scholarly journals Radial propagation of muscle action potential along the tubular system examined by potential-sensitive dyes.

1980 ◽  
Vol 76 (6) ◽  
pp. 751-762 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Nakajima ◽  
A Gilai

Isolated single (Xenopus) muscle fibers were stained with a non-permeant potential-probing dye, merocyanine rhodanine (WW375) or merocyanine oxazolone (NK2367). When the fiber was massively stimulated, an absorption change (wave a), which seemed to reflect the action potential, occurred. Simultaneous recording of optical changes and intracellular action potentials revealed that the time-course of wave a was slower than the action potential: the peak of wave a was attained at 1 ms, and the peak of action potential was reached at 0.5 ms after the stimulation. This difference suggests that wave a represents the potential changes of the whole tubular membrane and the surface membrane, whereas the action potential represents a surface potential change. This idea was substantiated by recording absorption signals preferentially from the surface membrane by recording the absorption changes at the edge of the fiber. Wave a obtained by this method was as quick as the intracellular action potential. The value of radial conduction velocity of action potential along the T system, calculated by comparing the action potential with wave a, was 6.4 cm/s at 24.5 degrees C, in fair agreement with González-Serratos (1971. J. Physiol. [Lond.]. 212:777-799). The shape of wave a suggests the existence of an access delay (a conduction delay at the orifice of the T system) of 130 microseconds.

2005 ◽  
Vol 94 (6) ◽  
pp. 4430-4440 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sofija Andjelic ◽  
Vincent Torre

Calcium dynamics in leech neurons were studied using a fast CCD camera. Fluorescence changes (Δ F/ F) of the membrane impermeable calcium indicator Oregon Green were measured. The dye was pressure injected into the soma of neurons under investigation. Δ F/ F caused by a single action potential (AP) in mechanosensory neurons had approximately the same amplitude and time course in the soma and in distal processes. By contrast, in other neurons such as the Anterior Pagoda neuron, the Annulus Erector motoneuron, the L motoneuron, and other motoneurons, APs evoked by passing depolarizing current in the soma produced much larger fluorescence changes in distal processes than in the soma. When APs were evoked by stimulating one distal axon through the root, Δ F/ F was large in all distal processes but very small in the soma. Our results show a clear compartmentalization of calcium dynamics in most leech neurons in which the soma does not give propagating action potentials. In such cells, the soma, while not excitable, can affect information processing by modulating the sites of origin and conduction of AP propagation in distal excitable processes.


1994 ◽  
Vol 267 (3) ◽  
pp. H1157-H1166 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. M. Wahler ◽  
S. J. Dollinger ◽  
J. M. Smith ◽  
K. L. Flemal

The rat ventricular action potential shortens after birth. The contribution of increases in the transient outward current (Ito) to postnatal action potential shortening was assessed by measuring Ito in isolated cells and by determining the effect of 2 mM 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) on the action potentials of papillary muscles. 4-AP had no effect on 1-day action potential duration at 25% repolarization (APD25), and 1-day cells had little Ito. In 8- to 10-day muscles, 4-AP caused a small, but significant, increase in APD25. Ito increased slightly between day 1 and days 8-10, but this increase was not significant. Most of the increase in Ito (79%) and in the response to 4-AP (64%) occurred between days 8-10 and adult; however, approximately 75% of the APD25 shortening took place by days 8-10. Thus, while Ito may contribute to repolarization in late neonatal and adult cells, the different time courses of action potential shortening and increases in Ito suggest that changes in Ito are unlikely to be responsible for most of the postnatal action potential shortening.


1956 ◽  
Vol 186 (2) ◽  
pp. 317-324 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian F. Hoffman ◽  
E. E. Suckling

The effects of changes in the extracellular concentrations of Ca, K and Mg on the transmembrane resting and action potentials of single fibers of the auricle, ventricle and specialized conducting system of the dog heart have been studied by means of intracellular microelectrodes. With respect to Ca, the three tissues exhibit quite different sensitivities. Changes in concentration of this ion alter the time course of the action potential recorded from auricle and ventricle but have little effect on the action potential configuration of the Purkinje fiber. In the latter tissue, on the other hand, pacemaker activity is most strongly enhanced by Ca depletion and excitability is lost at Ca concentrations permitting normal propagation in papillary muscle. The effect of K on the resting transmembrane potential is dependent on the simultaneous Ca concentration. The interrelationship is such that the depolarizing effect of high K is decreased by elevated Ca and the depolarization produced by low K is diminished by low levels of Ca. Changes in the concentration of Mg have little effect on the transmembrane potentials of cardiac muscle unless the level of Ca is low. Under this condition a simultaneous decrease in Mg gives rise to a marked prolongation of the action potential duration of both auricle and ventricle. Some evidence for the basic similarity of the processes underlying repolarization in these three tissues is presented and it is thought the normally encountered differences in their action potentials may be related to the sensitivity of each tissue to extracellular Ca.


