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The Journal of General Physiology, Vol 44, 819-843, Copyright © 1961 by The Rockefeller University Press


ARTICLE

The Electrophysiology of Electric Organs of Marine Electric Fishes

III. The electroplaques of the stargazer, Astroscopus y-graecum



M. V. L. Bennett 1 and H. Grundfest 1

1 From the Department of Neurology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, and the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole

The electroplaques of Astroscopus y-graecum were studied in situ with microelectrode recordings. Despite the distant taxonomic relations and the different origins of the organs, their properties in the teleost and torpedine marine electric fishes are remarkably similar. Only the innervated membrane (the dorsal) is electrogenically reactive in Astroscopus, and it, too, does not respond to electrical stimuli. As in the torpedine fishes, the uninnervated membrane of the electroplaques offers a very low resistance to the discharge of the innervated membrane. Additional direct evidence for electrical inexcitability of the reactive surface was obtained by denervating one of the bilateral organs. The denervated one did not respond to strong electrical stimuli which evoked responses in the opposite, innervated organ. The denervated electroplaques had a normal resting potential and were depolarized by acetylcholine and carbamylcholine similarly to normal cells. Other properties related to electrical inexcitability were also demonstrated. A pharmacological finding of considerable theoretical significance is that desensitization occurred on depolarizing cells with acetylcholine but was absent on depolarizing them with carbamylcholine.

Submitted on August 26, 1960


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