scholarly journals A nonlinear electrostatic potential change in the T-system of skeletal muscle detected under passive recording conditions using potentiometric dyes.

1990 ◽  
Vol 95 (1) ◽  
pp. 147-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
J A Heiny ◽  
D S Jong

Voltage-sensing dyes were used to examine the electrical behavior of the T-system under passive recording conditions similar to those commonly used to detect charge movement. These conditions are designed to eliminate all ionic currents and render the T-system potential linear with respect to the command potential applied at the surface membrane. However, we found an unexpected nonlinearity in the relationship between the dye signal from the T-system and the applied clamp potential. An additional voltage- and time-dependent optical signal appears over the same depolarizing range of potentials where change movement and mechanical activation occur. This nonlinearity is not associated with unblocked ionic currents and cannot be attributed to lack of voltage clamp control of the T-system, which appears to be good under these conditions. We propose that a local electrostatic potential change occurs in the T-system upon depolarization. An electrostatic potential would not be expected to extend beyond molecular distances of the membrane and therefore would be sensed by a charged dye in the membrane but not by the voltage clamp, which responds solely to the potential of the bulk solution. Results obtained with different dyes suggest that the location of the phenomena giving rise to the extra absorbance change is either intramembrane or at the inner surface of the T-system membrane.

1982 ◽  
Vol 80 (2) ◽  
pp. 203-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
J A Heiny ◽  
J Vergara

Absorbance signals were recorded from cut single skeletal muscle fibers stained with the nonpenetrating potentiometric dye NK2367 and mounted in a three-vaseline-gap voltage clamp. The characteristics of the optical signals recorded under current and voltage-clamp conditions were studied at various wavelengths between 500 and 800 nm using unpolarized light. Our results indicate that the absorbance signals recorded with this dye reflect potential changes across both the surface and T system membranes and that the relative contribution of each of these membrane compartments to the total optical change is strongly wavelength dependent. A peak intensity change was detected at 720 nm for the surface membrane signal and at 670 nm for the T system. Evidence for this wavelength-dependent separation derives from an analysis of the kinetics and voltage dependence of the optical signals at different wavelengths, and results obtained in detubulated fibers. The 670-nm optical signal was used to demonstrate the lack of potential control in the T system by the voltage clamp and the effect of a tetrodotoxin (TTX)-sensitive sodium conductance on tubular depolarization.


1980 ◽  
Vol 28 (12) ◽  
pp. 1286-1294 ◽  
Author(s):  
N N Malouf ◽  
G Meissner

Enzymatic properties of a canine cardiac muscle microsomal fraction were determined to localize in situ a "basic," divalent cation dependent adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) by ultrastructural cytochemistry. The microsomal fraction had a buoyant density of 1.08--1.13 (20--30% [w/w] sucrose) and hydrolyzed adenosine triphosphate in the presence of Mg2+, Ca2+, Mn2+, or Co2+, but not in that of Sr2+ or Ni2+, under conditions that inhibited interfering (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase activities. "Basic" ATPase was localized in paraformaldehyde-fixed tissue in a medium containing Mg2+ or a high Ca2+ concentration (4 mM). A free Pb2+ concentration of less than 1 microM was used to capture enzymatically released phosphate anions. Electron-dense lead precipitates were present at the plasmalemma, T-system, and intercalated disc membranes with the exception of the nexus. These studies suggest that "basic" ATPase activity is associated with surface membrane structures of canine cardiac muscle.


1979 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 205-215
Author(s):  
R. W. Tsien ◽  
R. S. Kass ◽  
R. Weingart

