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Sensitivity of cultured and skinned chick myotube to calcium, strontium, and barium ions examined by recording isometric contractions
Author(s) -
Saito Koji,
Yoshida Mikiharu,
Tanaka Hikaru
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
journal of cellular physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.529
H-Index - 174
eISSN - 1097-4652
pISSN - 0021-9541
DOI - 10.1002/jcp.1041500107
Subject(s) - myogenesis , isometric exercise , calcium , myocyte , barium , myofilament , anatomy , strontium , medicine , biophysics , troponin , tonic (physiology) , chemistry , biology , endocrinology , inorganic chemistry , organic chemistry , myocardial infarction
Sensitivity of cultured chick myotubes to alkaline earth metal ions was investigated by recording contractile isometric tension through a semiconductor transducer. The myotubes were obtained by culturing myoblasts of chick embryo breast muscles, and skinned chemically before physiological experiments. Contractions developed in response to Ca 2+ in a bathing medium higher than 3 × 10 −7 M and reached maximum at 1 × 10 −5 M. Sr 2+ was less effective than Ca 2+ ; the threshold concentration was 1 × 10 −5 M and the tension reached maximum at 1 × 10 −3 M. Ba 2+ was the least effective among the three alkaline earth metal ions; only one fifth of the Ca 2+ ‐induced maximum tension was attained at 1 × 10 −3 M. The sensitivity was similar to that of the mature pectoral muscle fiber, a fast twitch muscle fiber, rather than that of the anterior latissimus dorsi, a slow tonic muscle fiber. The sensitivity was shown to be dependent on its troponin C by replacing it with troponin C from the mature pectoral or cardiac muscle. This indicates that TnC of a fast‐muscle type is expressed in the cultured chick myotube as in the mature pectoral muscle. The contractile apparatus was thus shown to be well developed in the cultured myotube with characteristics similar to the mature fast twitch muscle fiber.

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