Abstract

The contractile effects of maximum doses of adrenaline, noradrenaline, methacholine, acetylcholine, serotonin and barium chloride were studied following substitution of a medium without calcium for the normal nutrient solution. Except for the last agonist, the effects fall to about 10% within the first 3 min with prompt return to normal value upon reintroduction of regular fluid. This recovery is, however, slower if the previous incubation in Ca-free solution is prolonged. When barium chloride is used in a calcium-free medium, the maximum height of contractions falls exponentially at a t1/2 of about 180 min. This decay can be accelerated by giving successive 5-min doses of the agonist or by using EDTA. It is hypothesised that excitation--contraction coupling in rat vas deferens depends on at least two different calcium sources: a deep site associated with the effects of barium, and a superficial one, related to the other agonists. To explain the slow recovery after prolonged calcium lack, a third compartment in series with the latter is suggested. No indication is found that the biphasic effects of barium depend on two different calcium pools.

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