Membrane Potential of Squid Axons: Effect of Internal and External Ion Concentration

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Abstract

Transmembrane resting potentials of squid axons were measured with variation of intracellular salt concentrations. It was found that the dependence of resting potential on the extracellular K-ion concentration was practically unaffected by the change of ionic strength in the intracellular phase, and the relationship of membrane potential and the logarithm of extracellular K-ion concentration was a straight line with a slope of about 50 mV/10-fold extracellular K-ion concentration. Also, the degree of change in resting potential due to the change of intracellular K-ion concentration was not affected appreciably by the extracellular solution with various K-ion concentrations, and the membrane potentials were insensitive over a wide range of intracellular K-ion concentrations. It was also indicated that the observed transmembrane potentials are not explained by a conventional membrane potential theory. © 1979, PHYSIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN. All rights reserved.

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Ohki, S., & Aono, O. (1979). Membrane Potential of Squid Axons: Effect of Internal and External Ion Concentration. Japanese Journal of Physiology, 29(4), 373–382. https://doi.org/10.2170/jjphysiol.29.373

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