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Conduction velocities in amphibian skeletal muscle fibres exposed to hyperosmotic extracellular solutions

Early quantitative analyses of conduction velocities in unmyelinated nerve studied in a constantly iso-osmotic volume conductor were extended to an analysis of the effects of varying extracellular osmolarities on conduction velocities of surface membrane action potentials in Rana esculenta skeletal...

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Autores principales: Chen, Zhongbo, Hothi, Sandeep S., Xu, Wei, Huang, Christopher L-H.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Netherlands 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2045119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17891463
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10974-007-9115-8
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author Chen, Zhongbo
Hothi, Sandeep S.
Xu, Wei
Huang, Christopher L-H.
author_facet Chen, Zhongbo
Hothi, Sandeep S.
Xu, Wei
Huang, Christopher L-H.
author_sort Chen, Zhongbo
collection PubMed
description Early quantitative analyses of conduction velocities in unmyelinated nerve studied in a constantly iso-osmotic volume conductor were extended to an analysis of the effects of varying extracellular osmolarities on conduction velocities of surface membrane action potentials in Rana esculenta skeletal muscle fibres. Previous papers had reported that skeletal muscle fibres exposed to a wide range of extracellular sucrose concentrations resemble perfect osmometers with increased extracellular osmolarity proportionally decreasing fibre volume and therefore diminishing fibre radius, a. However, classical electrolyte theory (Robinson and Stokes 1959, Electrolyte solutions 2nd edn. Butterworth & Co. pp 41–42) would then predict that the consequent increases in intracellular ionic strength would correspondingly decrease sarcoplasmic resistivity, R(i). An extension of the original cable analysis then demonstrated that the latter would precisely offset its expected effect of alterations in a on the fibre axial resistance, r(i), and leave action potential conduction velocity constant. In contrast, other reports (Hodgkin and Nakajima J Physiol 221:105–120, 1972) had suggested that R(i)increased with extracellular osmolarity, owing to alterations in cytosolic viscosity. This led to a prediction of a decreased conduction velocity. These opposing hypotheses were then tested in muscle fibres subject to just-suprathreshold stimulation at a Vaseline seal at one end and measuring action potentials and their first order derivatives, dV/dt, using 5–20 MΩ, 3 M KCl glass microelectrodes at defined distances away from the stimulus sites. Exposures to hyperosmotic, sucrose-containing, Ringer solutions then reversibly reduced both conduction velocity and maximum values of dV/dt. This was compatible with an increase in R(i) in the event that conduction depended upon a discharge of membrane capacitance by propagating local circuit currents through initially passive electrical elements. Conduction velocity then showed graded decreases with increasing extracellular osmolarity from 250–750 mOsm. Action potential waveforms through these osmolarity changes remained similar, including both early surface and the late after-depolarisation events reflecting transverse tubular activation. Quantitative comparisons of reduced-χ (2) values derived from a comparison of these results and the differing predictions from the two hypotheses strongly favoured the hypothesis in which R(i)increased rather than decreased with hyperosmolarity. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s10974-007-9115-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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spelling pubmed-20451192007-11-01 Conduction velocities in amphibian skeletal muscle fibres exposed to hyperosmotic extracellular solutions Chen, Zhongbo Hothi, Sandeep S. Xu, Wei Huang, Christopher L-H. J Muscle Res Cell Motil Original Paper Early quantitative analyses of conduction velocities in unmyelinated nerve studied in a constantly iso-osmotic volume conductor were extended to an analysis of the effects of varying extracellular osmolarities on conduction velocities of surface membrane action potentials in Rana esculenta skeletal muscle fibres. Previous papers had reported that skeletal muscle fibres exposed to a wide range of extracellular sucrose concentrations resemble perfect osmometers with increased extracellular osmolarity proportionally decreasing fibre volume and therefore diminishing fibre radius, a. However, classical electrolyte theory (Robinson and Stokes 1959, Electrolyte solutions 2nd edn. Butterworth & Co. pp 41–42) would then predict that the consequent increases in intracellular ionic strength would correspondingly decrease sarcoplasmic resistivity, R(i). An extension of the original cable analysis then demonstrated that the latter would precisely offset its expected effect of alterations in a on the fibre axial resistance, r(i), and leave action potential conduction velocity constant. In contrast, other reports (Hodgkin and Nakajima J Physiol 221:105–120, 1972) had suggested that R(i)increased with extracellular osmolarity, owing to alterations in cytosolic viscosity. This led to a prediction of a decreased conduction velocity. These opposing hypotheses were then tested in muscle fibres subject to just-suprathreshold stimulation at a Vaseline seal at one end and measuring action potentials and their first order derivatives, dV/dt, using 5–20 MΩ, 3 M KCl glass microelectrodes at defined distances away from the stimulus sites. Exposures to hyperosmotic, sucrose-containing, Ringer solutions then reversibly reduced both conduction velocity and maximum values of dV/dt. This was compatible with an increase in R(i) in the event that conduction depended upon a discharge of membrane capacitance by propagating local circuit currents through initially passive electrical elements. Conduction velocity then showed graded decreases with increasing extracellular osmolarity from 250–750 mOsm. Action potential waveforms through these osmolarity changes remained similar, including both early surface and the late after-depolarisation events reflecting transverse tubular activation. Quantitative comparisons of reduced-χ (2) values derived from a comparison of these results and the differing predictions from the two hypotheses strongly favoured the hypothesis in which R(i)increased rather than decreased with hyperosmolarity. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s10974-007-9115-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. Springer Netherlands 2007-09-22 2007-04 /pmc/articles/PMC2045119/ /pubmed/17891463 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10974-007-9115-8 Text en © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2007
spellingShingle Original Paper
Chen, Zhongbo
Hothi, Sandeep S.
Xu, Wei
Huang, Christopher L-H.
Conduction velocities in amphibian skeletal muscle fibres exposed to hyperosmotic extracellular solutions
title Conduction velocities in amphibian skeletal muscle fibres exposed to hyperosmotic extracellular solutions
title_full Conduction velocities in amphibian skeletal muscle fibres exposed to hyperosmotic extracellular solutions
title_fullStr Conduction velocities in amphibian skeletal muscle fibres exposed to hyperosmotic extracellular solutions
title_full_unstemmed Conduction velocities in amphibian skeletal muscle fibres exposed to hyperosmotic extracellular solutions
title_short Conduction velocities in amphibian skeletal muscle fibres exposed to hyperosmotic extracellular solutions
title_sort conduction velocities in amphibian skeletal muscle fibres exposed to hyperosmotic extracellular solutions
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2045119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17891463
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10974-007-9115-8
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