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Showing papers in "The Journal of General Physiology in 1980"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The relative permeability of endplate channels to many organic cations was determined by reversal-potential criteria and specific chemical factors seem to be less important than access or friction in determining the ionic selectivity of the endplate channel.
Abstract: The relative permeability of endplate channels to many organic cations was determined by reversal-potential criteria. Endplate currents induced by iontophoretic "puffs" of acetylcholine were studied by a Vaseline gap, voltage clamp method in cut muscle fibers. Reversal potential changes were measured as the NaCl of the bathing medium was replaced by salts of organic cations, and permeability ratios relative to Na+ ions were calculated from the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation. 40 small monovalent organic cations had permeability ratios larger than 0.1. The most permeant including NH4+, hydroxylamine, hydrazine, methylamine, guanidine, and several relatives of guanidine had permeability ratios in the range 1.3--2.0. However, even cations such as imidazole, choline, tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane, triethylamine, and glycine methylester were appreciably permeant with permeability ratios of 0.13--0.95. Four compounds with two charged nitrogen groups were also permeant. Molecular models of the permeant ions suggest that the smallest cross-section of the open pore must be at least as large as a square, 6.5 A x 6.5 A. Specific chemical factors seem to be less important than access or friction in determining the ionic selectivity of the endplate channel.

356 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Data is presented that suggest that the ion-flux pathways responsible for cell-volume regulation are not activated by changes in cell volume per se but by some event associated with osmotic perturbation, such as changes in intracellular pH.
Abstract: After osmotic perturbation, the red blood cells of Amphiuma exhibited a volume-regulatory response that returned cell volume back to or toward control values. After osmotic swelling, cell-volume regulation (regulatory volume decrease; RVD) resulted from net cellular loss of K, Cl, and osmotically obliged H2O. In contrast, the volume-regulatory response to osmotic shrinkage (regulatory volume increase; RVI) was characterized by net cellular uptake of Na, Cl, and H2O. The net K and Na fluxes characteristic of RVD and RVI are increased by 1-2 orders of magnitude above those observed in studies of volume-static control cells. The cell membrane potential of volume-regulating and volume-static cells was measured by impalement with glass microelectrodes. The information gained from the electrical and ion-flux studies led to the conclusion that the ion fluxes responsible for cell-volume regulation proceed via electrically silent pathways. Furthermore, it was observed that Na fluxes during RVI were profoundly sensitive to medium [HCO3] and that during RVI the medium becomes more acid, whereas alkaline shifts in the suspension medium accompany RVD. The experimental observations are explained by a model featuring obligatorily coupled alkali metal-H and Cl-HCO3 exchangers. The anion- and cation-exchange pathways are separate and distinct yet functionally coupled via the net flux of H. As a result of the operation of such pathways, net alkali metal, Cl, and H2O fluxes proceed in the same direction, whereas H and HCO3 fluxes are cyclic. Data also are presented that suggest that the ion-flux pathways responsible for cell-volume regulation are not activated by changes in cell volume per se but by some event associated with osmotic perturbation, such as changes in intracellular pH.

355 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Permeability ratios for divalent ions decreased as the concentration of divalent ion was increased in a manner consistent with the negative surface potential theory of Lewis (1979 J. Physiol.
Abstract: The relative permeability of endplate channels to monovalent and divalent metal ions was determined from reversal potentials. Thallium is the most permeant ion with a permeability ratio relative to Na+ of 2.5. The selectivity among alkali metals is weak with a sequence, Cs+ greater than Rb+ greater than K+ greater than Na+ greater than Li+, and permeability ratios of 1.4, 1.3, 1.1, 1.0, and 0.9. The selectivity among divalent ions is also weak, with a sequence for alkaline earths of Mg++ greater than Ca++ greater than Ba++ greater than Sr++. The transition metal ions Mn++, Co++, Ni++, Zn++, and Cd++ are also permeant. Permeability ratios for divalent ions decreased as the concentration of divalent ion was increased in a manner consistent with the negative surface potential theory of Lewis (1979 J. Physiol. (Lond.). 286: 417--445). With 20 mM XCl2 and 85.5 mM glucosamine.HCl in the external solution, the apparent permeability ratios for the alkaline earth cations (X++) are in the range 0.18--0.25. Alkali metal ions see the endplate channel as a water-filled, neutral pore without high-field-strength sites inside. Their permeability sequence is the same as their aqueous mobility sequence. Divalent ions, however, have a permeability sequence almost opposite from their mobility sequence and must experience some interaction with groups in the channel. In addition, the concentrations of monovalent and divalent ions are increased near the channel mouth by a weak negative surface potential.

323 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work proposes that fusion occurs by the osmotic swelling of vesicles in contact with the planar membrane, with subsequent rupture of the vesicular and planar membranes in the region of contact, and provides a general method for incorporating and reconstituting transport proteins into planar phospholipid bilayer membranes.
Abstract: Fusion of multilamellar phospholipid vesicles with planar phospholipid bilayer membranes was monitored by the rate of appearance in the planar membrane of an intrinsic membrane protein present in the vesicle membranes. An essential requirement for fusion is an osmotic gradient across the planar membrane, with the cis side (the side containing the vesicles) hyperosmotic to the opposite (trans) side; for substantial fusion rates, divalent cation must also be present on the cis side. Thus, the low fusion rates obtained with 100 mM excess glucose in the cis compartment are enhanced orders of magnitude by the addition of 5-10 mM CaCl2 to the cis compartment. Conversely, the rapid fusion rates induced by 40 mM CaCl2 in the cis compartment are completely suppressed when the osmotic gradient (created by the 40 mM CaCl2) is abolished by addition of an equivalent amount of either CaCl2, NaCl, urea, or glucose to the trans compartment. We propose that fusion occurs by the osmotic swelling of vesicles in contact with the planar membrane, with subsequent rupture of the vesicular and planar membranes in the region of contact. Divalent cations catalyze this process by increasing the frequency and duration of vesicle-planar membrane contact. We argue that essentially this same osmotic mechanism drives biological fusion processes, such as exocytosis. Our fusion procedure provides a general method for incorporating and reconstituting transport proteins into planar phospholipid bilayer membranes.

