Abstract

A method based upon an extension of Campbell's theorem is used to measure the amplitude, waveform, and frequency of occurrence of miniature endplate potentials (mepps) at rapidly secreting neuromuscular junctions of frog cutaneous pectoris muscles. Measurements of the variance, skew, and power spectrum of the fluctuations in membrane potential are used to deduce the mepp parameters. These estimates of mepp amplitude and frequency are insensitive to slow drifts in membrane potential that preclude the conventional application of Campbell's theorem, which uses the mean and variance. The new method becomes unreliable at high mepp frequencies because the distribution of the values of membrane potential approaches a Gaussian thereby reducing the accuracy of skew measurements. Frequencies approaching 10(4) s-1 can be measured, however, if the data are high-pass filtered. The method has been tested with computer simulated data and applied to junctions exposed to La3+; the effects of Ca2+ on the La3+-induced secretion have been explored. Some muscles were fixed after treatment with La3+, and changes in nerve terminal ultrastructure were assessed by morphometric analysis of electron micrographs. Horseradish peroxidase was used to obtain information about vesicle recycling.

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