Diabetes Mellitus-induced Hypersensitivity of Mouse Skeletal Muscles to Acetylcholine and Succinylcholine

Abstract
The myopathy in skeletal muscles of genetically diabetic male KK-CAy mice or alloxan-induced diabetic mice was investigated. In these diabetic mice, nerve-stimulated twitch tensions of in situ sciatic nerve-gastrocnemius muscle preparations were inhibited by intraarterially administered succinylcholine (SuCh) to a greater extent than in normal (non-diabetic) ones. Despite the high blood glucose level, at one week after alloxan administration, no hypersensitivity to SuCh was induced in mice, but mice at 2 weeks and 4 weeks after alloxan showed greater sensitivities. In isolated diaphragm muscles of diabetic KK-Cay mice, the acetylcholine (ACh, iontophoretically applied) potential amplitude was greater than in KK-CAy prediabetic muscles. SuCh in diabetic KK-CAy muscles inhibited ACh potentials to a greater extent than in normal ddY muscles. Hill coefficients obtained from the inhibition curve by SuCh of the nerve-stimulation response were decreased by the diabetic state. The sensitivities to d-tubocurarine and .alpha.-bungarotoxin were the same in both kinds of muscles. Both extrajunctional ACh receptors in denervated muscles of normal ddY and diabetic KK-CA7 mice revealed the lower sensitivity to SuCh than junctional receptors in non-denervated normal muscles. In conclusion, diabetic muscles showed the hypersensitivity restricted to SuCh. These phenomena are neither due to glycosylation nor to denervation supersensitivity.