Effects of muscarine on single rat adrenal chromaffin cells
1. The action of muscarine on membrane currents and cytosolic calcium (Ca2+) of dissociated rat adrenal chromaffin cells was investigated using standard whole-cell voltage-clamp techniques and microfluorimetry of unclamped single cells. 2. In cells held at a constant holding potential negative to -4...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1992-07, Vol.453 (1), p.133-166 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. The action of muscarine on membrane currents and cytosolic calcium (Ca2+) of dissociated rat adrenal chromaffin cells was
investigated using standard whole-cell voltage-clamp techniques and microfluorimetry of unclamped single cells. 2. In cells
held at a constant holding potential negative to -40 mV, brief (5-10 s) applications of muscarine produced a transient activation
of outward current. The activation of this current by muscarine also occurs in the presence of 5 mM-Co2+. 3. The outward current
activated by muscarine at holding potentials negative to about -40 mV is blocked over 90% by either 200 microM-curare or 200
nM-apamin. One millimolar TEA produces variable blocking effects at such potentials. 4. The outward current activated by muscarine
is transient even in the continuing presence of muscarine. Complete recovery between pairs of muscarine applications occurs
over a 1-2 min period. If sufficient time was allowed for recovery between muscarine applications, the muscarine-activated
outward current could be reliably elicited in dialysed cells for periods of 20-30 min. 5. Voltage ramps were used to examine
effects of muscarine on currents over a range of membrane potentials. Over all potentials, muscarine activates a relatively
voltage-independent component which is blocked almost completely by 200 nM-apamin and by 200 microM-curare. At potentials
negative to about -40 mV, the apamin- and curare-sensitive current accounts for virtually all muscarine-activated current.
This current appears to correspond to a Ca(2+)-activated, voltage-independent current found in these cells. Effects of muscarine
on currents activated at potentials positive to 0 mV are complex. At potentials above 0 mV, muscarine can produce either an
activation or an inhibition of outward current. The outward current activated at positive potentials was primarily voltage
dependent and blocked by 1 mM-TEA. However, in some cells activation of voltage-dependent current was not observed and, in
such cases, muscarine produced an inactivation of the voltage-dependent component of current. The inactivation of outward
current could also be observed in the presence of 5 mM-Co2+ indicating that the inactivation does not occur secondarily to
an effect of muscarine on Ca2+ current. The possibility is discussed that the inactivation of outward current occurs as a
result of intrinsic inactivation properties of the voltage-dependent Ca(2+)-dependent K+ current. According to this hypothesis,
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1992.sp019221 |