222 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data are consistent with the presence of two distinct populations of voltage-regulated, divalent cation-selective pathways for Ca entry in presynaptic brain nerve endings.
Abstract: Potassium-stimulated 45Ca entry into rat brain synaptosomes was measured at times ranging from 1 to 60 s. The K-rich solutions were used to depolarize the synaptosomes. Backflux of 45Ca from the synaptosomes was negligible during the first 10-20 s of incubation. An initial ("fast") phase of K-stimulated Ca entry, lasting from 1 to 2 s was observed. This phase was inhibited by low concentrations of La (KI approximately equal to 0.3 microM). It was also abolished ("inactivated") by incubating the synaptosomes in depolarizing solutions (containing veratridine, gramicidin, or elevated [K]o) before the addition of 45Ca. An additional long lasting ("slow") phase of K-stimulated Ca entry was also detected. This "slow" Ca entry was much less sensitive to La (KI > 100 microM) and was not affected by depolarizing the synaptosomes before the addition of 45Ca. The rate of influx during the fast phase was about four times the rate of Ca influx during the slow phase. Neither the fast nor slow phase of Ca entry was sensitive to tetrodotoxin (10 microM), a potent blocker of Na channels, but both phases were inhibited by Ni, Mn, Mg, and other agents that block Ca channels. The data are consistent with the presence of two distinct populations of voltage-regulated, divalent cation-selective pathways for Ca entry in presynaptic brain nerve endings.

217 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The open-channel conductance properties of a voltage-gated channel from sarcoplasmic reticulum were studied in planar phospholipid membranes, and the results are consistent with an Eyring- type barriers as it permeates the channel.
Abstract: The open-channel conductance properties of a voltage-gated channel from sarcoplasmic reticulum were studied in planar phospholipid membranes The channel is ideally selective for K+ over Cl- and for K+ over Ca++ In symmetrical 1 M solutions, the single-channel conductance (in pmho) falls in the order: K+ (214) > NH4+ (157) > Rb+ (125) > Na+ (72) > La+ (81) > Cs+ (< 3) In neutral bilayers, the channel conductance saturates with ion activity according to a rectangular hyperbolic relation, with half-saturation activities of 54 mM for K+ and 34 mM for Na+ Under symmetrical salt conditions, the K+:Na+ channel conductance ratio increases with salt activity, but the permeability ratio, measured by single-channel bi-ionic potentials, is constant between 20 mM and 25 M salt; the permeability ratio is equal to the conductance ratio in the limit of low-salt concentration The channel conductance varies < 5% in the voltage range -100 to +70 mV The maximum conductance varies K+ and Na+ is only weakly temperature dependent (delta H++ = 46 and 53 kcal/mol, respectively), but that of Li+ varies strongly with temperature (delta H++ = 13 kcal/mol) The channel's K+ conductance is blocked asymmetrically by Cs+, and this block is competitive with K+ The results are consistent with an Eyring-type barriers as it permeates the channel The data conform to Luger's (1973 Biochem Biophys Acta 311:423-441) predictions for a "pure" single-ion channel

214 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Comparison of the efficacy of Ba++ block at various internal K+ concentrations suggests that Ba++ is probably a simple competitive inhibitor of K+ interaction with the K+ conductance.
Abstract: Ba++ ion blocks K+ conductance at concentrations in the nanomolar range. This blockage is time and voltage dependent. From the time dependence it is possible to determine the forward and reverse rate constants for what appears to be an essentially first-order process of Ba++ interaction. The voltage dependence of the rate constants and the dissociation constants place the site of interaction near the middle of the membrane field. Comparison of the efficacy of Ba++ block at various internal K+ concentrations suggests that Ba++ is probably a simple competitive inhibitor of K+ interaction with the K+ conductance. The character of Ba++ block in high external K+ solutions suggests that Ba++ ion may be "knocked-off" the site by inward movement of external K+. Examination of the effects of other divalent cations suggests that the channel may have a closed state with a divalent cation inside the channel. The relative blockage at different temperatures implies a strong interaction between Ba++ and the K+ conductance.

192 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The permeability of lecithin bilayer membranes to nonelectrolytes is in reasonable agreement with Overton's rule and the recent emphasis on theoretically calculated intramembranous diffusion coefficients has diverted attention from the experimentally measurable and physiologically relevant permeability coefficients (Pd'S) and has obscured the simplicity and usefulness of Overton'S.
Abstract: The permeability of lecithin bilayer membranes to nonelectrolytes is in reasonable agreement with Overton's rule. The is, Pd alpha DKhc, where/Pd is the permeability coefficient of a solute through the bilayer, Khc is its hydrocarbon:water partition coefficient, and D is its diffusion coefficient in bulk hydrocarbon. The partition coefficients are by far the major determinants of the relative magnitudes of the permeability coefficients; the diffusion coefficients make only a minor contribution. We note that the recent emphasis on theoretically calculated intramembranous diffusion coefficients (Dm'S) has diverted attention from the experimentally measurable and physiologically relevant permeability coefficients (Pd'S) and has obscured the simplicity and usefulness of Overton's rule.

