Abstract
It has been suggested that ATP might play a role in synaptic transmission at developing vertebrate neuromuscular junctions. To increase our understanding of the events underlying synapse formation, we have used intracellular recording and patch clamp recording to examine the response of chick myoblasts and myotubes to ATP and other nucleotides. ATP, applied at micromolar concentrations, has a potent depolarizing action on chick myoblasts and myotubes. The ATP depolarization declines during prolonged application of ATP and shows no recovery for at least 20 min after the removal of ATP. The physiological event that underlies the ATP response has a reversal potential near 0 mV and is due to a conductance increase. However, contrary to our expectations, in a series of nearly 200 cell-attached and outside-out patch recordings, we did not detect single-channel currents tht were related to ATP. The myotube ATP receptor is pharmacologically distinct from putative ATP receptors in other systems. It is not activated by ADP, AMP, or adenosine. Furthermore, the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogs, AMP-PNP, .alpha.,.beta.-meATP, and .beta.,.gamma.-meATP (respectively, 5-adenylylimido diphosphate; .alpha.,.beta.-methylene adenosine 5''-triphosphate; and .beta.,.gamma.-methylene adenosine 5''-triphosphate), which are potent ATP agonists in other systems, have no depolarizing action on myotubes. The ATP receptor is also distinct from the nicotinic ACh receptor since responses to ATP are unaffected by the nicotinic antagonists d-tubocurarine and .alpha.-bungarotoxin. We therefore applied .alpha.-bungarotoxin to nerve-muscle co-cultures in the hope of uncovering an additional component of the postsynaptic potential, which might represent a synaptic action of ATP. Under these experimental conditions no evidence indicative of a postsynaptic action of ATP released from nerve terminals was observed.