Currents recorded through small areas of squid axon membrane with an internal virtual ground voltage clamp. 1981

J López-Barneo, and D R Matteson, and C M Armstrong

A new voltage-clamp apparatus for the squid axon has been implemented to enable recording of currents through small areas of axon membrane. The performance of this clamp was tested by recording total sodium currents from perfused axons (I total) and sodium currents from small membrane patches (I patch), which were recorded from inside the axon with an L-shaped pipette. The I patch records, although four orders of magnitude smaller than I total, were stable and showed normal kinetics and voltage dependence, and appeared to reflect the activation of a small population of normal sodium channels. The size of the current recorded from the patch was mainly a function of the tip diameter of the L-shaped pipette and of the shunt resistance between inside the pipette and the axoplasm.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008564 Membrane Potentials The voltage differences across a membrane. For cellular membranes they are computed by subtracting the voltage measured outside the membrane from the voltage measured inside the membrane. They result from differences of inside versus outside concentration of potassium, sodium, chloride, and other ions across cells' or ORGANELLES membranes. For excitable cells, the resting membrane potentials range between -30 and -100 millivolts. Physical, chemical, or electrical stimuli can make a membrane potential more negative (hyperpolarization), or less negative (depolarization). Resting Potentials,Transmembrane Potentials,Delta Psi,Resting Membrane Potential,Transmembrane Electrical Potential Difference,Transmembrane Potential Difference,Difference, Transmembrane Potential,Differences, Transmembrane Potential,Membrane Potential,Membrane Potential, Resting,Membrane Potentials, Resting,Potential Difference, Transmembrane,Potential Differences, Transmembrane,Potential, Membrane,Potential, Resting,Potential, Transmembrane,Potentials, Membrane,Potentials, Resting,Potentials, Transmembrane,Resting Membrane Potentials,Resting Potential,Transmembrane Potential,Transmembrane Potential Differences
D004594 Electrophysiology The study of the generation and behavior of electrical charges in living organisms particularly the nervous system and the effects of electricity on living organisms.
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia
D001369 Axons Nerve fibers that are capable of rapidly conducting impulses away from the neuron cell body. Axon
D049832 Decapodiformes A superorder of CEPHALOPODS comprised of squid, cuttlefish, and their relatives. Their distinguishing feature is the modification of their fourth pair of arms into tentacles, resulting in 10 limbs. Cuttlefish,Illex,Sepiidae,Squid,Todarodes,Cuttlefishs,Decapodiforme,Illices,Squids,Todarode

Related Publications

J López-Barneo, and D R Matteson, and C M Armstrong
October 1957, Science (New York, N.Y.),
J López-Barneo, and D R Matteson, and C M Armstrong
December 1975, The Journal of membrane biology,
J López-Barneo, and D R Matteson, and C M Armstrong
December 1974, Journal of theoretical biology,
J López-Barneo, and D R Matteson, and C M Armstrong
January 1982, Annual review of neuroscience,
J López-Barneo, and D R Matteson, and C M Armstrong
May 1958, The American journal of physiology,
J López-Barneo, and D R Matteson, and C M Armstrong
November 1966, The Journal of general physiology,
J López-Barneo, and D R Matteson, and C M Armstrong
October 2005, The International journal of neuroscience,
J López-Barneo, and D R Matteson, and C M Armstrong
November 1960, Biophysical journal,
J López-Barneo, and D R Matteson, and C M Armstrong
August 1990, Journal of neuroscience methods,
J López-Barneo, and D R Matteson, and C M Armstrong
May 1958, The American journal of physiology,
Copied contents to your clipboard!