141 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The discharge of vesicular contents across the planar membrane is the most convincing evidence of vESicle-membrane fusion and serves as a model for that ubiquitous biological phenomenon--exocytosis.
Abstract: Multilamellar phospholipid vesicles are introduced into the cis compartment on one side of a planar phospholipid bilayer membrane. The vesicles contain a water-soluble fluorescent dye trapped in the aqueous phases between the lamellae. If a vesicle containing n lamellae fuses with a planar membrane, an n-1 lamellar vesicle should be discharged into the opposite trans compartment, where it would appear as a discernible fluorescent particle. Thus, fusion events can be assayed by counting the number of fluorescent particles appearing in the trans compartment. In the absence of divalent cation, fusion does not occur, even after vesicles have been in the cis compartment for 40 min. When CaCl2 is introduced into the cis compartment to a concentration of greater than or equal to 20 mM, fusion occurs within the next 20 min; it generally ceases thereafter because of vesicle aggregation in the cis compartment. With approximately 3 x 10(8) vesicles/cm3 in the cis compartment, about 25-50 fusion events occur following CaCl2 addition. The discharge of vesicular contents across the planar membrane is the most convincing evidence of vesicle-membrane fusion and serves as a model for that ubiquitous biological phenomenon--exocytosis.

136 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that each channel’s activation is determined by the configuration of a single tethered QBr molecule, and the same rate-limiting step governs the opening and closing of channels for both reversible and tethered agonists.
Abstract: After disulphide bonds are reduced with dithiothreitol, trans-3-(alpha-bromomethyl)-3’-[alpha-(trimethylammonium)methyl]azobenzene (trans-QBr) alkylates a sulfhydryl group on receptors. The membrane conductance induced by this “tethered agonist” shares many properties with that induced by reversible agonists. Equilibrium conductance increases as the membrane potential is made more negative; the voltage sensitivity resembles that seen with 50 [mu]M carbachol. Voltage- jump relaxations follow an exponential time-course; the rate constants are about twice as large as those seen with 50 mu M carbachol and have the same voltage and temperature sensitivity. With reversible agonists, the rate of channel opening increases with the frequency of agonist-receptor collisions: with tethered trans-Qbr, this rate depends only on intramolecular events. In comparison to the conductance induced by reversible agonists, the QBr-induced conductance is at least 10-fold less sensitive to competitive blockade by tubocurarine and roughly as sensitive to “open-channel blockade” bu QX-222. Light-flash experiments with tethered QBr resemble those with the reversible photoisomerizable agonist, 3,3’,bis-[alpha-(trimethylammonium)methyl]azobenzene (Bis-Q): the conductance is increased by cis {arrow} trans photoisomerizations and decreased by trans {arrow} cis photoisomerizations. As with Bis-Q, ligh-flash relaxations have the same rate constant as voltage-jump relaxations. Receptors with tethered trans isomer. By comparing the agonist-induced conductance with the cis/tans ratio, we conclude that each channel’s activation is determined by the configuration of a single tethered QBr molecule. The QBr-induced conductance shows slow decreases (time constant, several hundred milliseconds), which can be partially reversed by flashes. The similarities suggest that the same rate-limiting step governs the opening and closing of channels for both reversible and tethered agonists. Therefore, this step is probably not the initial encounter between agonist and receptor molecules.

