| Literature DB >> 6824660 |
R DiPolo, H Rojas, J Vergara, R Lopez, C Caputo.
Abstract
Ca2+-selective electrodes have been used to measure free intracellular Ca2+ concentrations in squid giant axons. Electrodes made of glass cannulas of about 20 microns in diameter, plugged with a poly(vinyl chloride) gelled sensor were used to impale the axons axially. They showed a Nernstian response to Ca2+ down to about 3 microM in solutions containing 0.3 M K+ and 0.025 M Na+. Sub-Nernstian but useful responses were obtained up to pCa 8. The electrodes showed adequate selectivity to Ca2+ over Mg2+, H+, K+ and Na+. To calibrate them properly, a set of standard solutions were prepared using different Ca2+ buffers (EGTA, HEEDTA, nitrilotriacetic acid) after carefully characterizing their apparent Ca2+ association constants under conditions resembling the axoplasmic environment. In fresh axons incubated in artificial seawater containing 4 mM Ca2+, the mean resting intracellular ionized calcium concentration was 0.106 microM (n = 15). The Ca2+-electrodes were used to investigate effects of different experimental procedures on the [Ca2+]i. The main conclusions are: (i) intact axons can extrude calcium ions at low [Ca2+]i levels by a process independent of external Na+; (ii) poisoned axons can extrude calcium ions at high levels of [Ca2+]i by an external Na+-dependent process. The level of free intracellular Ca attained at these latter conditions is about an order to magnitude greater than the resting physiological value.Entities:
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Year: 1983 PMID: 6824660 DOI: 10.1016/0005-2736(83)90500-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta ISSN: 0006-3002