Use-dependent reduction and facilitation of Ca2+ current in guinea-pig myocytes.

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1. Action potentials, calcium currents (iCa) and cell contraction have been recorded from single guinea-pig myocytes during periods of stimulation from rest. Voltage clamp was carried out using a single microelectrode. Cell contraction was measured optically. All experiments were performed at 18-22 degrees C. 2. An inverse relationship was observed between cell contraction and action potential duration or iCa. Mixed trains of action potentials and voltage clamp pulses preserved this relationship. Long voltage clamp pulses induced negative 'staircases' of iCa and positive 'staircases' of cell contraction. A facilitation of iCa was observed during repetitive stimulation with clamp pulses of 100 ms duration or less and was accompanied by a decrease in cell contraction. 3. The voltage dependence of inward current staircases was found to depend on Ca2+ entry rather than membrane voltage for long voltage clamp pulses and was not affected by 30 mM-TEA or 50 microM-TTX. Current reduction was greatest at 0 mV (P less than 0.05) when iCa was largest. Changes in cell contraction during pulse trains showed a similar voltage dependence. The time constant of current staircases was only mildly voltage dependent. 4. Interference with normal cellular mechanisms for Ca2+ uptake and release by strontium, 1-5 mM-caffeine and 1 microM-ryanodine increased current staircases and could abolish iCa facilitation with short clamp pulses. 5. Variations in the level of Ca2+-dependent inactivation of iCa can explain many features of the changes in iCa during stimulation after rest. Long clamp pulses (or action potentials) may increase cell Ca2+ loading and inhibit iCa. Short clamp pulses reduce available Ca2+ for cell contraction and this may reflect a lowered myoplasmic Ca2+ level which allows facilitation of iCa.

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