134 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The decrease in the light sensitivity of PDE that can be observed upon lowering the calcium concentration may be related to the desensitization of the permeability change mechanism that occurs during light adaptation of rod photoreceptors.
Abstract: The light-activated cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) of frog photoreceptor membranes has been assayed in isolated outer segments suspended in a low-calcium Ringer's solution. Activation occurs over a range of light intensity that also causes a decrease in the permeability, cyclic GMP levels, and GTP levels of isolated outer segments. At intermediate intensities, PDE activity assumes constant intermediate values determined by the rate of rhodopsin bleaching. Washing causes an increase in maximal enzyme activity. Increasing light intensity from darkness to a level bleaching 5 x 10(3) rhodopsin molecules per outer segment per second shifts the apparent Michaelis constant (Km) from 100 to 900 microM. Maximum enzyme velocity increases at least 10-fold. The component that normally regulates this light-induced increase in the Km of PDE is removed by the customary sucrose flotation procedures. The presence of 10(-3) M Ca++ increases the light sensitivity of PDE, and maximal activation is caused by illumination bleaching only 5 x 10(2) rhodopsin molecules per outer segment per second. Calcium acts by increasing enzyme velocity while having little influence on Km. The effect of calcium appears to require a labile component, sensitive to aging of the outer segment preparation. The decrease in the light sensitivity of PDE that can be observed upon lowering the calcium concentration may be related to the desensitization of the permeability change mechanism that occurs during light adaptation of rod photoreceptors.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The pH buffering capacity of the neurons was measured using three different techniques: H+ injection, depressing intrinsic pH changes with a pH buffer, and a method employing the EGTA-calcium reaction which gave significantly higher values and showed no difference between pleural and pedal neurons.
Abstract: Simultaneous measurements of electrical activity and light absorbance have been made on nerve cell bodies from Archidoris monteryensis injected with indicator dyes. pH indicators, phenol red and bromocresol purple, and arsenazo III, which under normal conditions is primarily a calcium indicator have been employed. Voltage clamp pulses which induced calcium influx caused an absorbance decrease of the pH dyes indicating an internal acidification. The onset of the pH drop lagged the onset of Ca2+ influx by 200-400 ms, and pH continued to decrease for several seconds after pulse termination which shut off Ca2+ influx. Trains of action potentials also produced an internal pH decrease. Recovery of the pH change required periods greater than 10 min. The magnitude of the pH change was largely unaffected by external pH in the range 6.8-8.4. The voltage dependence of the internal p/ change was similar to the voltage dependence of calcium influx determined by arsenazo III, and removal of calcium from the bathing saline eliminated the pH signal. In neurons injected with EGTA (1-5 mM), the activity-induced internal Ca2+ changes were reduced or eliminated, but the internal pH drop was increased severalfold in magnitude. After the injection of EGTA, voltage clamp pulses produced a decrease in arsenazo III absorbance instead of the normal increase. Under these conditions the dye was responding primarily to changes in internal pH. Injection of H+ caused a rise in internal free calcium. The pH buffering capacity of the neurons was measured using three different techniques: H+ injection, depressing intrinsic pH changes with a pH buffer, and a method employing the EGTA-calcium reaction. The first two methods gave similar measurements: 4-9 meq/unit pH per liter for pleural ganglion cells and 13-26 meq/unit pH per liter for pedal ganglion cells. The EGTA method gave significantly higher values (20-60 meq/unit pH per liter) and showed no difference between pleural and pedal neurons.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The hypothesis that Ca sensitivity of cardiac myofibrils is regulated by a phosphrylation of TNI that is stimulated by cyclic AMP (cAMP) and inhibited by cGMP is supported.
Abstract: Bundles of cells from rat right ventricular myocardium were made "hyperpermeable" by an overnight soak in 10 mM EGTA (McClellan and Winegrad. 1978. J. Gen. Physiol. 72:737-764). In this preparation the cytoplasmic concentration of Ca++ and ATP could be controlled while sarcolemmal receptors and enzymes were retained. The Ca sensitivity of the tissues (as indicated by the pCa for 50% maximum activation) was altered to different extents in the presence of [32Pgamma]ATP by treatment with cyclic nucleotides, catecholamines, or a low concentration of nonionic detergent. The proteins of the tissue were then isolated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and the identity of 32P-labeled proteins was determined. The Ca sensitivity is inversely related to the relative amount of 32P incorporated into the inhibitory subunit of troponin (TNI). Extrapolation of the relation to the lowest Ca sensitivity observed gives a stoichiometry of about 0.8 mol PO4 per mol TNI. These results support the hypothesis that Ca sensitivity of cardiac myofibrils is regulated by a phosphrylation of TNI that is stimulated by cyclic AMP (cAMP) and inhibited by cGMP.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of this study demonstrate that the sodium current of heart cells recorded at 37 degrees C can be described by Hodgkin-Huxley kinetics with speeds approximately four times faster than the squid giant axon at 15 degrees C.
Abstract: The rapid inward sodium current in spherical clusters of 11-d-old embryonic chick heart cells, ranging in size between 65 and 90 micron diameter, was studied using the two-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique. Using these preparations, it was possible to resolve the activation phase of the rapid inward current for potentials negative to -25 mV at 37 degrees C. The rapid inward current exhibited a voltage and time dependence similar to that observed in other excitable tissues. It was initiated at potential steps more positive than -45 mV. The magnitude of the current reached its maximum value at a potential of approximately -20 mV. The measured reversal potential was that predicted by the Nernst equation for sodium ions. The falling phase of the current followed a single exponential time-course with a time constant of inactivation, tau h, ranging between 2.14 ms at -40 mV and 0.18 ms at -5 mV. The time constant of inactivation, tau h, determined by a single voltage-step protocol was compared to the constant, tau c, determined by a double voltage-step protocol and no significant different between the two constants of inactivation was found. Furthermore, the time constants of inactivation and reactivation at the same potential in the same preparation were similar. The results of this study demonstrate that the sodium current of heart cells recorded at 37 degrees C can be described by Hodgkin-Huxley kinetics with speeds approximately four times faster than the squid giant axon at 15 degrees C.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A voltage-dependent, K+-selective ionic channel from sarcoplasmic reticulum of rabbit skeletal muscle has been studied in a planar phospholipid bilayer membrane to study the mechanism by which the channel undergoes transitions between its conducting and nonconducting states.
Abstract: A voltage-dependent, K+-selective ionic channel from sarcoplasmic reticulum of rabbit skeletal muscle has been studied in a planar phospholipid bilayer membrane. The purpose of this work is to study the mechanism by which the channel undergoes transitions between its conducting and nonconducting states. Thermody- namic studies show that the "open" and "closed" states of the channel exist in a voltage-dependent equilibrium, and that the channel displays only a single open state; the channel conductance is 120 pmho in 0.1 M K +. The channel's gating process follows single exponential kinetics at all voltages tested, and the individual opening and closing rate constants are exponentially dependent on voltage. The individual rate constants may also be determined from a stochastic analysis of channel fluctua- tions among multiple conductance levels. Neither the thermodynamic nor the kinetic parameters of gating depend on the absolute concentration of channels in the bilayer. The results are taken as evidence that the channel gates by an unusually simple two- state conformational mechanism in which the equivalent of 1.1 net charges are moved across the membrane during the formation of the open channel. Of the events leading to the contraction of vertebrate skeletal muscle, those involved in the release of Ca ++ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) mem- brane are the least understood. It is clear that the permeability of the SR membrane to Ca ++ is greatly increased during the release process (Endo, 1977), but it is not known to what extent other ions participate in any voltage and conductance changes that may occur during Ca ++ release. One obvious question to arise from any consideration of Ca ++ movements is: what other ions move across the SR membrane to maintain electroneutralit y and, hence, to permit the rapid, massive fluxes of Ca ++ into and out of the SR throughout the contraction-rela xation cycle? Indirect approaches have yielded estimates of the overall SR conductance (Vergara et al., 1978), but the ionic basis of this is entirely unknown. In particular, the role of K +, the overwhelmingly abundant ion on both sides of the SR membrane in vivo (Somlyo et al., 1977)) is obscure.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The high economy of force maintenance compared with other muscle types is undoubtedly due to a slower cross-bridge cycle time, and integral of Pdt/delta approximately P was higher during relaxation than during force maintenance in the stimulated muscle.
Abstract: High-energy phosphate utilization (delta approximately P) associated with force development, force maintenance, and relaxation has been determined during single isometric tetani in the rabbit taenia coli. ATP resynthesis from glycolysis and respiration was stopped without deleterious effects on the muscle. At 18 degrees C and a muscle length of 95% l0, the resting rate of energy utilization is 1.8 +/- 0.2 nmol/g . s-1, or 0.85 +/- 0.2 mmol approximately P/mol of total creatine (Ct) . s-1, where Ct = 2.7 mumol/g wet wt. During the initial 25 s of stimulation when force is developed, the average rate of delta approximately P was -8.2 +/- 0.8 mmol/mol Ct . s-1, some four times greater than during the subsequent 35 s of force maintenance, when the rate was -2.0 +/- 0.6 mmol approximately P/mol Ct . s-1. The energy cost of force redevelopment (0 to 95% P0) after a quick release from the peak of a tetanus is very low compared with the initial force development. Therefore, the high rate of energy utilization during force development is not due only to internal work done against the series elasticity nor to any high rate of cross-bridge cycling inherently associated with force development. The high economy of force maintenance compared with other muscle types is undoubtedly due to a slower cross-bridge cycle time. The energy utilization during 45 s of relaxation was not statistically significant, and integral of Pdt/delta approximately P was higher during relaxation than during force maintenance in the stimulated muscle.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A more complicated model is used in the text to fit the structure of skeletal muscle and other properties of its charge movement, and some of the properties of gating currents produced by intramembrane charge movement are computed.
Abstract: The consequences of ionic current flow from the T system to the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) of skeletal muscle are examined. The Appendix analyzes a simple model in which the conductance gx, linking T system and SR, is in series with a parallel resistor and capacitor having fixed values. The conductance gx is supposed to increase rapidly with depolarization and to decrease slowly with repolarization. Nonlinear transient currents computed from this model have some of the properties of gating currents produced by intramembrane charge movement. In particular, the integral of the transient current upon depolarization approximates that upon repolarization. Thus, equality of nonlinear charge movement can occur without intramembrane charge movement. A more complicated model is used in the text to fit the structure of skeletal muscle and other properties of its charge movement. Rectification is introduced into gx and the membrane conductance of the terminal cisternae to give asymmetry in the time-course of the transient currents and saturation in the curve relating charge movement to depolarization, respectively. The more complex model fits experimental data quite well if the longitudinal tubules of the sarcoplasmic reticulum are isolated from the terminal cisternae by a substantial resistance and if calcium release from the terminal cisternae is, for the most part, electrically silent. Specific experimental tests of the model are proposed, and the implications for excitation-contraction coupling are discussed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that the potassium channel of squid giant axon is a multi-ion, single-file pore with three or more sites.
Abstract: The potassium flux ratio across the axolemma of internally perfused, voltage-clamped giant axons of Loligo pealei has been evaluated at various membrane potentials and internal potassium concentrations ([K]i). Four different methods were used: (a) independent measurement of one-way influx and efflux of 42K; (b) simultaneous measurement of net K current (IK) and 42K influx; (c) simultaneous measurement of IK and 42K efflux; and (d) measurement of potassium conductance and 42K influx at the potassium equilibrium potential. The reliability of each of these methods is discussed. The average value of the exponent n' in the Hodgkin-Keynes equation ranged from 1.5 at -4mV and 200 mM [K]i to 3.3 at -38 mV and 350 mM [K]i and appeared to be a function of membrane potential and possibly of [K]i. It is concluded that the potassium channel of squid giant axon is a multi-ion, single-file pore with three or more sites.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate (a) that shortening and relengthening is characterized by uniform activation between myofibrils within the cardiac cell and (b) that physiologically significant releng strengthening forces in living heart muscle originate at the level of the cell rather than in extracellular connections.
Abstract: We have observed the dynamics of sarcomere shortening and the diffracting action of single, functionally intact, unattached cardiac muscle cells enzymatically isolated from the ventricular tissue of adult rats. Sarcomere length was measured either (a) continuously by a light diffraction method or (b) by direct inspection of the cell's striated image as recorded on videotape or by cinemicroscopy (120--400 frames/s). At physiological levels of added CaCl2 (0.5--2.0 mM), many cells were quiescent (i.e., they did not beat spontaneously) and contracted in response to electrical stimulation (less than or equal to 1.0-ms pulse width). Sarcomere length in the quiescent, unstimulated cells (1.93 +/- 0.10 [SD] micrometers), at peak shortening (1.57 +/- 0.13 micrometers, n = 49), and the maximum velocity of sarcomere shortening and relengthening were comparable to previous observations in intact heart muscle preparations. The dispersion of light diffracted by the cell remained narrow, and individual striations remained distinct and laterally well registered throughout the shortening-relengthening cycle. In contrast, appreciable nonuniformity and internal buckling were seen at sarcomere lengths < 1.8 micrometers when the resting cell, embedded in gelatin, was longitudinally compressed These results indicate (a) that shortening and relengthening is characterized by uniform activation between myofibrils within the cardiac cell and (b) that physiologically significant relengthening forces in living heart muscle originate at the level of the cell rather than in extracellular connections. First-order diffracted light intensity, extremely variable during sarcomere shortening, was always greatest during midrelaxation preceding the onset of a very slow and uniform phase of sarcomere relengthening.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A three-state model for Na+ channel operation can account for the effects of these neurotoxins on Na+ channels as determined both by Na+ flux measurements in vitro and by electrophysiological experiments in intact nerve and muscle.
Abstract: Regulation of Na+ channels by neurotoxins has been studied in pinched-off nerve endings (synaptosomes) from rat brain. Activation of Na+ channels by the steroid batrachotoxin and by the alkaloid veratridine resulted in an increase in the rate of influx of 22Na into the synaptosomes. In the presence of 145 mM Na+, these agents also depolarized the synaptosomes, as indicated by increased fluorescence in the presence of a voltage-sensitive oxacarbocyanine dye [diO-C5(3)]. Polypeptide neurotoxins from the scorpion Leiurus quinquestriatus and from the sea anemone Anthopleura xanthogrammica potentiated the stimulatory effects of batrachotoxin and veratridine on the influx of 22Na into synaptosomes. Saxitoxin and tetrodotoxin blocked the stimulatory effects of batrachotoxin and veratridine, both in the presence and absence of the polypeptide toxins, but did not affect control 22Na influx or resting membrane potential. A three-state model for Na+ channel operation can account for the effects of these neurotoxins on Na+ channels as determined both by Na+ flux measurements in vitro and by electrophysiological experiments in intact nerve and muscle.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results strongly suggest that the major mechanisms involved in the generator potential are the latency process and the bump process, which completely characterize the frequency response to sinusoidal flicker.
Abstract: To light stimuli of very low intensity, Limulus photoreceptors give a voltage response with a fluctuating delay. This phenomenon has been called "latency dispersion." If the generator potential is the superposition of discrete voltage events ("bumps"), and if the effect of light upon bump size is negligible, then the latency dispersion and the bump shape completely characterize the frequency response to sinusoidal flicker. For very low light intensities, the latency dispersion of the bumps, the bump shape, and the frequency response are measured. It is found that for data obtained at 20 degrees C, the frequency response can be accounted for completely by the latency dispersion and by the bump shape derived from steady-state noise characteristics. At 10 degrees C, the time scale of the response of the photoreceptor is lengthened. The dispersion of latencies and the bump shape are found not to have the same temperature dependence. However, just as those measured at 20 degrees C, the bump shape and the dispersion of latencies measured at 10 degrees C can predict the frequency response measured under the same conditions. These results strongly suggest that the major mechanisms involved in the generator potential are the latency process and the bump process. At high light intensities, the time scale of the generator potential shortens. The decrease in time scale of the generator potential can be attributed to the decreases in time scales of the bumps and of the latency dispersion process.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that the underlying mechanisms in the nerve terminal that give rise to the components of increased transmitter release in the rabbit ganglion and frog neuromuscular junction are similar but not identical.
Abstract: The effect of repetitive stimulation on synaptic transmission was studied in the isolated superior cervical ganglion of the rabbit under conditions of reduced quantal content. Excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSP) were recorded with the sucrose gap technique to obtain estimates of transmitter release. Four components of increased transmitter release, with time constants of decay similar to those observed at the frog neuromuscular junction at 20 degrees C, were found in the ganglion at 34 degrees C: a first component of facilitation, which decayed with a time constant of 59 +/- 14 ms (mean +/- SD); a second component of facilitation, which decayed with a time constant of 388 +/- 97 ms; augmentation, which decayed with a time constant of 7.2 +/- 1 s; and potentiation, which decayed with a time constant of 88 +/- 25 s. The addition of 0.1-0.2 mM Ba2+ to the Locke solution increased the magnitude but not the time constant of decay of augmentation. Ba2+ had little effect on potentiation. The addition of 0.2-0.8 mM Sr2+ to the Locke solution appeared to increase the magnitude of the second component of facilitation. Sr2+ had little effect on augmentation or potentiation. These selective effects of Ba2+ and Sr2+ on the components of increased transmitter release in the rabbit ganglion are similar to the effects of these ions at the frog neuromuscular junction. Although the effects of Ba2+ and Sr2+ are similar in the two preparations, the magnitudes of augmentation and the second component of facilitation after a single impulse were about 6-10 times greater in the rabbit ganglion than at the frog neuromuscular junction. These results suggest that the underlying mechanisms in the nerve terminal that give rise to the components of increased transmitter release in the rabbit ganglion and frog neuromuscular junction are similar but not identical.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These experiments suggest that a K+ channel is normally occupied by one or more small cations, and becomes nonfunctional when these cations are removed and deliberate destruction of K+ conductance by removal of permeant cations is accompanied by measurable loss in asymmetric charge movement.
Abstract: K+ currents were recorded in squid axons internally perfused with impermeant electrolyte. Total absence of permeant ions inside and out leads to an irreversible loss of potassium conductance with a time constant of approximately 11 min at 8 degrees C. Potassium channels can be protected against this effect by external K+, Cs+, NH4+, and Rb+ at concentrations of 100-440 mM. These experiments suggest that a K+ channel is normally occupied by one or more small cations, and becomes nonfunctional when these cations are removed. A large charge movement said to be related to K+ channel gating in frog skeletal muscle is absent in squid giant axons. However, deliberate destruction of K+ conductance by removal of permeant cations is accompanied by measurable loss in asymmetric charge movement. This missing charge component is large enough to contain a contribution from K+ gating charge movements of more than five elementary charges per channel.

