rhodanine and sodium-perchlorate

rhodanine has been researched along with sodium-perchlorate* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for rhodanine and sodium-perchlorate

ArticleYear
A surface potential change in the membranes of frog skeletal muscle is associated with excitation-contraction coupling.
    The Journal of physiology, 1997, Mar-15, Volume: 499 ( Pt 3)

    1. Voltage changes and intramembrane charge movements in the transverse tubule membranes (T-system) of frog fast twitch muscle fibres were compared using the potentiometric dye WW-375 and a Vaseline-gap voltage clamp. As shown previously, the potentiometric dye reports a dynamic surface potential change that occurs on the myoplasmic face of the T-system membranes when the macroscopic potential applied across the surface membrane exceeds the mechanical threshold (about -60 mV). 2. The voltage dependence of the extra surface potential change and charge movement were found to be similar. Both activated with a sigmoid voltage dependence centred around -35 to -40 mV, and saturated at voltages above 0 mV. Both processes inactivated upon sustained depolarization, with a mid-point for inactivation of -40 mV. 3. Pharmacological agents which alter charge movement and excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling altered the non-linear surface potential change in a parallel manner. Perchlorate, which potentiates charge movement and E-C coupling, slowed the activation and deactivation of both charge movement and the non-linear surface potential change at voltages above -40 mV, and shifted the voltage dependence of both processes by 13 14 mV to more negative voltages. Dantrolene, which depresses charge movement and E-C coupling, shifted the voltage dependence of both processes to more positive voltages. Nifedipine, which suppresses charge movement and E-C coupling, reduced the magnitude of both charge movement and the non-linear surface potential change. 4. The non-linear surface potential change remained after the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) was depleted of Ca2+, suggesting that it is not a consequence of Ca2+ release. 5. These results suggest that the non-linear surface potential change is closely associated with movements of the voltage sensor (dihydropyridine (DHP) receptor) that control E-C coupling and/or signal transduction across the triadic junction. We propose that the movement of charged intramembrane domains of the DHP receptor which generate charge movement drive a subsequent movement of charged intracellular molecular domains that move within about 1 nm of the T-system membrane to generate a measurable change in surface charge. For example, the postulated mobile surface charges could be on an intracellular domain of the voltage sensor or closely associated protein, or could be a charged molecular domain of a protein that associates/dissociates with T-system memb

    Topics: Animals; Calcium; Calcium Channel Blockers; Coloring Agents; Dantrolene; Membrane Potentials; Models, Molecular; Muscle Contraction; Muscle Fibers, Fast-Twitch; Muscle Relaxants, Central; Muscle, Skeletal; Nifedipine; Patch-Clamp Techniques; Perchlorates; Potentiometry; Rana catesbeiana; Rhodanine; Sarcoplasmic Reticulum; Sodium Compounds; Surface Properties

1997