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J Neurophysiol 73: 2357-2368, 1995;
0022-3077/95 $5.00
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Journal of Neurophysiology, Vol 73, Issue 6 2357-2368, Copyright © 1995 by APS


ARTICLES

Characterization of the Ca2+ current in freshly dissociated crustacean peptidergic neuronal somata

J. E. Richmond, E. Sher and I. M. Cooke
Bekesy Laboratory of Neurobiology, University of Hawaii, Honolulu 96822, USA.

1. Freshly dissociated neuronal somata of the crab (Cardisoma carnifex) X-organ were studied in the whole cell patch-clamp configuration. To characterize the Ca2+ currents in these somata, recordings were made under conditions designed to suppress K+ and Na+ currents. 2. In 52 mM external Ca2+ the threshold for activation of Ca2+ currents was above -40 mV, with peak amplitudes occurring around +10 to +20 mV. The full component of the current was available for activation at -50 mV because no current increase was observed when the holding potential was increased to -90 mV. These characteristics of the current characterize it as a high-voltage activated (HVA) current. 3. The Ca2+ current was almost completely (60-90%) inactivated within 200 ms at maximal current potentials (+10 to +20 mV). The decay was best described by a double-exponential function with a fast and slow component of inactivation (tau f = 12 ms and tau s = 64 ms). Both Sr2+ and Ba2+ substitutions reduced the rates of inactivation. 4. In double-pulse experiments, plots of variable prepulse potential versus test pulse current produced a U-shaped curve with test pulse currents showing maximal inactivation at potentials that produced maximal Ca2+ influx during the prepulse. Tail currents also displayed a U-shaped inactivation curve. The extent of current-dependent inactivation was sequentially reduced by Sr2+ and Ba2+ substitutions. These data suggest that inactivation in crab somata is predominantly Ca2+ dependent. The remaining inactivation of Ba2+ currents suggests that there is also a component of voltage-dependent inactivation in the somata. 5. Part of the inactivated Ca2+ current could be recovered during short (4-10 ms) hyperpolarizing pulses to -130 mV. The absolute extent of recovery from inactivation was greatest for currents carried by Ca2+ rather than Sr2+ or Ba2+. When voltage-dependent inactivation was dominant (Ba2+ currents), the relative amount of current recovered was greater. The data suggest that hyperpolarizing pulses are more effective in removing voltage-dependent inactivation, but also allow some recovery from Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation. 6. In the crab saline, which contained 24 mM Mg2+, the amplitudes of currents carried by 52 mM Ca2+, Sr2+ and Ba2+ were similar. Removing the Mg2+ from the saline augmented both the Ba2+ and Sr2+ currents relative to the Ca2+ current.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


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