Transmitter-like action of ATP on patched membranes of cultured myoblasts and myotubes.
The concept of purinergic neurotransmission, first proposed by Burnstock, has been confirmed in various cell types. We show here, by the patch-clamp method, that external ATP in micromolar concentrations (1-100 microM) activates cation channels in the membranes of fusion-competent myoblasts and myotubes. In cell-attached membrane patches of myoblasts and myotubes the mean number of simultaneously activated channels increases with time after external ATP application. In myoblasts only one population of channels having a mean single-channel conductance of gamma=43 pS was found, while in myotubes two populations with gamma 1=48 pS and gamma 2=20 pS were observed. Treatment of myotube membranes with acetylcholine (ACh) or carbachol resulted in two populations of channels which had conductance values and voltage-dependent mean channel lifetimes similar to those produced in response to ATP. The results show that embryonic skeletal muscle cells contain cation channels sensitive to ATP and provide evidence for a neurotransmitter-like action of ATP on these cells.[1]References
- Transmitter-like action of ATP on patched membranes of cultured myoblasts and myotubes. Kolb, H.A., Wakelam, M.J. Nature (1983) [Pubmed]
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