Electromechanical and pharmacomechanical coupling was investigated in human ciliary muscle by measuring the intracellular free calcium in single cultured ciliary muscle cells and the contractility in meridional ciliary muscle strips. The basal resting calcium concentration was 75 +/- 8.7 nmol/l, n = 23. Application of acetylcholine (0.1 mmol/l) and carbachol (0.1 mmol/l) resulted in an initial [Ca2+]i peak followed by a recovery phase and a [Ca2+]i plateau. The initial [Ca2+]i peak was still observed in the absence of extracellular calcium and in the presence of verapamil (0.1 mmol/l). During its plateau [Ca2+]i was decreased by withdrawal of extracellular calcium or application of verapamil (0.1 mmol/l). Depolarization induced by a high level of extracellular potassium yielded only a small transient [Ca2+]i peak without a [Ca2+]i plateau. In isolated ciliary muscle strips, muscarinic stimulation (carbachol 0.1 mmol/l) resulted in an initial phasic and a subsequent tonic contraction. Removal of external calcium reduced the phasic contraction to 30.6 +/- 4.4% (n = 8) and completely abolished the tonic one. Verapamil (0.1 mmol/l) had only a slight relaxing effect when applied during the tonic contraction. We conclude that human ciliary muscle contraction is mediated by calcium release from intracellular stores and calcium entry through calcium channels, which are most probably receptor-operated. Depolarization of the muscle cell membrane and calcium entry through voltage-operated calcium channels do not contribute significantly to human ciliary muscle contraction.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00370567DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

ciliary muscle
28
human ciliary
16
[ca2+]i peak
12
verapamil mmol/l
12
calcium
11
muscle
8
muscle strips
8
carbachol mmol/l
8
mmol/l initial
8
initial [ca2+]i
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!