scholarly journals Temperature Effects on Membrane Chloride Conductance and Electrical Excitability of Lizard Skeletal Muscle Fibres

1989 ◽  
Vol 144 (1) ◽  
pp. 551-563 ◽  
Author(s):  
BRETT A. ADAMS

1. Intracellular recording techniques were used to study the effects of temperature on resting membrane conductances, electrical excitability and synaptic efficacy in fast-glycolytic (FG) skeletal muscle fibres from the lizard Dipsosaurus dorsalis. 2. The conductance of the resting muscle membrane to chloride ions (gCl) increased from 488μS cm−2 at 15°C (pH7.8) to 730μS cm−2 at 45°C (pH7.4), yielding a temperature coefficient (thermal ratio, R10) of 1.14. Resting potassium conductance (gK) increased from 84μS cm−2 at 15°C to 236μScm−2 at 45 °C (R10=1.41). 3. Fibres bathed in Cl− -free Ringer's solution were hyperexcitable, and produced repetitive action potentials both during and following intracellular current injection. At the preferred body temperature of Dipsosaurus (near 40°C) the fibres also fired repetitively in response to single nerve shock. 4. The electrical excitability of Dipsosaurus fibres decreased with increasing temperature. Threshold current, measured at endplate regions of fibres bathed in normal Ringer's solution, was 146 nA at 15°C and 353 nA at 45°C (R10= 1.34). 5. Despite the temperature-dependent change in threshold current, at both 15 and 45°C all fibres examined had suprathreshold neuromuscular transmission response to single nerve shock. 6. The relative thermal independence of gCl in Dipsosaurus fibres may be an adaptation that contributes to a large safety factor for neuromuscular transmission at the high body temperatures preferred by this lizard species.

1982 ◽  
Vol 60 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
George B. Frank ◽  
Farrokh Rohani

The effects of Ba2+ ions on twitches. K+-induced contractures, and on intracellularly recorded membrane potentials (Em) and depolarizations of frog skeletal muscle fibres were investigated. Exposure of toe muscles to choline–Ringer's solution with 10−3 M Ba2+ with Ca2+ (1.08 mM) eliminated or very greatly reduced contractures produced by 60 mM K+. In contrast, not only did the same concentration of Ba2+ ions fail to depress the twitch tension of isolated semitendinosus fibres when added to Ringer's with Ca2+, but it even restored twitches that had been eliminated in a zero Ca2+ Ringer's solution. The resting Em of sartorius muscle fibres in choline–Ringer's solution was reduced about 20 mV by 10−3 M Ba2+. This Ba2+ ion concentration also antagonized the K+-induced depolarization. Thus in the presence of 1 mM Ba2+, 20 mM K+ hyperpolarized rather than depolarized the fibres and 60 or 123 mM K+ produced only very slowly developing, small depolarizations. These results suggest that the loss of the K+-induced contracture in choline–Ringer's caused by Ba2+ ions is due to an inhibition of the K+-induced depolarization. The latter result is consistent with previous findings of other workers that Ba2+ ions block membrane K+ channels.not available


1989 ◽  
Vol 504 (2) ◽  
pp. 306-310 ◽  
Author(s):  
Inger Nennesmo ◽  
Tomas Olsson ◽  
Åke Ljungdahl ◽  
Krister Kristensson ◽  
Peter H. Van der Meide

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