On the voltage-dependent action of tetrodotoxin
- PMID: 843585
- PMCID: PMC1473237
- DOI: 10.1016/S0006-3495(77)85656-7
On the voltage-dependent action of tetrodotoxin
Abstract
The use of the maximum rate-of-rise of the action potential (Vmax) as a measure of the sodium conductance in excitable membranes is invalid. In the case of membrane action potentials, Vmax depends on the total ionic current across the membrane; drugs or conditions that alter the potassium or leak conductances will also affect Vmax. Likewise, long-term depolarization of the membrane lessens the fraction of total ionic current that passes through the sodium channels by increasing potassium conductance and inactivating the sodium conductance, and thereby reduces the effect of Vmax of drugs that specifically block sodium channels. The resultant artifact, an apparent voltage-dependent potency of such drugs, is theoretically simulated for the effects of tetrodotoxin on the Hodgkin-Huxley squid axon.
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