Physiological basis of a steady endogenous current in rat lumbrical muscle

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Abstract

In an attempt to determine the mechanism by which rat skeletal muscle endplates generate a steady outward current, we measured the effects of several drugs (furosemide, bumetanide, 9-anthracene carboxylic acid [9- AC]) and changes in external ion concentration (Na+, K+, Cl−, Ba++) on resting membrane potential (Vm) and on the steady outward current. Each of the following treatments caused a 10-15-mV hyperpolarization of the membrane: replacement of extracellular Cl− with isethionate, addition of furosemide or bumetanide, and addition of 9-AC. These results suggest that Cl− is actively accumulated by the muscle fibers and that the equilibrium potential of Cl− is more positive than the membrane potential. Removal of external Na+ also caused a large hyperpolarization and is consistent with evidence in other tissues that active Cl− accumulation requires external Na+. The same treatments greatly reduced or abolished the steady outward current, with a time course that paralleled the changes in Vm. These results cannot be explained by a model in which the steady outward current is assumed to arise as a result of a nonuniform distribution of Na+ conductance, but they are consistent with models in which the steady current is produced by a nonuniform distribution of GCl or Gk Other treatments (Na+-free and K+-free solutions, and 50 µM BaCl2) caused a temporary reversal of the steady current. Parallel measurements of Vm suggested that in none of these cases did the electrochemical driving force for K+ change sign, which makes it unlikely that the steady current arises as a result of a nonuniform distribution of GK. All of the results, however, are consistent with a model in which the steady outward current arises as a result of a nonuniform distribution of Cl− conductance, with GCl lower near the endplate than in extrajunctional regions. © 1984, Rockefeller University Press., All rights reserved.

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Betz, W. J., Caldwell, J. H., & Kinnamon, S. C. (1984). Physiological basis of a steady endogenous current in rat lumbrical muscle. Journal of General Physiology, 83(2), 175–192. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.83.2.175

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