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- OtherArne, Thomas Augustine; Kirkby, Emma; Morton, Richard Edward; Goodman, Roy.Contents:
The morning : no. 5 of Six cantatas for a voice and instruments
Sigh no more, ladies : from Shakespeare's Much ado about nothing
What tho' his guilt : from Murphy's The desert island
Cymon and Iphigenia : a cantata
Frolic and free : no. 3 of Six cantatas for a voice and instruments
Thou soft flowing Avon : an ode upon dedicating a building to Shakespeare
Jenny : an agreeable musical choice
The lover's recantation : from The winter's amusement.Print p1988 - ArticleHutter OF, Williams TL.J Physiol. 1979 Jan;286:591-606.1. The inwardly rectifying potassium conductance of the membrane of frog sartorius muscle fibres is greatly reduced by treatment of muscles for 30 min with a solution containing formaldehyde (10 mM). 2. A transient increase in the conductance of the inward rectifier is observed early during formaldehyde action. 3. Analysis of the biphasic time course of the conductance changes, as determined under controlled voltage conditions, suggests that treatment with formaldehyde alters simultaneously, but in opposite ways, two factors that determine the conductance of the inward rectifier. 4. The linear component of the current-voltage relation, which dominates the relation at strongly positive potentials, is not affected while the above changes occur. But on prolonged exposure to formaldehyde the leak conductance increases. 5. The effects of formaldehyde on the inward rectifier are reversible on prolonged superfusion with normal Ringer solution. 6. The slight inward rectification remaining after most of the extracellular K is replaced by Rb, is similarly reduced by treatment with formaldehyde. 7. The results are interpreted in terms of the chemical properties of formaldehyde and present views of the mechanisms of inward rectification.