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TL;DR: The results suggest that the time-course of ganglionic EPSC decay is primarily determined by the kinetics of the receptor-channel complex rather than hydrolysis or diffusion of transmitter away from the postsynaptic receptors.
Abstract: Excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) have been studied in voltage-clamped bullfrog sympathetic ganglion B cells. The EPSC was small, rose to a peak within 1-3 ms, and then decayed exponentially over most of its time-course. For 36 cells at --50 mV (21-23 degrees C), peak EPSC size was --6.5 +/- 3.5 nA (mean +/- SD), and the mean decay time constant tau was 5.3 +/- 0.9 ms. tau showed a small negative voltage dependence, which appeared independent of temperature, over the range --90 to --30 mV; the coefficient of voltage dependence was --0.0039 +/-0.0014 mV-1 (n = 29). The peak current-voltage relationship was linear between --120 and --30 mV but often deviated from linearity at more positive potentials. The reversal potential determined by interpolation was approximately --5 mV. EPSC decay tau had a Q10 = 3. The commonly used cholinesterase inhibitors, neostigmine and physostigmine, exhibited complex actions at the ganglia. Neostigmine (1 X 10(-5)M) produced a time-dependent slowing of EPSC decay without consistent change in EPSC size. In addition, the decay phase often deviated from a single exponential function, although it retained its negative voltage dependence. With 1 x 10(-6) M physostigmine, EPSC decay was slowed by the decay phase remained exponential. At higher concentrations of physostigmine, EPSC decay was markedly prolonged and was composed of at least two decay components. High concentrations of atropine (10(-5) to 10(-4) M) produced complex alterations in EPSC decay, creating two or more exponential components; one decay component was faster and the other was slower than that observed in untreated cells. These results suggest that the time-course of ganglionic EPSC decay is primarily determined by the kinetics of the receptor-channel complex rather than hydrolysis or diffusion of transmitter away from the postsynaptic receptors.

