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Sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca 2+ release and depletion fail to affect sarcolemmal ion channel activity in mouse skeletal muscle
Author(s) -
Allard Bruno,
Couchoux Harold,
Pouvreau Sandrine,
Jacquemond Vincent
Publication year - 2006
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.2006.112367
Subject(s) - depolarization , biophysics , skeletal muscle , endoplasmic reticulum , chemistry , intracellular , cyclopiazonic acid , sarcolemma , membrane potential , myocyte , calcium , gating , biochemistry , biology , endocrinology , organic chemistry
In skeletal muscle, sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca 2+ depletion is suspected to trigger a calcium entry across the plasma membrane and recent studies also suggest that the opening of channels spontaneously active at rest and possibly involved in Duchenne dystrophy may be regulated by SR Ca 2+ depletion. Here we simultaneously used the cell‐attached and whole‐cell voltage‐clamp techniques as well as intracellular Ca 2+ measurements on single isolated mouse skeletal muscle fibres to unravel any possible change in membrane conductance that would depend upon SR Ca 2+ release and/or SR Ca 2+ depletion. Delayed rectifier K + single channel activity was routinely detected during whole‐cell depolarizing pulses. In addition the activity of channels carrying unitary inward currents of ∼1.5 pA at −80 mV was detected in 17 out of 127 and in 21 out of 59 patches in control and mdx dystrophic fibres, respectively. In both populations of fibres, large whole‐cell depolarizing pulses did not reproducibly increase this channel activity. This was also true when, repeated application of the whole‐cell pulses led to exhaustion of the Ca 2+ transient. SR Ca 2+ depletion produced by the SR Ca 2+ pump inhibitor cyclopiazonic acid (CPA) also failed to induce any increase in the resting whole‐cell conductance and in the inward single channel activity. Overall results indicate that voltage‐activated SR Ca 2+ release and/or SR Ca 2+ depletion are not sufficient to activate the opening of channels carrying inward currents at negative voltages and challenge the physiological relevance of a store‐operated membrane conductance in adult skeletal muscle.