Abstract

Properties of ionic currents in smooth muscle membranes of the longitudinal muscle layer of the rabbit ileum were investigated using the single electrode voltage clamp method. In the present experiments, this method was applicable only to the smooth muscle ball (fragment) and not for the dispersed whole cell, because of incompleteness of the voltage clamping. A voltage step elicited a transient inward current followed by an outward current. This outward current was partly inhibited by Mn2+ or nisoldipine or by a reduction in the extracellular [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]o). Tetraethylammonium (TEA) reduced the delayed outward current in a dose-dependent manner, but 50 mM TEA did not produce a complete block of a residual current. When the pipette contained K+-free (Cs+ with TEA+) solution, the residual outward current was abolished. The inward current was elicited at -30 mV (holding potential of -60 mV) and reached the maximal value at +10 mV; the polarity was reversed at +60 mV. This inward current depended on the [Ca2+]o and was blocked by Mn2+ or nisoldipine. Ba2+ also permeated the membrane, and the inward current evoked by Ba2+ was also blocked by Mn2+ or nisoldipine. Reduction of [Na+]o in a solution containing 2.4 mM Ca2+ neither modified the current-voltage relation nor the decay of the inward current, but when [Ca2+]o was reduced to below 1 microM, Na+ permeated the membrane and was blocked by nisoldipine. In conclusion, ionic currents were recordable from the fragmented ball of the longitudinal muscle of rabbit ileum. There were at least two K+ currents as the outward current (Ca2+-dependent K+ and delayed K+ currents) and a Ca2+ current as the inward current. The property of the Ca2+ channel was similar to that observed with other preparations.

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