A novel calcium current in dysgenic skeletal muscle.
Open Access
- 1 September 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 94 (3), 429-444
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.94.3.429
Abstract
The whole-cell patch-clamp technique was used to study voltage-dependent calcium currents in primary cultures of myotubes and in freshly dissociated skeletal muscle from normal and dysgenic mice. In addition to the transient, dihydropyridine (DHP)-insensitive calcium current previously described, a maintained DHP-sensitive calcium current was found in dysgenic skeletal muscle. This current, here termed ICa-dys, is largest in acutely dissociated fetal or neonatal dysgenic muscle and also in dysgenic myotubes grown on a substrate of killed fibroblasts. In dysgenic myotubes grown on untreated plastic culture dishes, ICa-dys is usually so small that it cannot be detected. In addition, ICa-dys is apparently absent from normal skeletal muscle. From a holding potential of -80 mV. ICa-dys becomes apparent for test pulses to approximately -20 mV and peaks at approximately +20 mV. The current activates rapidly (rise time approximately 5 ms at 20 degrees C) and with 10 mM Ca as charge carrier inactivates little or not at all during a 200-ms test pulse. Thus, ICa-dys activates much faster than the slowly activating calcium current of normal skeletal muscle and does not display Ca-dependent inactivation like the cardiac L-type calcium current. Substituting Ba for Ca as the charge carrier doubles the size of ICa-dys without altering its kinetics. ICa-dys is approximately 75% blocked by 100 nM (+)-PN 200-110 and is increased about threefold by 500 nM racemic Bay K 8644. The very high sensitivity of ICa-dys to these DHP compounds distinguishes it from neuronal L-type calcium current and from the calcium currents of normal skeletal muscle. ICa-dys may represent a calcium channel that is normally not expressed in skeletal muscle, or a mutated form of the skeletal muscle slow calcium channel.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mitogens and Oncogenes Can Block the Induction of Specific Voltage-Gated Ion ChannelsScience, 1987
- Dihydropyridine-sensitive Ca2+ channels in mammalian skeletal muscle cells in culture: electrophysiological properties and interactions with Ca2+ channel activator (Bay K8644) and inhibitor (PN 200-110).Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1986
- A fast‐activated inward calcium current in twitch muscle fibres of the frog (Rana montezume).The Journal of Physiology, 1986
- Different types of Ca2+ channels in mammalian skeletal muscle cells in culture.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1986
- Abnormal transverse tubule system and abnormal amount of receptors for Ca2+ channel inhibitors of the dihydropyridine family in skeletal muscle from mice with embryonic muscular dysgenesisDevelopmental Biology, 1985
- Two kinds of calcium channels in canine atrial cells. Differences in kinetics, selectivity, and pharmacology.The Journal of general physiology, 1985
- Na and Ca channels in a transformed line of anterior pituitary cells.The Journal of general physiology, 1984
- Calcium currents in a fast-twitch skeletal muscle of the rat.The Journal of general physiology, 1983
- Evidence for dysfunction in the regulation of cytosolic Ca2+ in excitation-contraction uncoupled dysgenic muscleDevelopmental Biology, 1983
- Improved patch-clamp techniques for high-resolution current recording from cells and cell-free membrane patchesPflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology, 1981