User Settings

Stretch Activated Nonselective Cation Channels in Urinary Bladder Myocytes: Importance for Pacemaker Potentials and Myogenic Response

M C Wellner,G Isenberg-1993-01-01-Birkhäuser Basel eBooks
32

TL;DRAbstract

Filling of the bladder with urine stretches the myocytes in the wall. Stretch activates nonselective cation channels (SACs) thereby constituting a pacemaking mechanism. Once action potentials are triggered, Ca2+ influx through nifedipine-sensitive Ca2+ channels provides activator Ca2+ for the stretch-induced increase in wall tension (myogenic response). An additional component of myogenic response is independent of nifedipine and membrane potential; Ca2+ influx through SACs is large enough to induce Ca2+ release from intracellular stores.

Chat with Paper

AI Agents for this Paper

Filling of the bladder with urine stretches the myocytes in the wall. Stretch activates nonselective cation channels (SACs) thereby constituting a pacemaking mechanism. Once action potentials are triggered, Ca2+ influx through nifedipine-sensitive Ca2+ channels provides activator Ca2+ for the stretch-induced increase in wall tension (myogenic response). An additional component of myogenic response is independent of nifedipine and membrane potential; Ca2+ influx through SACs is large enough to induce Ca2+ release from intracellular stores.

Keywords

NifedipineActivator (genetics)MyocyteChemistryIntracellularMyogenic contractionBiophysicsPacemaker potential

Chat

Click to start Chat