Effect of Cooling on Neuromuscular Transmission in the Frog
- 28 February 1958
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content
- Vol. 192 (3) , 464-470
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajplegacy.1958.192.3.464
Abstract
Recording with intracellular electrodes from endplate regions of frogs sartorius muscle showed that at –1°C miniature endplate potentials still occurred and that the resting membrane potentials differed very little from those recorded at room temperatures. The miniature potentials, however, were decreased in frequency and increased in amplitude by cooling; and at about 5°C, the amplitude began to fall while the frequency continued to be low. It was also at about 5°C that the muscle responses to nerve stimulation frequently consisted of endplate potentials only. Upon rewarming spike potentials again appeared. These observations suggest that there is a critical temperature for neuromuscular transmission, below which impediment of impulse transmission began; and in the frog it is 5°C. The experiments also demonstrated that during the process of cooling a blockage of impulses at one neuromuscular junction and transmission across the other in a single muscle fiber could occur.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Some properties of mammalian skeletal muscle fibres with particular reference to fibrillation potentialsThe Journal of Physiology, 1957
- The effects of presynaptic polarization on the spontaneous activity at the mammalian neuromuscular junctionThe Journal of Physiology, 1956
- The effect of internal and external potassium concentration on the membrane potential of frog muscleThe Journal of Physiology, 1956
- An investigation of spontaneous activity at the neuromuscular junction of the ratThe Journal of Physiology, 1956
- Spontaneous subthreshold activity at mammalian neuromuscular junctionsThe Journal of Physiology, 1956
- TEMPERATURE EFFECTS ON THE ELECTRICAL ACTIVITY OF PURKINJE FIBRES1954
- The formation of ice in protoplasmProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Containing Papers of a Biological Character, 1932