1993 ◽  
Vol 70 (5) ◽  
pp. 1874-1884 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Morita ◽  
G. David ◽  
J. N. Barrett ◽  
E. F. Barrett

1. The hyperpolarization that follows tetanic stimulation was recorded intra-axonally from the internodal region of intramuscular myelinated motor axons. 2. The peak amplitude of the posttetanic hyperpolarization (PTH) that followed stimulation at 20-100 Hz for < or = 35 s increased with increasing train duration, reaching a maximum of 22 mV. PTH decayed over a time course that increased from tens to hundreds of seconds with increasing train duration. For a given frequency of stimulation the time integral of PTH was proportional to the number of stimuli in the train, averaging 3-4 mV.s per action potential. 3. Ouabain (0.1-1 mM) and cyanide (1 mM) depolarized the resting potential and abolished PTH. Tetanic stimulation in ouabain was followed by a slowly decaying depolarization (probably due to extra-axonal K+ accumulation) whose magnitude and duration increased as the duration of the train increased. 4. Axonal input resistance showed no consistent change during PTH in normal solution but increased during PTH in the presence of 3 mM Cs+ (which blocks axonal inward rectifier currents). 5. PTH was abolished when bath Na+ was replaced by Li+ or choline. PTH persisted after removal of bath Ca2+ and addition of 2 mM Mn2+. 6. Removal of bath K+ abolished the PTH recorded after brief stimulus trains and greatly reduced the duration of PTH recorded after longer stimulus trains. 7. A brief application of 10 mM K+, which normally depolarizes axons, produced a ouabain-sensitive hyperpolarization in axons bathed in K(+)-free solution. 8. These observations suggest that in these myelinated axons PTH is produced mainly by activation of an electrogenic Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase, rather than by changes in K+ permeability or transmembrane [K+] gradients. This conclusion is supported by calculations showing agreement between estimates of Na+ efflux/impulse based on PTH measurements and estimates of Na+ influx/impulse based on nodal voltage-clamp measurements. Pump activity also appears to contribute to the resting potential. 9. The stimulus intensity required to initiate a propagating action potential increased during PTH but decreased during the posttetanic depolarization recorded in ouabain. Thus changes in axonal excitability after tetanic stimulation correlate with changes in the posttetanic membrane potential. 10. Action potentials that propagated during PTH had a larger peak amplitude and were followed by a larger and longer depolarizing afterpotential than action potentials elicited at the resting potential. This enhancement of the depolarizing afterpotential is consistent with previous reports of an increased superexcitable period after action potentials evoked during PTH.


1996 ◽  
Vol 271 (3) ◽  
pp. H1151-H1161 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Benardeau ◽  
S. N. Hatem ◽  
C. Rucker-Martin ◽  
B. Le Grand ◽  
L. Mace ◽  
...  

The Ca2+ dye indo 1 was used to record internal Ca2+ (Cai) transients in order to investigate the role of the Na+/Ca2+ exchange current (INa/Ca) in whole cell patch-clamped human atrial myocytes After the activation of the L-type Ca2+ current by test pulses (20 ms) at +20 mV, a tail current (I(tail)) was activated at a holding potential of -80 mV with a density of -1.29 +/- 0.06 pA/pF. The time course of I(tail) followed that of Cai transients I(tail) was suppressed by dialyzing cells with ethylene glycol-bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, applying 5 mM caffeine, or substituting external Na+ with Li+, indicating that this current was mainly generated by INa/Ca. Two types of action potential were recorded: type A, which is characterized by a narrow early plateau followed by a late low plateau phase, and type B, which is characterized by a small initial peak followed by a prolonged high plateau phase. Type B action potentials were found in larger cells than type A action potentials (membrane capacitance 81.8 +/- 4.5 and 122.4 +/- 7.0 pF in types A and B, respectively, P < 0.001). Substitution of external Na+ with Li+ shortened the late plateau of the type A action potential and the prolonged plateau of the type B action potential. Suppression of Cai transients by caffeine shortens the late part of both types of action potentials, whereas its lengthening effect on the initial phase of action potentials can result from several different mechanisms. The beat-to-beat dependent relationship between Cai transients and action potentials could be mediated by Ina/Ca- Delayed afterdepolarizations were present in a significant proportion of atrial myocytes in our experimental conditions. They were reversibly suppressed by Li+ substitution for Na+, suggesting that they are generated by INa/Ca. We conclude that INa/Ca plays a major role in the development of action potentials and delayed afterdepolarizations in isolated human atrial myocytes.


1969 ◽  
Vol 54 (5) ◽  
pp. 607-635 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Paes de Carvalho ◽  
Brian Francis Hoffman ◽  
Marilene de Paula Carvalho

Transmembrane potentials recorded from the rabbit heart in vitro were displayed as voltage against time (V, t display), and dV/dt against voltage (V, V or phase-plane display). Acetylcholine was applied to the recording site by means of a hydraulic system. Results showed that (a) differences in time course of action potential upstroke can be explained in terms of the relative magnitude of fast and slow phases of depolarization; (b) acetylcholine is capable of depressing the slow phase of depolarization as well as the plateau of the action potential; and (c) action potentials from nodal (SA and AV) cells seem to lack the initial fast phase. These results were construed to support a two-component hypothesis for cardiac electrogenesis. The hypothesis states that cardiac action potentials are composed of two distinct and physiologically separable "components" which result from discrete mechanisms. An initial fast component is a sodium spike similar to that of squid nerve. The slow component, which accounts for both a slow depolarization during phase 0 and the plateau, probably is dependent on the properties of a slow inward current having a positive equilibrium potential, coupled to a decrease in the resting potassium conductance. According to the hypothesis, SA and AV nodal action potentials are due entirely or almost entirely to the slow component and can therefore be expected to exhibit unique electrophysiological and pharmacological properties.


