Intracellular calcium during fatigue of cane toad skeletal muscle in the absence of glucose

Dec 29, 2000Journal of muscle research and cell motility

Calcium levels inside muscle cells during tiredness in cane toads without glucose

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Abstract

Fatigue in single muscle fibers of cane toads resulted in a force reduction to 50% within 8-10 minutes during initial fatigue runs.

  • The peak levels of intracellular calcium initially increased during the first fatigue run but declined to 54±5% of the initial value when force fell to 50%.
  • In subsequent fatigue runs, force declined more rapidly, yet the peak tetanic calcium levels remained similar to those observed in the first fatigue runs.
  • After the first fatigue run, the rapidly releasable calcium store from the sarcoplasmic reticulum decreased to 46±6% of its pre-fatigue value, while this store increased to 109±16% after the final fatigue run.
  • The glycogen content in muscle fibers decreased from 117±17 mmol glycosyl units/l fiber after one fatigue run to 85±9 mmol glycosyl units/l fiber after the final fatigue run.
  • [Mg2+]i levels did not show significant changes, indicating that ATP levels may not decline significantly during either fatigue pattern.

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