Abstract
The present review describes store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE) in skeletal muscle. Fundamental discoveries in the field of skeletal muscle SOCE are described and the techniques that were used to make these. The advantages and limitations in these techniques are discussed to provide a means of questioning and determining the physiological role(s) of SOCE in skeletal muscle. It is concluded that SOCE has little or no role in the filling of the sarcoplasmic reticulum with Ca2+ at rest or during a single contracture. It is likely that SOCE is activated during fatigue, although direct measurements of SOCE are lacking and the physiological significance remains uncertain.