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1Department of Life Sciences, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, University of Tokyo, Meguro-ku, 153-8902 Tokyo; 2Molecular Neurobiology Section, Neuroscience Research Institute, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Tsukuba, 305-8566 Ibaraki; 3Division of Biophysics and Neurobiology, Department of Molecular Physiology, National Institute for Physiological Sciences; and 4Section of Developmental Neurophysiology, Center for Integrative Bioscience, Okazaki National Research Institutes, Myodaiji, Okazaki 444-8585 Aichi, Japan
Submitted 16 January 2004; accepted in final form 30 March 2004
Isolated ascidian Halocynthia roretzi blastomeres of the muscle lineage exhibit muscle cell-like excitability on differentiation despite the arrest of cell cleavage early in development. This characteristic provides a unique opportunity to track changes in ion channel expression during muscle cell differentiation. Here, we show that the intrinsic membrane property of ascidian cleavage-arrested muscle-type cells becomes oscillatory by expressing transient outward currents (Ito) activated by Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) in a maturation-dependent manner. In current-clamp mode, most day 4 (72 h after fertilization) cleavage-arrested muscle cells exhibited an oscillatory membrane potential of 20 mV at 15 Hz, whereas most day 3 (48 h after fertilization) cells exhibited a spiking pattern. In voltage-clamp mode, the day 4 cells exhibited prominent transient outward currents that were not present in day 3 cells. Ito was abolished by the application of 10 mM caffeine, implying that CICR was involved in Ito activation. Ito was based on K+ efflux and sensitive to tetraethylammonium and some Ca2+-activated K+ channel inhibitors. We found a 60-pS single channel conductance that was activated by local Ca2+ release in ascidian muscle cell. Voltage-clamp recording with an oscillatory waveform as a command pulse showed that CICR-activated K+ currents were activated during the falling phase of the membrane potential oscillation. These results suggest that developmental expression of CICR-activated K+ current plays a role in the maturation of larval locomotion by modifying the intrinsic membrane excitability of muscle cells.
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