Differential effects of voltage-dependent inactivation and local anesthetics on kinetic phases of CA^sup 2+^ release in frog skeletal muscle
In voltage-clamped frog skeletal muscle fibers, Ca^sup 2+^ release rises rapidly to a peak, then decays to a nearly steady state. The voltage dependence of the ratio of amplitudes of these two phases (p/s) shows a maximum at low voltages and declines with further depolarization. The peak phase has b...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biophysical journal 2003-07, Vol.85 (1), p.245 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In voltage-clamped frog skeletal muscle fibers, Ca^sup 2+^ release rises rapidly to a peak, then decays to a nearly steady state. The voltage dependence of the ratio of amplitudes of these two phases (p/s) shows a maximum at low voltages and declines with further depolarization. The peak phase has been attributed to a component of Ca^sup 2+^ release induced by Ca^sup 2+^ which is proportionally greater at low voltages. We compared the effects of two interventions that inhibit Ca^sup 2+^ release: inactivation of voltage sensors, and local anesthetics reputed to block Ca^sup 2+^ release induced by Ca^sup 2+^. Holding the cells partially depolarized strongly reduced the peak and steady levels of Ca^sup 2+^ release elicited by a test pulse and suppressed the maximum of the p/s ratio at low voltages. The p/s ratio increased monotonically with test voltage, eventually reaching a value similar to the maximum found in noninactivated fibers. This implies that the marked peak of Ca^sup 2+^ release is a property of a cooperating collection of voltage sensors rather than individual ones. Local anesthetics reduced the peak of release flux at every test voltage, and the steady phase to a lesser degree. At variance with sustained depolarization, they made p/s low at all voltages. These observations were well-reproduced by the "couplon" model of dual control, which assumes that depolarization and anesthetics respectively, and selectively, disable its Ca^sup 2+^-dependent or its voltage-operated channels. This duality of effects and their simulation under such hypotheses are consistent with the operation of a dual, two-stage control of Ca^sup 2+^ release in muscle, whereby Ca^sup 2+^ released through multiple directly voltage-activated channels builds up at junctions to secondarily open Ca^sup 2+^-operated channels. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] |
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ISSN: | 0006-3495 1542-0086 |