Rhythmic oscillations in the membrane potential of heart cells are important in normal cardiac pacemaker activity as well as cardiac arrhythmias. Two fundamentally different mechanisms of oscillatory activity can be distinguished at the cellular and subcellular level. The first mechanism, referred to as a surface membrane oscillator, can be represented by a control loop in which membrane potential changes evoke delayed conductance changes and vice versa. Since the surface membrane potential is a key variable within the control loop, the oscillation can be interrupted at any time by holding the membrane potential constant with a voltage clamp. This mode of oscillation seems to describe spontaneous pacemaker activity in the primary cardiac pacemaker (sinoatrial node) as well as other regions (Purkinje fibre, atrial or ventricular muscle). In all tissues studied so far, the pacemaker depolarization is dominated by the slow shutting-off of an outward current, largely carried by potassium ions. The second mechanism can be called an internal oscillator since it depends upon a subcellular rhythm generator which is largely independent from the surface membrane. Under voltage clamp, the existence of the internal oscillation is revealed by the presence of oscillations in membrane conductance or contractile force which occur even though the membrane potential is held fixed. The two oscillatory mechanisms are not mutually exclusive; the subcellular mechanism can be preferentially enhanced in any given cardiac cell by conditions which elevate intracellular calcium. Such conditions include digitalis intoxication, high Cao, low Nao, low or high Ko, cooling, or rapid stimulation. Several lines of evidence suggest that the subcellular mechanism involves oscillatory variations in myoplasmic calcium, probably due to cycles of Ca uptake and release by the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The detailed nature of the Cai oscillator and its interaction with the surface membrane await further investigation.


2000 ◽  
Vol 116 (3) ◽  
pp. 341-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
James A. Morrill ◽  
Stephen C. Cannon

Skeletal muscle dihydropyridine (DHP) receptors function both as voltage-activated Ca2+ channels and as voltage sensors for coupling membrane depolarization to release of Ca2+ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. In skeletal muscle, the principal or α1S subunit occurs in full-length (∼10% of total) and post-transcriptionally truncated (∼90%) forms, which has raised the possibility that the two functional roles are subserved by DHP receptors comprised of different sized α1S subunits. We tested the functional properties of each form by injecting oocytes with cRNAs coding for full-length (α1S) or truncated (α1SΔC) α subunits. Both translation products were expressed in the membrane, as evidenced by increases in the gating charge (Qmax 80–150 pC). Thus, oocytes provide a robust expression system for the study of gating charge movement in α1S, unencumbered by contributions from other voltage-gated channels or the complexities of the transverse tubules. As in recordings from skeletal muscle, for heterologously expressed channels the peak inward Ba2+ currents were small relative to Qmax. The truncated α1SΔC protein, however, supported much larger ionic currents than the full-length product. These data raise the possibility that DHP receptors containing the more abundant, truncated form of the α1S subunit conduct the majority of the L-type Ca2+ current in skeletal muscle. Our data also suggest that the carboxyl terminus of the α1S subunit modulates the coupling between charge movement and channel opening.


Author(s):  
Quan Zhang ◽  
Juris Galvanovskis ◽  
Fernando Abdulkader ◽  
Christopher J Partridge ◽  
Sven O Göpel ◽  
...  

The perforated whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique was applied to functionally identified β-cells in intact mouse pancreatic islets to study the extent of cell coupling between adjacent β-cells. Using a combination of current- and voltage-clamp recordings, the total gap junctional conductance between β-cells in an islet was estimated to be 1.22 nS. The analysis of the current waveforms in a voltage-clamped cell (due to the firing of an action potential in a neighbouring cell) suggested that the gap junctional conductance between a pair of β-cells was 0.17 nS. Subthreshold voltage-clamp depolarization (to −55 mV) gave rise to a slow capacitive current indicative of coupling between β-cells, but not in non-β-cells, with a time constant of 13.5 ms and a total charge movement of 0.2 pC. Our data suggest that a superficial β-cell in an islet is in electrical contact with six to seven other β-cells. No evidence for dye coupling was obtained when cells were dialysed with Lucifer yellow even when electrical coupling was apparent. The correction of the measured resting conductance for the contribution of the gap junctional conductance indicated that the whole-cell K ATP channel conductance ( G K,ATP ) falls from approximately 2.5 nS in the absence of glucose to 0.1 nS at 15 mM glucose with an estimated IC 50 of approximately 4 mM. Theoretical considerations indicate that the coupling between β-cells within the islet is sufficient to allow propagation of [Ca 2+ ] i waves to spread with a speed of approximately 80 μm s −1 , similar to that observed experimentally in confocal [Ca 2+ ] i imaging.


Using signal-averaging techniques, one can record small membrane currents which remain even after blockage of the ionic currents which accompany electrical excitation in muscle. These residual currents probably represent the reorientation of charged molecules inside the membrane in response to a change in membrane potential. Two operationally separable types of intramembrane charge movement in muscle are described, one of which may play a role in excitation—contraction coupling. Studies of tetrodotoxin binding to muscle indicate that ‘sodium gating current’ is unlikely to contribute significantly to either type of charge movement.


