pubmed-article:2858341 | pubmed:abstractText | Intracellular recordings have been made from salivary gland cells of the pond snail Planorbis corneus. Gland cells produced a dose-dependent biphasic response to the bath application of acetylcholine (ACh), an initial depolarization being followed by a hyperpolarization. Nicotine and the nicotinic agonist tetramethylammonium had an excitatory action on the gland cells. The muscarinic agonists acetyl-beta-methyl choline and arecoline were also stimulants, but muscarine, bethanechol and pilocarpine produced no response from gland cells at 10(-3) M. A number of cholinergic antagonists, including atropine, hexamethonium and curare, effectively blocked the response to ACh. The depolarizing phase of the ACh response resulted from an increased membrane permeability to Na+ ions, though the participation of other ionic species cannot be ruled out. The hyperpolarizing phase of the ACh response was produced by the activity of an electrogenic Na+/K+ pump. | lld:pubmed |