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TL;DR: Beyond the distinction between electrolytes and nonelectrolytes, the whole-nerve response to a mixture could not be predicted from the known neural or psychophysical effects of its components.
Abstract: Binary mixtures of taste stimuli were applied to the tongue of the hamster and the reaction of the whole corda tympani was recorded. Some of the chemicals that were paired in mixtures (HCl, NH4Cl, NaCl, CaCl2, sucrose, and D-phenylalanine) have similar tastes to human and/or hamster, and/or common stimulatory effects on individual fibers of the hamster chorda tympani; other pairs of these chemicals have dissimilar tastes and/or distinct neural stimulatory effects. The molarity of each chemical with approximately the same effect on the activity of the nerve as 0.01 M NaCl was selected, and an established relation between stimulus concentration and response allowed estimation of the effect of a "mixture" of two concentrations of one chemical. Each mixture elicited a response that was smaller than the sum of the responses to its components. However, responses to some mixtures approached this sum, and responses to other mixtures closely approached the response to a "mixture" of two concentrations of one chemical. Responses of the former variety were generated by mixtures of an electrolyte and a nonelectrolyte and the latter by mixtures of two electrolytes or two nonelectrolytes. But, beyond the distinction between electrolytes and nonelectrolytes, the whole-nerve response to a mixture could not be predicted from the known neural or psychophysical effects of its components.

