saxitoxin and 1-4-dihydropyridine

saxitoxin has been researched along with 1-4-dihydropyridine* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for saxitoxin and 1-4-dihydropyridine

ArticleYear
Calcium currents in bullfrog sympathetic neurons. I. Activation kinetics and pharmacology.
    The Journal of general physiology, 1989, Volume: 94, Issue:1

    The calcium current of bullfrog sympathetic neurons activates and deactivates rapidly (tau less than 3 ms). For brief depolarizations, the current can be fit reasonably well by a Hodgkin-Huxley-type model with a single gating particle of charge +3. With 2 mM Ca2+ as the charge carrier, half-maximal activation occurs at approximately -5 mV, near the voltage where activation and deactivation are slowest. When extracellular divalent ion concentrations are reduced, monovalent ions (e.g., Na+ and methylammonium) produce kinetically similar inward currents. Current carried by Ba2+ is blocked by Cd2+ at micromolar concentrations, and by 100 nM omega-conotoxin. Commercially available saxitoxin blocks the current, but different batches have quantitatively different potency. The dihydropyridine agonist Bay K 8644 induces a slight shift in activation kinetics to more negative voltages, with little effect on the peak current. Nifedipine at least partially reverses the effect of Bay K 8644, but has little effect on its own. Muscarinic agonists and other ligands that inhibit the M-type potassium current of frog sympathetic neurons have weak inhibitory effects on the calcium current as well. One interpretation of these results is that the N-type calcium current predominates in these cells, with a minor contribution of L-type current.

    Topics: 3-Pyridinecarboxylic acid, 1,4-dihydro-2,6-dimethyl-5-nitro-4-(2-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl)-, Methyl ester; Adenosine Triphosphate; Animals; Cadmium; Calcium Channel Agonists; Calcium Channels; Dihydropyridines; Ganglia, Sympathetic; Kinetics; Membrane Potentials; Neurons; Nifedipine; Rana catesbeiana; Saxitoxin; Second Messenger Systems

1989