Abstract

The influence of solution hypertonicity on contraction was studied in small bundles of tonic muscle fibers from the iliofibularis muscle of the frog Rana pipiens. Muscles were activated with high-K+ solutions that had osmolalities which were increased with tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethanepropionate. Peak potassium contracture force decreased monotonically with tonicity and was zero in solutions with 2.5 or 3 times the osmolality of control Ringer. Contracture force at all tonicities studied (less than or equal to 3 X Ringer) was increased by increasing Ca2+ in the media 10-fold (to 20 mM) and/or by adding caffeine (10-20 mM). Nevertheless, this potentiated force also was diminished as tonicity increased. Force of single, mechanically skinned tonic fibers taken from these bundles was activated by Ca2+ over the same concentration range as that of twitch fibers. Moreover, maximal Ca2+-activated force, normalized per cross-sectional area, was similar in skinned tonic and twitch fibers. As was shown previously in twitch fibers, maximal Ca2+-activated force was decreased when ionic strength was increased. These data suggest that, as with twitch fibers, increased tonicity depresses contraction of tonic fibers by increasing the intracellular ionic strength, which in turn inhibits the ability of the contractile apparatus to generate force. Unlike twitch fibers, however, disruption of the excitation-contraction coupling process probably plays a more significant role in the action of hypertonicity on tonic fibers.

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