Different excitation-contraction coupling mechanisms exist in squid, cuttlefish and octopod mantle muscle

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Abstract

Excitation-contraction (EC) coupling was studied in central zone mantle muscle fibres of a squid (Alloteuthis subulata), a cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis) and an octopod (Eledone cirrhosa). Thin slices of muscle were used for twitch experiments and enzymatic isolation of single fibres for whole-cell patch-clamp studies. The current required for a supramaximal twitch response during direct stimulation of muscle slices was lower for squid than for cuttlefish. In squid, but not in cuttlefish, the current-response relationship was independent of slice thickness (range 0.1-0.5mm). Twitches of squid and cuttlefish slices were reversibly abolished by removal of extracellular Ca2+. In squid, but not in cuttlefish, the current-response relationship was Na+-dependent, and in the absence of Na+ higher current strengths were required to generate a supramaximal response. In whole-cell voltage-clamp experiments on isolated muscle fibres from squid, cuttlefish and Eledone cirrhosa, a sustained inward current was recorded upon depolarisation. This current was blocked by 5mmol l-1 Co2+ and suppressed by 10 μmol l-1 nifedipine. In squid, an additional inward fast-activating transient current was seen which was blocked by 2 μmol l-1 tetrodotoxin and depolarised holding potentials. The fast current represents a voltage-activated Na+ channel, and the slow currents represent L-type Ca2+ channels. We conclude that squid possess a specialised rapid EC coupling mechanism in central zone fibres that is absent in cuttlefish and Eledone cirrhosa.

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Rogers, C. M., Nelson, L., Milligan, B. J., & Brown, E. R. (1997). Different excitation-contraction coupling mechanisms exist in squid, cuttlefish and octopod mantle muscle. Journal of Experimental Biology, 200(23), 3033–3041. https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.200.23.3033

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