The effects of muscle activity on the growth of synaptic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) accumulations and on the metabolic AChR stability were investigated in rat skeletal muscle. Ectopic end plates induced surgically in adult soleus muscle were denervated early during development when junctional AChR number and stability were still low and, subsequently, muscles were either left inactive or they were kept active by chronic exogenous stimulation. AChR numbers per ectopic AChR cluster and AChR stabilities were estimated from the radioactivity and its decay with time, respectively, of end plate sites whose AChRs had been labeled with 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-butx). The results show that the metabolic stability of the AChRs in ectopic clusters is reversibly increased by muscle activity even when innervation is eliminated very early in development. 1 d of stimulation is sufficient to stabilize the AChRs in ectopic AChR clusters. Muscle stimulation also produced an increase in the number of AChRs at early denervated end plates. Activity-induced cluster growth occurs mainly by an increase in area rather than in AChR density, and for at least 10 d after denervation is comparable to that in normally developing ectopic end plates. The possible involvement of AChR stabilization in end plate growth is discussed.
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1 August 1990
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August 01 1990
Metabolic stabilization of acetylcholine receptors in vertebrate neuromuscular junction by muscle activity.
S Rotzler,
S Rotzler
Department of Physiology, University of Basel, Switzerland.
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H R Brenner
H R Brenner
Department of Physiology, University of Basel, Switzerland.
Search for other works by this author on:
S Rotzler
Department of Physiology, University of Basel, Switzerland.
H R Brenner
Department of Physiology, University of Basel, Switzerland.
Online ISSN: 1540-8140
Print ISSN: 0021-9525
J Cell Biol (1990) 111 (2): 655–661.
Citation
S Rotzler, H R Brenner; Metabolic stabilization of acetylcholine receptors in vertebrate neuromuscular junction by muscle activity.. J Cell Biol 1 August 1990; 111 (2): 655–661. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.111.2.655
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