Abstract
1. Until recently it was believed that axoplasmic transport in vitro was not affected by Ca2+, transport being normal in Ca2+‐free medium. This was found due to the presence of the relatively impermeable perineurial sheath around the nerve trunks. Using a desheathed cat peroneal nerve preparation, axoplasmic transport was shown to require an adequate level of Ca2+ in the external medium. In a buffered Ca2+‐free medium, transport began to decline within 30 min and a complete block occurred in 2 . 6 hr. A concentration of 5 mM‐Ca2+ added to a buffered isotonic sucrose of NaCl solution was able to maintain transport. With lower concentrations of Ca2+ of 1 . 5‐3 . 0 mM, those usually present in the extracellular fluid or in a Ringer medium, some impairment of transport was seen but the addition of 4 mM‐K+ restored the normal pattern of axoplasmic transport. With Ca2+ concentrations below 0 . 75 mM, however, 4 mM‐K+ was unable to sustain transport. 2. Potassium by itself at a concentration of 4 mM when added to a buffered isotonic sucrose of NaCl medium was unable to prolong the time of transport block beyond that seen in buffered isotonic NaCl or sucrose solutions. In concentrations of K+ up to 25 mM, 1 . 5‐5 mM‐Ca2+ was required for normal transport. With moderately higher concentrations of K+ in the range of 50‐100 mM, normal appearing transport was seen with or without Ca2+. This was seen whether or not Na+ was present in the medium. At higher levels of K+, 120‐150 mM, decreased transport was seen, with or without the addition of either 15 mM‐Na+ or Ca2+ in concentrations of 1 . 5‐3 . 0 mM. 3. While Mg2+ could not substitute completely for Ca2+ in maintaining transport, it was able to prolong the time before block occurred. An extra 30‐60 min of downflow was seen when 5 mM‐Mg2+ was added to a buffered isotonic NaCl medium. Magnesium also acts synergistically with Ca2+. Concentration of Ca2+ as low as 0 . 25 mM was, with the addition of 1 . 5 mM‐Mg2+, able to maintain transport. 4. The results are interpreted in the light of studies of the mechanism of Ca2+ regulation known to occur in giant nerve fibres and other clls controlling the level of free Ca2+. The relationship of Ca2+ to the mechanism considered to underlie axoplasmic transport in nerve fibres is also discussed.
Dates
Type | When |
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Created | 10 years, 8 months ago (Dec. 19, 2014, 2:23 a.m.) |
Deposited | 1 year, 10 months ago (Nov. 6, 2023, 7:03 a.m.) |
Indexed | 2 days ago (Sept. 4, 2025, 9:53 a.m.) |
Issued | 45 years, 5 months ago (April 1, 1980) |
Published | 45 years, 5 months ago (April 1, 1980) |
Published Online | 45 years, 5 months ago (April 1, 1980) |
Published Print | 45 years, 5 months ago (April 1, 1980) |
@article{Chan_1980, title={The requirement for calcium ions and the effect of other ions on axoplasmic transport in mammalian nerve.}, volume={301}, ISSN={1469-7793}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1980.sp013219}, DOI={10.1113/jphysiol.1980.sp013219}, number={1}, journal={The Journal of Physiology}, publisher={Wiley}, author={Chan, S Y and Ochs, S and Worth, R M}, year={1980}, month=apr, pages={477–504} }