Experiments were carried out to investigate the accumulation from the extracellular medium of 45Ca2+ by the endplate region of skeletal muscle.
Mouse diaphragm muscle was incubated in physiological saline labelled with 45Ca at 37°C for periods of up to 1.5 h.
The muscle was divided into junctional and non‐junctional portions and the Ca from the extracellular fluid accumulated at the endplate determined from the 45Ca content of the portions.
The accumulation of extracellular Ca at the endplate region of muscles incubated in physiological saline alone was nil, but there was accumulation in the presence of the anticholinesterase ecothiopate iodide 0.5 × 10−6 m (ECO). Stimulation of the phrenic nerve at 0.02 Hz caused no further increase in accumulation, but reduced the amount of spontaneous fasciculation. In tetrodotoxin (TTX) 10−6 m, the accumulation was halved, and in 3.5 mM Mg2+ the accumulation was nil. Carbachol 10−4 m resulted in an accumulation of Ca similar to that in ECO.
It is concluded that there was an accumulation of extracellular Ca following excitation of the nerve by stimulation at a low frequency and during the spontaneous fasciculations, and about half of the accumulation of extracellular Ca after ECO in the experiments was due to the postsynaptic action of ACh released non‐quantally from the nerve terminals.
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