FEBS Letters ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 580 (16) ◽  
pp. 3823-3828 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshinori Hagiwara ◽  
Masakazu Sugishima ◽  
Yasuhiro Takahashi ◽  
Keiichi Fukuyama

1996 ◽  
Vol 107 (4) ◽  
pp. 515-534 ◽  
Author(s):  
C L Huang

The effects of the ryanodine receptor (RyR) antagonists ryanodine and daunorubicin on the kinetic and steady-state properties of intramembrane charge were investigated in intact voltage-clamped frog skeletal muscle fibers under conditions that minimized time-dependent ionic currents. A hypothesis that RyR gating is allosterically coupled to configurational changes in dihydropyridine receptors (DHPRs) would predict that such interactions are reciprocal and that RyR modification should influence intramembrane charge. Both agents indeed modified the time course of charging transients at 100-200-microM concentrations. They independently abolished the delayed charging phases shown by q gamma currents, even in fibers held at fully polarized, -90-mV holding potentials; such waveforms are especially prominent in extracellular solutions containing gluconate. Charge movements consistently became exponential decays to stable baselines in the absence of intervening inward or other time-dependent currents. The steady-state charge transfers nevertheless remained equal through the ON and the OFF parts of test voltage steps. The charge-voltage function, Q(VT), shifted by approximately +10 mV, particularly through those test potentials at which delayed q gamma currents normally took place but retained steepness factors (k approximately 8.0 to 10.6 mV) that indicated persistent, steeply voltage-dependent q gamma contributions. Furthermore, both RyR antagonists preserved the total charge, and its variation with holding potential, Qmax (VH), which also retained similarly high voltage sensitivities (k approximately 7.0 to 9.0 mV). RyR antagonists also preserved the separate identities of q gamma and q beta species, whether defined by their steady-state voltage dependence or inactivation or pharmacological properties. Thus, tetracaine (2 mM) reduced the available steady-state charge movement and gave shallow Q(VT) (k approximately 14 to 16 mV) and Qmax (VH) (k approximately 14 to 17 mV) curves characteristic of q beta charge. These features persisted with exposure to test agent. Finally, q gamma charge movements showed steep voltage dependences with both activation (k approximately 4.0 to 6.5 mV) and inactivation characteristics (k approximately 4.3 to 6.6 mV) distinct from those shown by the remaining q beta charge, whether isolated through differential tetracaine sensitivities, or the full approximation of charge-voltage data to the sum of two Boltzmann distributions. RyR modification thus specifically alters q gamma kinetics while preserving the separate identities of steady-state q beta and q gamma charge. These findings permit a mechanism by which transverse tubular voltage provides the primary driving force for configurational changes in DHPRs, which might produce q gamma charge movement. However, they attribute its kinetic complexities to the reciprocal allosteric coupling by which DHPR voltage sensors and RyR-Ca2+ release channels might interact even though these receptors reside in electrically distinct membranes. RyR modification then would still permit tubular voltage change to drive net q gamma charge transfer but would transform its complex waveforms into simple exponential decays.


1975 ◽  
Vol 23 (10) ◽  
pp. 727-744 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Gros ◽  
C E Challice

The coating of mouse myocardial cells has been investigated with a variety of cytochemical methods. The coating of the surface membrane gives a positive reaction with ruthenium red, colloidal thorium, phosphotungstic acid (PTA) at low pH, silver methenamine after periodic oxidation (PA-silver technique) and with silver proteinate after periodic oxidation and thiocarbohydrazide treatment (PA-TCH-silver technique). The coating of the T system gives almost similar results. The nexuses do not react with PTA nor with the PA-silver and PA-TCH-silver techniques, but they are strongly stained with ruthenium red which reveals periodic structures in their gaps. The specificities of the colloidal thorium technique and PAT staining have been tested by chemical treatments (methylation, acetylation, saponification), enzymatic digestions (pronase, trypsin, hyaluronidase, neuraminidase) and carbohydrate extractions (with 0.1 N NaOH and 0.05 M H2SO4). These cytochemical data indicate, considering the specificity of the reactions, that the coating of the membrane surface and the T system contains polyanionic groups. A part of them, at least, would belong to a carbohydrate-containing material (glycoproteins), whereas at the level of nexuses the sugar residues would probably be absent.


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