A calcium‐activated sodium conductance produces a long‐duration action potential in the egg of a nemertean worm.

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Abstract

1. The egg of the nemertean worm Cerebratulus lacteus produced an action potential having a duration of about 9 min. We investigated the ionic conductances which accounted for this long‐duration action potential. 2. The peak of the action potential was about +50 mV and depended on extracellular Ca2+, while the plateau potential was about +25 mV and depended on extracellular Na+. 3. Under voltage‐clamp conditions, depolarization produced two temporally separate inward currents: a fast current which reached a peak at about 10 ms, and a slow current which took up to 1 min to reach its peak and lasted for several min. 4. The fast current was independent of extracellular Na+, but was blocked by removal of extracellular Ca2+. 5. The slow current was not seen when extracellular Na+ was replaced by choline+ or K+. 6. The slow current did not develop in Ca2+‐free sea water, and was reduced to about half if Ca2+ was removed after the current had been initiated. 7. Microinjection of EGTA blocked the slow current, and reduced the action potential duration to about 1 min. 8. We concluded that a voltage‐activated Ca2+ conductance produced the peak of the action potential, while a Ca2+‐activated Na+ conductance produced its plateau. © 1986 The Physiological Society

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Jaffe, L. A., Kado, R. T., & Kline, D. (1986). A calcium‐activated sodium conductance produces a long‐duration action potential in the egg of a nemertean worm. The Journal of Physiology, 381(1), 263–278. https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1986.sp016326

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