PHOTOREGULATION OF BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY BY PHOTOCHROMIC REAGENTS, III. PHOTOREGULATION OF BIOELECTRICITY BY ACETYLCHOLINE RECEPTOR INHIBITORS*

  1. Walter J. Deal,
  2. Bernard F. Erlanger, and
  3. David Nachmansohn
  1. DEPARTMENT OF NEUROLOGY, COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
  2. DEPARTMENT OF MICROBIOLOGY, COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY

Abstract

The photochromic compounds N-p-phenylazophenyl-N-phenylcarbamylcholine chloride and p-phenylazophenyltrimethylammonium chloride inhibit the carbamylcholine-produced depolarization of the excitable membrane of the monocellular electroplax preparation of Electrophorus. The trans isomer of each predominates in the light of a photoflood (420 mμ) lamp; they are stronger inhibitors than the cis isomers, which predominate under ultraviolet (320 mμ) irradiation. The potential difference across the excitable membrane may be photoregulated by exposing an electroplax in the presence of a solution of carbamylcholine and either of the two compounds to light of appropriate wavelengths, since light shifts the cis-trans equilibrium. The system may be considered as a model illustrating how one may link a cis-trans isomerization, the first step in the initiation of a visual impulse, with substantial changes (20-30 mv) in the potential difference across an excitable membrane.

Footnotes

  • * This work has been supported by National Science Foundation grants NSF-GB-7149 and NSF-GB-4861, by U.S. Public Health Service grants NB-03304 and GM-11805-10, by the Raymond and Beverly Sackler and the Irene Heinz Given and John LaPorte Given Foundations, and by a gift from the New York Heart Association, Incorporated.

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