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Biophys J, March 2000, p. 1106-1118, Vol. 78, No. 3


*The Neurobiology Laboratory, Department of Physiology, Institute
for Biomedical Research and
The School of Mathematics and
Statistics, University of Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia
The release of a quantum from a nerve terminal is
accompanied by the flow of extracellular current, which creates a field around the site of transmitter action. We provide a solution for the
extent of this field for the case of a quantum released from a site on
an amphibian motor-nerve terminal branch onto the receptor patch of a
muscle fiber and compare this with measurements of the field using
three extracellular electrodes. Numerical solution of the equations for
the quantal potential field in cylindrical coordinates show that the
density of the field at the peak of the quantal current gives rise to a
peak extracellular potential, which declines approximately as the
inverse of the distance from the source at distances greater than about
4 µm from the source along the length of the fiber. The peak
extracellular potential declines to 20% of its initial value in a
distance of about 6 µm, both along the length of the fiber and in the
circumferential direction around the fiber. Simultaneous recordings of
quantal potential fields, made with three electrodes placed in a line at right angles to an FM1-43 visualized branch, gave determinations of
the field strengths in accord with the numerical solutions. In
addition, the three electrodes were placed so as to straddle the
visualized release sites of a branch. The positions of these sites were
correctly predicted on the basis of the theory and independently
ascertained by FM1-43 staining of the sites. It is concluded that
quantal potential fields at the neuromuscular junction that can be
measured with available recording techniques are restricted to regions
within about 10 µm of the release site.
Biophys J, March 2000, p. 1106-1118, Vol. 78, No. 3
© 2000 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/00/03/1106/13 $2.00
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