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TL;DR: Evidence is presented that the "selectivity filter" for the ACh channel is located near the intracellular membrane surface, consistent with a first-order gating process in which the channel opening rate constant is slightly voltage dependent.
Abstract: Spherical "myoballs" were grown under tissue culture conditions from striated muscle of neonatal rat thighs. The myoballs were examined electrophysiologically with a suction pipette which was used to pass current and perfuse internally. A microelectrode was used to record membrane potential. Experiments were performed with approximately symmetrical (intracellular and extracellular) sodium aspartate solutions. The resting potential, acetylcholine (ACh) reversal potential, and sodium channel reversal potential were all approximately 0 mV. ACh-induced currents were examined by use of both voltage jumps and voltage ramps in the presence of iontophoretically applied agonist. The voltage-jump relaxations had a single exponential time-course. The time constant, tau, was exponentially related to membrane potential, increasing e-fold for 81 mV hyperpolarization. The equilibrium current-voltage relationship was also approximately exponential, from -120 to +81 mV, increasing e-fold for 104 mV hyperpolarization. The data are consistent with a first-order gating process in which the channel opening rate constant is slightly voltage dependent. The instantaneous current-voltage relationship was sublinear in the hyperpolarizing direction. Several models are discussed which can account for the nonlinearity. Evidence is presented that the "selectivity filter" for the ACh channel is located near the intracellular membrane surface.

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TL;DR: Light-evoked intracellular voltage noise records have been obtained from Limulus eccentric cells, from threshold light intensity to an intensity .10(5) times threshold, and a modest change of the adaptation correlation shows that naive application of Campbell's theorem to such data is adequate for rough estimation of the model's physiological parameters.
Abstract: Light-evoked intracellular voltage noise records have been obtained from Limulus eccentric cells, from threshold light intensity to an intensity .10(5) times threshold. These data are analyzed in terms of a simple "adapting-bump" noise model. It is shown how the model yields a data reduction procedure that slightly generalizes the familiar use of Campbell's theorem for Poisson shot noise: the correlative effect of adaptation amends Campbell's theorem by a single multiplicative factor, which may be estimated directly from the power spectrum of the noise data. The model also permits direct estimation of the bump shape from the power spectrum. The bump shape estimated from noise at dim light is in excellent agreement with the average shape of bumps observed directly in the dark. The data yield a bump rate that is linear with light up through about 50 times threshold intensity but that falls short of linearity by a factor of 35 at the brightest light. The bump height decreases as the -0.4 power of light intensity across the entire range. Bump duration decreases by a factor of 2 across the entire range, and the adaptation correlation factor descends from unity to about one-third. The modest change of the adaptation correlation shows that naive application of Campbell's theorem to such data is adequate for rough estimation of the model's physiological parameters. This simple accounting for all the data gives support to the adapting-bump model.

