Relationship between depolarization-induced force responses and Ca2+ content in skeletal muscle fibres of rat and toad
1. The relationship between the total Ca2+ content of a muscle fibre and the magnitude of the force response to depolarization was examined in mechanically skinned fibres from the iliofibularis muscle of the toad and the extensor digitorum longus muscle of the rat. The response to depolarization in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1997-02, Vol.498 (Pt 3), p.571-586 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. The relationship between the total Ca2+ content of a muscle fibre and the magnitude of the force response to depolarization
was examined in mechanically skinned fibres from the iliofibularis muscle of the toad and the extensor digitorum longus muscle
of the rat. The response to depolarization in each skinned fibre was assessed either at the endogenous level of Ca2+ content
or after depleting the fibre of Ca2+ to some degree. Ca2+ content was determined by a fibre lysing technique. 2. In both muscle
types, the total Ca2+ content could be reduced from the endogenous level of approximately 1.3 mmol l-1 (expressed relative
to intact fibre volume) to approximately 0.25 mmol l-1 by either depolarization or caffeine application in the presence of
Ca2+ chelators, showing that the great majority of the Ca2+ was stored in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). Chelation of Ca2+
in the transverse tubular (T-) system, either by exposure of fibres to EGTA before skinning or by permeabilizing the T-system
with saponin after skinning, reduced the lower limit of Ca2+ content to < or = 0.12 mmol l-1, indicating that 10-20% of the
total fibre Ca2+ resided in the T-system. 3. In toad fibres, both the peak and the area (i.e. time integral) of the force
response to depolarization were reduced by any reduction in SR Ca2+ content, with both decreasing to zero in an approximately
linear manner as the SR Ca2+ content was reduced to < 15% of the endogenous level. In rat fibres, the peak size of the force
response was less affected by small decreases in SR content, but both the peak and area of the response decreased to zero
with greater depletion. In partially depleted toad fibres, inhibition of SR Ca2+ uptake potentiated the force response to
depolarization almost 2-fold. 4. The results show that in this skinned fibre preparation: (a) T-system depolarization and
caffeine application can each virtually fully deplete the SR of Ca2+, irrespective of any putative inhibitory effect of SR
depletion on channel activation; (b) all of the endogenous level of SR Ca2+ must be released in order to produce a maximal
response to depolarization; and (c) a substantial part (approximately 40%) of the Ca2+ released by a depolarization is normally
taken back into the SR before it can contribute to force production. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1997.sp021884 |