Charge conservation in intact frog skeletal muscle fibres in gluconate‐containing solutions.
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 474 (1) , 161-171
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1994.sp020010
Abstract
1. The conservation of intramembrane charge was investigated in intact voltage-clamped frog skeletal muscle fibres under conditions that minimized time-dependent ionic currents and so facilitated precise determination of capacitative charge. 2. Prolonged (q gamma) transients were demonstrated in 3,4-diaminopyridine and tetraethyl-ammonium gluconate-containing low [Ca2+] solutions in response to 125 ms pulses that explored the voltage range -90 to -20 mV. The tetracaine-sensitive, q gamma, component then accounted for a significant proportion (over 50%) of available charge. 3. Both delayed 'on' q gamma currents and 'off' current tails decayed to steady direct current (DC) baselines without significant residual ionic current slopes in the chosen extracellular solutions. This suggested that the current transients represented capacitative decays. It was also compatible with the precise determination of effective charge by integration. 4. The advent of 'on' q gamma current was accompanied by increased 'off' charge. Thus, charge was conserved through all 'on' and 'off' steps and through test voltages that extended from the threshold appearance of q gamma as a slow transient to its full merger with the earlier q beta decay at stronger depolarizations. 5. Charge conservation persisted through a wide range of 'on' pulse durations between 60 and 370 ms and was therefore independent of the interval following the q gamma decay. 6. The quantity of q gamma charge remained a monotonic single-valued function of test voltage, whether this potential was reached directly from the -90 mV holding potential or following a prepulse to -10 mV. 7. These findings suggest that the q gamma charge movement represents the electrical signature of an intramembrane entity whose transitions are primarily driven by, and therefore conserved with, the steady-state potential.Keywords
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