Increased chloride conductance as the proximate cause of hydrogen ion concentration effects in Aplysia neurons

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Abstract

A fall in extracellular pH increased membrane conductance of the giant cell in the abdominal ganglion of Aplysia californica. Chloride conductance was trebled whereas potassium conductance was increased by 50 %. Half the giant cells were hyperpolarized (2-8 my) and half were depolarized (3-10 my) by lowering the pH. The hyperpolarizing response always became a depolarizing response in half-chloride solutions. When internal chloride was increased electrophoretically, the hyperpolarization was either decreased or changed to depolarization. The depolarizing response was reduced or became a hyperpolarizing response after soaking the cell in 10.0 mM chloride, artificial seawater solution for I hr. Depolarization was unaffected when either external sodium, calcium, or magnesium was omitted. A glass micropipette having an organic liquid chloride ion exchanger in its tip was used to measure intracellular chloride activity in 14 giant cells; 7 had values of 27.7 ± 1.8 mM (SEM) and 7 others 40.7 ± 1.5 mM. Three of the first group were hyperpolarized when pH was lowered and three of the second group were depolarized. In all six cells, these changes of membrane potential were in the direction of the chloride equilibrium potential. Intracellular potassium activity was measured by means of a potassium ion exchanger microelectrode. © 1970, Rockefeller University Press., All rights reserved.

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Brown, A. M., Walker, J. L., & Sutton, R. B. (1970). Increased chloride conductance as the proximate cause of hydrogen ion concentration effects in Aplysia neurons. Journal of General Physiology, 56(5), 559–582. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.56.5.559

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