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J Neurophysiol 73: 993-1004, 1995;
0022-3077/95 $5.00
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Journal of Neurophysiology, Vol 73, Issue 3 993-1004, Copyright © 1995 by APS


ARTICLES

Ca(2+)-activated K current in the ARC muscle of Aplysia

V. Brezina and K. R. Weiss
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029, USA.

1. This work continues our examination of the electrophysiology and contractions of single, functionally intact fibers dissociated from a widely studied molluscan muscle, the accessory radula closer (ARC) muscle of Aplysia californica, aimed at understanding its excitation-contraction mechanisms and their modulation. Extensive previous work has characterized a number of ion currents in the fibers. 2. Here we describe an additional major current that could not be studied earlier because, unlike all of the other currents in the ARC muscle fibers, it becomes prominent only during contraction of the fiber. It is a Ca(2+)-activated K current, associated with contraction most likely because both are activated by the same elevation in intracellular free Ca2+. 3. We used several manipulations to elicit the Ca(2+)-activated K current and contraction: depolarizing voltage steps in the presence of extracellular Ca2+, application of caffeine in the presence or absence of extracellular Ca2+ (and thus presumably working by releasing Ca2+ from intracellular stores), application of the Ca(2+)-ionophore A23187, and direct iontophoretic injection of Ca2+ into the fiber. 4. The Ca(2+)-activated K current reversed around -70 mV, not far from EK, and the reversal potential shifted substantially with elevated extracellular K+. Activation of the current was not only Ca2+ dependent, but also quite strongly voltage dependent, promoted by depolarization. The current was well blocked by tetraethylammonium (KD approximately 2 mM), but not blocked by even 10 mM 4-aminopyridine or low concentrations of the K-current blocking toxins charybdotoxin and apamin. 5. After a depolarizing voltage step in Ca(2+)-containing solution, the Ca(2+)-activated K current appeared, often with some delay, as a large peak of current that soon disintegrated into a prolonged period of individual oscillatory transients of Ca(2+)-activated K current, sometimes correlated with transient contractions. Similar transients could be elicited by caffeine or iontophoretic Ca2+ injection. More extensive study of the underlying Ca2+ dynamics will be presented elsewhere, but we interpret these phenomena in terms of our hypothesis that the ARC muscle generates both contraction and the Ca(2+)-activated K current by Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release (CICR), in which a small depolarization-induced influx of extracellular Ca2+ releases more Ca2+ from intracellular stores. 6. The Ca(2+)-activated K current is significant in the physiological operating voltage range of the ARC muscle, and its predicted hyperpolarizing action and consequent negative-feedback depression of contractions is likely to be an important part of the integrated set of mechanisms that regulate the muscle's contractility.


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