The effect of caffeine and tetracaine on the time course of potassium contractures of single muscle fibres.
- 1 February 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 255 (1) , 191-207
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1976.sp011275
Abstract
1. The time course of potassium contractures can be significantly prolonged by low concentrations of caffeine. 2. This effect of caffeine is not due to impairment of the fibre relaxing system. 3. Under conditions were contractile repriming is delayed (low temperature) an extra amount of activator can be released by caffeine, in addition to that released by potassium. 4. The source of this extra amount of activator is intracellular since its release can be shown in a O calcium EGTA medium. 5. Local anaesthetics, tetracaine, and to a lesser extent procaine, affect the release of contractile activator, without impairing the contractile machinery itself. 6. The results of the present paper support the view that the time course of potassium contracture is controlled by a membrane mechanism which is activated upon depolarization and later inactivates with time. 7. The effect of caffeine and local anaesthetics can be explained by assuming that the former prolongs the inactivation time course while the latter shortens it.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- The action of caffeine on the activation of the contractile mechanism in striated muscle fibresThe Journal of Physiology, 1968
- Effects of External Calcium Deprivation on Single Muscle FibersThe Journal of general physiology, 1967
- The Effect of Calcium on the Mechanical Response of Single Twitch Muscle Fibres of Xenopus LaevisActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1967
- The action of calcium ions on potassium contractures of single muscle fibresThe Journal of Physiology, 1963
- Utilization of bound calcium in the action of caffeine and certain multivalent cations on skeletal muscleThe Journal of Physiology, 1962
- Effects of changes in extracellular calcium concentration on the potassium‐induced contracture of frog's skeletal muscleThe Journal of Physiology, 1960