Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 5, 110-116, Copyright © 1985 by Society for Neuroscience
Postsynaptic block of frog neuromuscular transmission by conotoxin GI
OB McManus and JR Musick
Conotoxin GI, a peptide neurotoxin contained in the venom of the marine
snail Conus geographus, was applied to the cutaneous pectoris muscle of the
frog, and the effects on the postsynaptic response to acetylcholine were
examined. Conotoxin GI reversibly blocked nerve-evoked muscle contractions
at concentrations greater than or equal to 3 to 4 microM. Micromolar
concentrations of conotoxin GI significantly reduced the amplitude of
miniature endplate potentials and membrane depolarizations produced by
ionophoretic application of acetylcholine, suggesting that the toxin
reduced the postsynaptic sensitivity to acetylcholine. The reduction in the
sensitivity of the muscle to acetylcholine was not due to changes in muscle
fiber resting membrane potential or input resistance. Conotoxin GI reduced
the amplitudes but did not affect the rates of decay of focal,
extracellularly recorded endplate currents or miniature endplate currents,
suggesting that the toxin did not affect the lifetime of ion channels
opened by acetylcholine. Miniature endplate currents decay five to six
times more slowly than normal when acetylcholinesterase is blocked with
neostigmine methyl sulfate due to repeated binding of acetylcholine to
receptors as it diffuses from the synaptic cleft. Conotoxin GI reduced the
amplitude and increased the rate of decay of miniature endplate currents
recorded in the presence of neostigmine methyl sulfate, suggesting that the
toxin reduced the binding of acetylcholine to endplate receptors. These
results are consistent with the hypothesis that conotoxin GI blocks
neuromuscular transmission at the frog endplate by reducing the binding of
acetylcholine to receptors.