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. 1938 Sep 20;22(1):37–64. doi: 10.1085/jgp.22.1.37

ELECTRIC IMPEDANCE OF NITELLA DURING ACTIVITY

Kenneth S Cole 1, Howard J Curtis 1
PMCID: PMC2213729  PMID: 19873091

Abstract

The changes in the alternating current impedance which occur during activity of cells of the fresh water plant Nitella have been measured with the current flow normal to the cell axis, at eight frequencies from 0.05 to 20 kilocycles per second, and with simultaneous records of the action potential under the impedance electrodes. At each frequency the resting cell was balanced in a Wheatstone bridge with a cathode ray oscillograph, and after electrical stimulation at one end of the cell, the changes in the complex impedance were determined from the bridge unbalance recorded by motion pictures of the oscillograph figure. An extension of the previous technique of interpretation of the transverse impedance shows that the normal membrane capacity of 0.9 µf./cm.2 decreases about 15 per cent without change of phase angle, while the membrane resistance decreases from 105 ohm cm.2 to about 500 ohm cm.2 during the passage of the excitation wave. This membrane change occurs during the latter part of the rising phase of the action potential, and it is shown that the membrane electromotive force remains unchanged until nearly the same time. The part of the action potential preceding these membrane changes is probably a passive fall of potential ahead of a partial short circuit.

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Selected References

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  1. Bogue J. Y., Rosenberg H. The rate of development and spread of electrotonus. J Physiol. 1934 Oct 17;82(3):353–368. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.1934.sp003186. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

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