Muscle fibers from individuals with hyperkalemic periodic paralysis generate repetitive trains of action potentials (myotonia) or large depolarizations and block of spike production (paralysis) when the extracellular K+ is elevated. These pathologic features are thought to arise from mutations of the sodium channel alpha subunit which cause a partial loss of inactivation (steady-state Popen approximately 0.02, compared to < 0.001 in normal channels). We present a model that provides a possible mechanism for how this small persistent sodium current leads to repetitive firing, why the integrity of the T-tubule system is required to produce myotonia, and why paralysis will occur when a slightly larger proportion of channels fails to inactivate. The model consists of a two-compartment system to simulate the surface and T-tubule membranes. When the steady-state sodium channel open probability exceeds 0.0075, trains of repetitive discharges occur in response to constant current injection. At the end of the current injection, the membrane potential may either return to the normal resting value, continue to discharge repetitive spikes, or settle to a new depolarized equilibrium potential. This after-response depends on both the proportion of noninactivating sodium channels and the magnitude of the activity-driven K+ accumulation in the T-tubular space. A reduced form of model is presented in which a two-dimensional phase-plane analysis shows graphically how this diversity of after-responses arises as extracellular [K+] and the proportion of noninactivating sodium channels are varied.
[1]
P A Pappone,et al.
Voltage‐clamp experiments in normal and denervated mammalian skeletal muscle fibres.
,
1980,
The Journal of physiology.
[2]
R. H. Adrian,et al.
Action potentials reconstructed in normal and myotonic muscle fibres.
,
1976,
The Journal of physiology.
[3]
P. Palade,et al.
Characteristics of the chloride conductance in muscle fibers of the rat diaphragm
,
1977,
The Journal of general physiology.
[4]
W. Almers.
Potassium conductance changes in skeletal muscle and the potassium concentration in the transverse tubules
,
1972,
The Journal of physiology.
[5]
R. H. Adrian,et al.
Sodium currents in mammalian muscle
,
1977,
The Journal of physiology.
[6]
Margaret Robertson,et al.
Identification of a mutation in the gene causing hyperkalemic periodic paralysis
,
1991,
Cell.