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Immobilization of membrane charge in frog skeletal muscle by prolonged depolarization.
Author(s) -
Rakowski R F
Publication year - 1981
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jphysiol.1981.sp013817
Subject(s) - depolarization , biophysics , membrane potential , chemistry , skeletal muscle , membrane , anatomy , biology , biochemistry
1. Inactivation ('immobilization') of the non‐linear component of capacitive current in semitendinosus muscles of Rana pipiens was studied using the three‐micro‐electrode voltage‐clamp technique (Adrian, Chandler & Hodgkin, 1970). 2. The steady‐state voltage dependence of non‐linear charge immobilization was determined by changing the holding potential. The data were fitted to an equation analogous to that used to describe the charge activation process (Schneider & Chandler, 1973). The steepness parameter, k, is the same for charge activation and immobilization, but the mid‐point voltage of charge immobilization is 8.9 +/‐ 2.6 mV (n = 9) more negative than the mid‐point of the non‐linear charge activation curve. The charge relaxation rate constants are unaffected by changes in holding potential. 3. The time course of non‐linear charge immobilization was studied using a protocol that measures the change in capacitive current required for a voltage step of a fixed magnitude determined before and after an intervening period of depolarization. The sum of the non‐linear charge that is immobilized and the non‐linear charge that remains mobile after a prolonged (greater than 1 s) depolarization is equal to the total non‐linear charge measured by a normally polarized holding potential (‐80 mV). The determination of the quantity of charge immobilized does not require the assumption of linearity of the control capacity transient. 4. The exponential time constant of the charge immobilization was found to be steeply voltage dependent. The charge immobilization time constant was 4.4 s at ‐40 mV, 1.5 s at ‐20 mV and 0.28 s at +20 mV. Temperature was 5 degrees C. 5. In addition to a decrease in the magnitude of non‐linear capacitive charge during prolonged depolarization muscle fibres generally showed showed an apparent decrease in linear effective capacity. It is suggested that this apparent change and the increase previously reported to occur when chronically depolarized fibres are hyperpolarized (Rakowski, 1978a) are artifactual results of incorrect current scaling rather than changes that result from alteration of a conductance pathway from the transverse tubular system into the sarcoplasmic reticulum.
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