of isolated cells from bullfrog atrium and sinus venous |
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Authors: | L. E. Moore R. B. Clark E. F. Shibata W. R. Giles |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Texas Medical Branch, 77550 Galveston, Texas;(2) Department of Medical Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, T2N 4N1 Calgary, Alberta, Canada |
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Abstract: | Summary Single electrode whole cell voltage-clamp experiments and frequency domain analyses have been used to study and compare the K+ currents in enzymatically dispersed single cells from the atrium and the sinus venosus (pacemaker region) of the bullfrog heart. Admittance measurements made near the resting or zero-current potential yield data from which the equivalent circuit of each cell type may be obtained. Data from both atrial and pacemaker cells are well-fitted by a model consisting only of parallel resistance-capacitative elements, as predicted from their micro-anatomy. Neither of these amphibian cardiac cells contain a transverse tubule system (TT) and both have very little sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). These results complement and extend two earlier investigations: (i) Moore, Schmid and Isenberg (J. Membrane Biol.81:29–40, 1984) have reported that in guinea pig ventricle cells (whichdo contain an internal membrane system consisting of transverse tubules and a substantial SR) the SR may be electrically coupled to the sarcolemma; (ii) Shibata and Giles (Biophys. J.45:136a, 1984) have shown that although bullfrog atrial cells have an inwardly rectifying back-ground K+ current,, pacemaker cells from the immediately adjacent sinus venosus do not. Data from admittance measurements also provide evidence that a TTX-insensitive inward Ca2+ current is activated in the pacemaker range of potentials. |
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Keywords: | atrium sinus venosus pacemaker inward rectifier impedance isolated cardiac cells linear analysis |
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