Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 8, 2422-2429, Copyright © 1988 by Society for Neuroscience
Electrophysiology and dye-coupling are sexually dimorphic characteristics of individual laryngeal muscle fibers in Xenopus laevis
ML Tobias and DB Kelley
Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University, New York, New York 10027.
Sex differences at the laryngeal neuromuscular junction of Xenopus laevis
were examined by recording intracellularly from muscle fibers in response
to nerve stimulation. Male laryngeal muscle contains 2 physiologically
distinct fiber types. Type I fibers generate postsynaptic potentials in
response to low-magnitude stimulus pulses and action potentials in response
to higher-magnitude stimulus pulses. Type II muscle fibers require
repetitive stimulation for action potential production, probably because of
facilitation. Subthreshold events in type I and II fibers suggest that
these neuromuscular synapses have low safety factor junctions. Female
laryngeal muscle contains one fiber type (III), which is physiologically
distinct from those found in the male. Type III fibers produce an action
potential in response to a single-stimulus pulse of suprathreshold voltage
delivered to the laryngeal nerve; subthreshold events were not observed.
Iontophoretic injection of Lucifer yellow into a single female muscle fiber
resulted in as many as 43 labeled fibers. In males, only one fiber was
labeled. Dye-coupling was not observed in adult females treated with the
androgenic steroid hormone, testosterone. We have previously reported that
laryngeal muscle fibers are recruited throughout a stimulus train presented
to the laryngeal nerve in males, but are not recruited in females (Tobias
and Kelly, 1987). Sex differences in the frequency of electrophysiological
fiber types described here may account for sex differences in fiber
recruitment. Synchronous activity of dye-coupled fibers may increase the
effectiveness of muscle contraction in females.