Abstract
Giant axons ofLoligo pealei were voltage clamped in artificial seawater solutions containing varying concentrations of calcium from 10 to 100mm, and the sodium conductance inactivation was measured with a series of two-pulse experiments. Theh vs. voltage curve showed a shift of about 10 mV in the depolarizing direction on the voltage axis for a tenfold increase in external calcium without substantial alteration in the slope of the voltage dependence. The kinetics of the inactivation process were found to be exponential for hyperpolarizing prepulses, but showed some indication of a sigmoidal decay for depolarizing prepulses in all calcium concentrations employed. Increasing calcium increased the delay in the sigmoidal response. The inactivation time constant τh increased as a function of calcium concentration over the potential range studied, −10 to −90 mV. The values of the rate constants αh and βh are decreased with an increase in calcium and these effects are not consistent with parallel shifts of the rate constant vs. voltage curves along the voltage axis for changes in calcium concentration. Magnesium does not behave as an equimolar substitute for calcium. The effect of a solution containing 10mm calcium and 50mm magnesium is intermediate to that of solutions containing 10 and 30mm calcium alone. Predictions of a recent model for the sodium conductance (Moore, J.W., Cox, E.B., 1976Biophys. J. 16:171) which employs calcium binding were compared with the experimental data.