Affiliation:
1. Department of Physiology, Nagoya City University Medical School, Japan.
Abstract
Single fibers from toe or anterior tibialis muscle contracted transiently and then tonically in the presence of 1.8 mM Ca2+ on addition of 10 microM Ag+. Exposure of fibers to Cd2+ completely inhibited tonic contraction and modified phasic contraction to some extent. Nifedipine at 10 microM initially potentiated and then completely inhibited twitch tension; subsequently, fibers no longer contracted phasically in response to 20 microM Ag+, whereas slight tonic contraction still occurred. Fibers with membrane potential clamped at -90 mV produced maintained inward current on application of Ag+. Simultaneous administration of 1 mM Cd2+ and 10 microM Ag+ to fibers voltage clamped with the double mannitol gap technique almost completely blocked the inward current. Removal of Cd2+ elicited a rapid and large inward current. Ag(+)-induced inward current was inhibited when 1 mM Cd2+ was applied to fibers during development of the inward current. In fibers paralyzed with 10 microM nifedipine, the inward current induced by 10 microM Ag+ was partially inhibited. These results suggest that phasic contraction induced by Ag+ is controlled by L-type Ca2+ channels (probably voltage sensors) located in the T-tubular membrane, whereas tonic contraction involves Ca2+ channels sensitive and/or insensitive to dihydropyridine in the surface and T-tubular membranes.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Cited by
10 articles.
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