Publication | Open Access
Injections of calcium ions into spinal motoneurones
294
Citations
28
References
1972
Year
Membrane ResistanceSynaptic TransmissionAnesthetic MechanismPeripheral NerveCellular PhysiologySocial SciencesResistance ChangeHyperpolarization (Biology)Electrolyte DisturbanceAnesthetic PharmacologySodium HomeostasisIon ChannelsCalcium IonsMembrane BiologyNervous SystemPharmacologyHyperpolarizationNeurophysiologyPhysiologyNeuroscienceElectrophysiologyCentral Nervous SystemAnesthesiaMedicineDial AnaesthesiaAnesthesiology
1. In cats under Dial anaesthesia, Ca(2+) was injected inside lumbosacral motoneurones, by passing currents between CaCl(2)- and KCl-containing barrels of compound micropipettes.2. There was a reduction in excitability and a fall in membrane resistance, both rapid in onset and quickly reversible.3. The minimum effective injection current was approximately 10 nA, and the effect reached a maximum with currents of approximately 30 nA. The mean slope of resistance change against injection current was -1.7%/nA (S.E. 0.35).4. The most common change in membrane potential was a hyperpolarization; but in nearly half the cases, there was no clear change or a small depolarization. A reversal level for the effect of Ca(2+) could be measured in five cells: on the average, it was 10 mV more negative than the resting potential.5. Observations on i.p.s.p.s showed that Ca(2+) probably does not alter g(Cl): it was concluded that the fall in membrane resistance caused by intracellular Ca(2+) is mainly due to an increase in g(K).6. These results confirm previous suggestions that a steep transmembrane gradient of Ca(2+) is essential for the maintenance of a low membrane conductivity, and that a rise in internal free Ca(2+) - whether due to influx or release from internal stores - may play an important role in regulating neuronal activity.
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