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TL;DR: Results provide pharmacological support for the proposal that there are four different components of increased transmitter release associated with repetitive stimulation and suggest that the underlying factors in the nerve terminal that give rise to these components can act somewhat independently of one another.
Abstract: Endplate potentials (EPP) were recorded from the frog sartorius neuromuscular junction under conditions of low quantal content to study the effect of Ba 2+, Sr z+, and Ca 2+ on the changes in evoked transmitter release that occur during and after repetitive stimulation. The addition of 0.1-1 mM Ba 2+ or Sr 2+ to the Ca2+-containing bathing solution, or the replacement of Ca 2+ with 0.8-1.4 mM Sr 2+, led to a greater increase in EPP amplitudes during and immediately after repetitive stimulation. These changes in release were analyzed in terms of the four apparent components of increased transmitter release that have previously been distinguished on the basis of their kinetic properties. The BaZ+-induced increase in EPP amplitudes was associated with an increase in the magnitude but not the time constant of decay of augmentation. Ba 2+ had little effect on potentiation or the first and second components of facilitation. The SrZ*-induced increase in EPP amplitudes was associated with an increase in the magnitude and the time constant of decay of the second component of facilita- tion. Sr 2+ had little effect on potentiation, augmentation, or the first component of facilitation. The selective effects of Ba ~+ on augmentation and of Sr z+ on the second component of facilitation were reversible and could be obtained in the presence of the other ion. The addition of 0.1-0.3 mM Ca 2+ to the bathing solution had little effect on potentiation, augmentation, or the two components of facilitation. These results provide pharmacological support for the proposal that there are four different components of increased transmitter release associ- ated with repetitive stimulation and suggest that the underlying factors in the nerve terminal that give rise to these components can act somewhat indepen- dently of one another.

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TL;DR: In this paper, the electrical potential (delta psi) and proton gradient (alpha pH) across the membranes of isolated bovine chromaffin granules and ghosts were simultaneously and quantitatively measured by using the membrane-permeable dyes 3,3'dipropyl-2,2'thiadicarbocyanine (diS-C3-(5)) to measure delta psi and 9-aminoacridine or atebrin to measure alpha pH.
Abstract: The electrical potential (delta psi) and proton gradient (alpha pH) across the membranes of isolated bovine chromaffin granules and ghosts were simultaneously and quantitatively measured by using the membrane-permeable dyes 3,3'dipropyl-2,2'thiadicarbocyanine (diS-C3-(5)) to measure delta psi and 9-aminoacridine or atebrin to measure delta pH. Increases or decreases in the delta psi across the granular membrane could be monitored by fluorescence or transmittance changes of diS-C3-(5). Calibration of the delta psi was achieved by utilization of the endogenous K+ and H+ gradients, and valinomycin or carbonyl cyanide-p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP), respectively, with the optical response of diS-C3-(5) varying linearly with the Nernst potential for H+ and K+ over the range -60 to +90 mV. The addition of chromaffin granules to a medium including 9-aminoacridine or atebrin resulted in a rapid quenching of the dye fluorescence, which could be reversed by agents known to cause collapse of pH gradients. From the magnitude of the quenching and the intragranular water space, it was possible to calculate the magnitude of the alpha pH across the chromaffin granule membrane. The time-course of the potential-dependent transmittance response of diS-C3-(5) and the delta pH-dependent fluorescence of the acridine dyes were studied simultaneously and quantitatively by using intact and ghost granules under a wide variety of experimental conditions. These results suggest that membrane-permeable dyes provide an accurate method for the kinetic measurement of delta pH and delta psi in an amine containing subcellular organelle.

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TL;DR: The results explain effects on the whole nerve, suggest that the sensitivity of a mammalian taste receptor to one chemical can be affected by a second, which may or may not be a stimulus for that receptor, and suggest that some effects of taste mixtures in humans may be the result of peripheral processes.
Abstract: Responses of three groups of neural fibers from the chorda tympani of the hamster to binary mixtures of taste stimuli applied to the tongue were analyzed. The groups displayed different sensitivities to six chemicals at concentrations that had approximately equal effects on the whole nerve. Sucrose-best fibers responded strongly only to sucrose and D-phenylalanine. NaCl-best and HCl-best fibers, responded to four electrolytes: equally to CaCl2 and nearly equally to HCl, but the former responded more to NaCl, and the latter responded more to NH4Cl. The groups of fibers dealt differently with binary mixtures. Sucrose-best fibers responded to a mixture of sucrose and D-phenylalanine as if one of the chemicals had been appropriately increased in concentration, but they responded to a mixture of either one and an electrolyte as if the concentration of sucrose or D-phenylalanine had been reduced. NaCl-best fibers responded to a mixture as if it were a "mixture" of two appropriate concentrations of one chemical, or somewhat less. But, responses of HCl-best fibers to mixtures were greater than that, approaching a sum of responses to components. These results explain effects on the whole nerve, suggest that the sensitivity of a mammalian taste receptor to one chemical can be affected by a second, which may or may not be a stimulus for that receptor, and suggest that some effects of taste mixtures in humans may be the result of peripheral processes.