Click here to close
Hello! We notice that you are using Internet Explorer, which is not supported by Xenbase and may cause the site to display incorrectly.
We suggest using a current version of Chrome,
FireFox, or Safari.
Acetylcholine receptor channel properties during development of Xenopus muscle cells in culture.
Brehm P, Kidokoro Y, Moody-Corbett F.
???displayArticle.abstract???
Developmental changes in acetylcholine (ACh) receptor channel function on aneural cultures of embryonic myotomal muscle cells were examined using the patch-clamp technique. At all stages of differentiation two different unitary-event amplitudes were observed, corresponding to high-gamma (single-channel conductance) (64 pS) and low-gamma (46 pS) channel types. No change in conductance occurred for either channel type during the 6-day in vitro period examined. At resting membrane potential (-85 mV) the low-gamma channel exhibited a mean open time of approximately 2 ms which, on the average, was 2-3-fold longer than that measured for the high-gamma channel. Neither the estimated mean channel open time nor the voltage dependence of the open state measured for either channel type changed during development. In recordings with low ACh concentration (0.1-0.25 microM) both high-gamma and low-gamma channel types exhibited non-stationary opening probabilities over the recording period. Usually the opening rate of both channel types decreased with time following seal formation, however, the 'drop-out' rate was faster for the low-gamma channel. A developmental increase in the proportion of high-gamma events occurred between day 1 (16%) and day 5 (56%) in culture, paralleling the time-dependent changes in the channel kinetics based on ACh-activated membrane noise. We conclude that the development of non-junctional muscle membrane is associated with increased expression of high-gamma channels and that this process is primarily responsible for the previously reported developmental alterations in macroscopic ACh receptor channel currents.
Auerbach,
Flickering of a nicotinic ion channel to a subconductance state.
1983, Pubmed
Auerbach,
Flickering of a nicotinic ion channel to a subconductance state.
1983,
Pubmed Brehm,
Metabolism of acetylcholine receptors on embryonic amphibian muscle.
1983,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase Brehm,
Channel open time of acetylcholine receptors on Xenopus muscle cells in dissociated cell culture.
1982,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase Brehm,
Properties of non-junctional acetylcholine receptor channels on innervated muscle of Xenopus laevis.
1984,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase Brenner,
Gating properties of acetycholine receptor in newly formed neuromuscular synapses.
1978,
Pubmed Brenner,
Neurotrophic control of channel properties at neuromuscular synapses of rat muscle.
1983,
Pubmed Colquhoun,
Fluctuations in the microsecond time range of the current through single acetylcholine receptor ion channels.
1981,
Pubmed Fischbach,
A post-natal decrease in acetylcholine channel open time at rat end-plates.
1980,
Pubmed Hamill,
Improved patch-clamp techniques for high-resolution current recording from cells and cell-free membrane patches.
1981,
Pubmed Hamill,
Multiple conductance states of single acetylcholine receptor channels in embryonic muscle cells.
1981,
Pubmed Hironaka,
The resting membrane potential of frog sartorius muscle.
1979,
Pubmed Jackson,
Single cholinergic receptor channel currents in cultured human muscle.
1982,
Pubmed Kullberg,
Development of the myotomal neuromuscular junction in Xenopus laevis: an electrophysiological and fine-structural study.
1977,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase Kullberg,
Nonjunctional acetylcholine receptor channel open time decreases during development of Xenopus muscle.
1981,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase Magleby,
A quantitative description of end-plate currents.
1972,
Pubmed Michler,
Receptor stability and channel conversion in the subsynaptic membrane of the developing mammalian neuromuscular junction.
1980,
Pubmed Sakmann,
Single acetylcholine-activated channels show burst-kinetics in presence of desensitizing concentrations of agonist.
1980,
Pubmed Sakmann,
Change in synaptic channel gating during neuromuscular development.
1978,
Pubmed Sakmann,
Acetylcholine-induced ionic channels in rat skeletal muscle.
1978,
Pubmed