1981 ◽  
Vol 77 (6) ◽  
pp. 629-646 ◽  
Author(s):  
D R Edgington ◽  
A E Stuart

After the offset of illumination, barnacle photoreceptors undergo a large hyperpolarization that lasts seconds or minutes. We studied the mechanisms that generate this afterpotential by recording afterpotentials intracellularly from the medial photoreceptors of the giant barnacle Balanus nubilus. The afterpotential has two components with different time-courses: (a) an earlier component due to an increase in conductance to K+ that is not blocked by extracellular tetraethylammonium ion (TEA+) or 3-aminopyridine (3-AP) and (b) a later component that is sensitive to cardiac glycosides and that requires extracellular K+, suggesting that it is due to an electrogenic Na+ pump. The K+ conductance component increases in amplitude with increasing CA++ concentration and is inhibited by extracellular Co++; the Co++ inhibition can be overcome by increasing the Ca++ concentration. Thus, the K+ conductance component is Ca++ dependent. An afterpotential similar to that evoked by a brief flash of light is generated by depolarization with current in the dark and by eliciting Ca++ action potentials in the presence of TEA+ in the soma, axon, or terminal regions of the photoreceptor. The action potential undershoot is generated by an increase in conductance to K+ that is resistant to TEA+ and 3-AP and inhibited by Co++. The similarity in time-course and pharmacology of the hyperpolarization afterpotentials elicited by (a) a brief flash of light, (b) depolarization with current, and (c) an action potential indicates that Ca++-dependent K+ channels throughout the photoreceptor membrane are responsible for all three hyperpolarizing events.


2007 ◽  
Vol 103 (1) ◽  
pp. 359-368 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simeon P. Cairns ◽  
Eva R. Chin ◽  
Jean-Marc Renaud

We examined whether electrical field stimulation with varying characteristics could excite isolated mammalian skeletal muscle through different sites. Supramaximal (20-V, 0.1-ms) pulse stimulation with transverse wire or parallel plate electrodes evoked similar forces in nonfatigued slow-twitch soleus and fast-twitch extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles from mice. d-tubocurarine shifted the twitch force-stimulation strength relationship toward higher pulse strengths with both electrode configurations in soleus muscle, suggesting that weaker pulses excite muscle via neuromuscular transmission. With wire stimulation, movement of the recording electrode along the muscle caused a delay between the stimulus artifact and the peak of the action potential, consistent with action potential propagation along the sarcolemma. TTX abolished all contractions evoked with 20-V, 0.1-ms pulses, suggesting that excitation occurred via voltage-dependent Na+ channels and, hence, muscle action potentials. TTX did not prevent force development with ≥0.4-ms pulses in soleus or 1-ms pulses in EDL muscle. Furthermore, myoplasmic Ca2+ (i.e., the fura 2 ratio) and sarcomere shortening were greater during tetanic stimulation with 2.0-ms than with 0.5-ms pulses in flexor digitorum brevis fibers from rats. TTX prevented all shortening and Ca2+ release with 0.5-ms, but not 2.0-ms, pulses, indicating that longer pulses can directly trigger Ca2+ release. Hence, proper interpretation of mechanistic studies requires precise understanding of how muscles are excited; otherwise, incorrect conclusions can be made. Using this new understanding, we showed that disrupted propagation of action potentials along the surface membrane is a major cause of fatigue in soleus muscle that is focally and continuously stimulated at 125 Hz.


1978 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
D J Miller ◽  
A Mörchen

Resting and action potentials were recorded from superfused strips of frog ventricle. Reducing the bathing calcium concentration ([Ca2+]0) with or without ethylene glycol-bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)N,N,N',N'-tetraacetate (EGTA) prolongs the action potential (AP). The change in the duration of the AP extends over many minutes, but is rapidly reversed by restoring calcium ions. Other changes (e.g., in resting potential and overshoot) are, however, only more slowly reversed. Reducing [Ca2+]0 with 0.2, 2, or 5 mM EGTA produces progressively greater prolongation of AP; maximum values were well in excess of 1 min. This prolongation can be reversed by other divalent cations in EGTA (Mg2+, Sr2+) or Ca-free (Mn2+) solutions, or by acetylcholine. Barium ions increase AP duration in keeping with their known effect on potassium conductance. D600, which blocks the slow inward current in cardiac muscle, is without effect on the action potentials recorded in EGTA solutions, or on the time course and extent of the recovery to normal duration upon restoring calcium ions. It is concluded that divalent cations exert an influence on membrane potassium conductance extracellularly in frog heart. The cell membrane does not become excessively "leaky" in EGTA solutions.


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