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The calcium dependence of electrical and mechanical responses of the odontophore protractor muscle of Busycon canaliculatum. A sucrose-gap study of calcium antagonist action.

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The calcium dependence of electrical and mechanical responses of the odontophore protractor muscle of Busycon canaliculatum. A sucrose-gap study of calcium antagonist action. / Huddart, H.; Nelson, I. D.; Brooks, D. D. et al.
In: Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology, Vol. 102, No. 2, 06.1992, p. 299-305.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal article

Harvard

Huddart, H, Nelson, ID, Brooks, DD & Hill, RB 1992, 'The calcium dependence of electrical and mechanical responses of the odontophore protractor muscle of Busycon canaliculatum. A sucrose-gap study of calcium antagonist action.', Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology, vol. 102, no. 2, pp. 299-305. https://doi.org/10.1016/0300-9629(92)90139-H

APA

Vancouver

Huddart H, Nelson ID, Brooks DD, Hill RB. The calcium dependence of electrical and mechanical responses of the odontophore protractor muscle of Busycon canaliculatum. A sucrose-gap study of calcium antagonist action. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology. 1992 Jun;102(2):299-305. doi: 10.1016/0300-9629(92)90139-H

Author

Huddart, H. ; Nelson, I. D. ; Brooks, D. D. et al. / The calcium dependence of electrical and mechanical responses of the odontophore protractor muscle of Busycon canaliculatum. A sucrose-gap study of calcium antagonist action. In: Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology. 1992 ; Vol. 102, No. 2. pp. 299-305.

Bibtex

@article{7badc149d6f84228ae351beaa6186ba0,
title = "The calcium dependence of electrical and mechanical responses of the odontophore protractor muscle of Busycon canaliculatum. A sucrose-gap study of calcium antagonist action.",
abstract = "1. 1. Exposures for 30 min to Ca-free salines irreversibly inhibited responses of the odontophore protractor (OP) muscles of Busycon canaliculatum to ACh and high K+ salines. Under continuous field stimulation, Ca-free salines extinguished the responses within 3 min and recovery on Ca readmission was only partial. 2. 2. Nifedipine converted normally smooth ACh-induced depolarizations into oscillatory events generating small twitch-like contractions. 3. 3. Nifedipine converted normally tonic high K+ responses into depolarizations with fast spike-like action potentials generating fast twitches. The low K+induced action potentials and fast twitches of this muscle were greatly enhanced by nifedipine. Nifedipine induced rapid transient inward current pulses accompanying this twitch activity. 4. 4. Co2+, Cd2+ and Gd3+ all inhibited the ACh and K+ responses of the OP muscle but Gd3+ was the most consistent and potent inhibitor of these responses. 5. 5. Gd3+ did not affect K+- or ACh-induced depolarization levels but eliminated spike-like action potentials and the twitches they generated. 6. 6. When the muscle membranes were depolarized with increasing K+ subsequent ACh responses were inhibited and eventually eliminated at about −41 mV, indicating that the ACh receptor here showed voltage inactivation. 7. 7. Although dependent upon an influx of[Ca]0 for CIRC to effect EC coupling, this Ca appears to enter the cells by a mechanism unlike that of mammalian smooth muscle. The cellular Ca pool appears to be independently but not synergistically accessed by ACh and K+ in the induction of contractile responses.",
author = "H. Huddart and Nelson, {I. D.} and Brooks, {D. D.} and Hill, {R. B.}",
year = "1992",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1016/0300-9629(92)90139-H",
language = "English",
volume = "102",
pages = "299--305",
journal = "Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology",
publisher = "Elsevier Science",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The calcium dependence of electrical and mechanical responses of the odontophore protractor muscle of Busycon canaliculatum. A sucrose-gap study of calcium antagonist action.

AU - Huddart, H.

AU - Nelson, I. D.

AU - Brooks, D. D.

AU - Hill, R. B.

PY - 1992/6

Y1 - 1992/6

N2 - 1. 1. Exposures for 30 min to Ca-free salines irreversibly inhibited responses of the odontophore protractor (OP) muscles of Busycon canaliculatum to ACh and high K+ salines. Under continuous field stimulation, Ca-free salines extinguished the responses within 3 min and recovery on Ca readmission was only partial. 2. 2. Nifedipine converted normally smooth ACh-induced depolarizations into oscillatory events generating small twitch-like contractions. 3. 3. Nifedipine converted normally tonic high K+ responses into depolarizations with fast spike-like action potentials generating fast twitches. The low K+induced action potentials and fast twitches of this muscle were greatly enhanced by nifedipine. Nifedipine induced rapid transient inward current pulses accompanying this twitch activity. 4. 4. Co2+, Cd2+ and Gd3+ all inhibited the ACh and K+ responses of the OP muscle but Gd3+ was the most consistent and potent inhibitor of these responses. 5. 5. Gd3+ did not affect K+- or ACh-induced depolarization levels but eliminated spike-like action potentials and the twitches they generated. 6. 6. When the muscle membranes were depolarized with increasing K+ subsequent ACh responses were inhibited and eventually eliminated at about −41 mV, indicating that the ACh receptor here showed voltage inactivation. 7. 7. Although dependent upon an influx of[Ca]0 for CIRC to effect EC coupling, this Ca appears to enter the cells by a mechanism unlike that of mammalian smooth muscle. The cellular Ca pool appears to be independently but not synergistically accessed by ACh and K+ in the induction of contractile responses.

AB - 1. 1. Exposures for 30 min to Ca-free salines irreversibly inhibited responses of the odontophore protractor (OP) muscles of Busycon canaliculatum to ACh and high K+ salines. Under continuous field stimulation, Ca-free salines extinguished the responses within 3 min and recovery on Ca readmission was only partial. 2. 2. Nifedipine converted normally smooth ACh-induced depolarizations into oscillatory events generating small twitch-like contractions. 3. 3. Nifedipine converted normally tonic high K+ responses into depolarizations with fast spike-like action potentials generating fast twitches. The low K+induced action potentials and fast twitches of this muscle were greatly enhanced by nifedipine. Nifedipine induced rapid transient inward current pulses accompanying this twitch activity. 4. 4. Co2+, Cd2+ and Gd3+ all inhibited the ACh and K+ responses of the OP muscle but Gd3+ was the most consistent and potent inhibitor of these responses. 5. 5. Gd3+ did not affect K+- or ACh-induced depolarization levels but eliminated spike-like action potentials and the twitches they generated. 6. 6. When the muscle membranes were depolarized with increasing K+ subsequent ACh responses were inhibited and eventually eliminated at about −41 mV, indicating that the ACh receptor here showed voltage inactivation. 7. 7. Although dependent upon an influx of[Ca]0 for CIRC to effect EC coupling, this Ca appears to enter the cells by a mechanism unlike that of mammalian smooth muscle. The cellular Ca pool appears to be independently but not synergistically accessed by ACh and K+ in the induction of contractile responses.

U2 - 10.1016/0300-9629(92)90139-H

DO - 10.1016/0300-9629(92)90139-H

M3 - Journal article

VL - 102

SP - 299

EP - 305

JO - Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology

JF - Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology

IS - 2

ER -