Differential expression of sodium channel activities during the development of chick skeletal muscle cells in culture

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Abstract

The expression of Na+ channels during differentiation of cultured embryonic chick skeletal muscle cells was investigated using saxitoxin (STX) and batrachotoxin (BTX), which previously have been shown to interact with distinct, separate receptor sites of the voltage-sensitive Na+ channel of excitable cells. In the present study, parallel measurements of binding of [3H]- STX (*STX) and of BTX-activated 22Na+ uptake (Na influx) were made in order to establish the temporal relationship of the appearance of these two Na+ channel activities during myogenesis. Na influx was clearly measurable in 2-d cells; from day 3 to day 7 the maximum Na influx approximately doubled when measured with saturating BTX concentrations potentiated by Leiurus scorpion toxin, while the apparant affinity of BTX, measured without scorpion toxin, also increased. Saturable *STX binding did not appear consistently until day 3; from then until day 7 the *STX binding capacity increased about threefold, whereas the equilibrium dissociation constant (K(d)) decreased about fourfold. Although Na influx in cells of all ages was totally inhibited by STX or tetrodotoxin (TTX) at 10μM, lower concentrations (2-50 nM) blocked the influx in 7-d cells much more effectively than that in 3-d cells, where half the flux was resistant to STX at 20-50 nM. Similar but smaller differences characterized the block by TTX. In addition, when protein synthesis is inhibited by cycloheximide, both Na influx and *STX binding activities disappear more rapidly in 3-d than in 7-d cells, which shows that these functions are less stable metabolically in the younger cells.

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Strichartz, G., Bar Sagi, D., & Prives, J. (1983). Differential expression of sodium channel activities during the development of chick skeletal muscle cells in culture. Journal of General Physiology, 82(3), 365–384. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.82.3.365

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