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1.
Chemical stimulation of primary afferent nerves in the rat urinary bladder in vivo with topical capsaicin (1 microg in 50 microl saline) determines a dual motor response, consisting of a contractile effect mediated by tachykinins released from sensory nerves in the bladder wall and a transient activation of a bladder-to-bladder micturition reflex organized at the supraspinal level (chemoceptive micturition reflex). Both responses undergo complete desensitization upon repeated applications of capsaicin. The i.v. administration of the novel neuropeptide nociceptin (100 nmol/kg) produced a long-lasting protection from capsaicin desensitization of afferent nerves which mediate the chemoceptive micturition reflex. In fact a chemoceptive micturition reflex could be repeatedly evoked by topical capsaicin in nociceptin-pretreated rats. In sharp contrast, nociceptin did not influence the development of desensitization of the local response to capsaicin, corresponding to the 'efferent' function of capsaicin-sensitive afferent neurons. These results suggest that the afferent and 'efferent' function of capsaicin-sensitive primary afferent neurons (CSPANs) in the rat bladder are differentiated by nociceptin. Alternative mechanisms underlying this phenomenon are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Cadmium chloride (CdCl2)(30 microM-1 mM) produced a concentration-related contraction of the rat isolated urinary bladder which was abolished by tetrodotoxin (1 microM) or extrinsic bladder denervation (72 h before). Complete cross-desensitization was observed between the contractile response to Cd and capsaicin, indicating that, at the peripheral level, this inorganic calcium channel blocker can activate the 'efferent' function of capsaicin-sensitive sensory nerves.  相似文献   

3.
1. Toluene diisocyanate produced concentration-dependent contractions of the rat isolated urinary bladder. 2. The contractions were tetrodotoxin-resistant and were abolished by previous exposure of the strips to capsaicin. 3. Indomethacin (5 microM) and ruthenium red (30 microM) inhibited toluene diisocyanate-induced contractions. Responses expressed as a percentage of the response obtained with substance P, 30 nM, were respectively 141.6 +/- 24.8% and 20.1 +/- 5.1% in control and indomethacin-treated strips (P less than 0.005); 123.0 +/- 30.2% and 14.0 +/- 6.5% in control and ruthenium red-treated strips (0.01 less than P less than 0.05). 4. These results suggest that toluene diisocyanate-induced contractions of the rat isolated bladder are the result of the release of cyclo-oxygenase products which may act by activating the capsaicin receptor.  相似文献   

4.
We have investigated the ability of ruthenium red, an inorganic dye with Ca2+ entry-blocking properties and a selective antagonist of capsaicin, and of indomethacin, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, to inhibit bronchial smooth muscle responses evoked by toluene diisocyanate in guinea pigs. Previous exposure of isolated guinea pig bronchi to ruthenium red significantly decreased the response produced by toluene diisocyanate. Further, the response to toluene diisocyanate was significantly decreased by pretreatment with indomethacin. These findings provide evidence that toluene diisocyanate-induced contractions of guinea pig bronchi are produced indirectly by generation of a prostanoid that activates capsaicin-sensitive afferents via a ruthenium red-sensitive mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
1. We have determined the effect of neuropeptide Y (NPY) on motor responses produced by activation of capsaicin-sensitive primary afferents in the guinea-pig isolated left atria (reserpine-pretreatment, atropine in the bath) and bronchi (atropine and indomethacin in the bath) using capsaicin itself and electrical field stimulation as stimuli. 2. In both preparations, NPY inhibited or suppressed the response produced by electrical field stimulation while leaving the response to a submaximal concentration of capsaicin unaffected. 3. NPY had no effect on motor responses produced by a submaximal concentration of calcitonin gene-related peptide (atria) or neurokinin A (bronchi), the putative endogenous mediators of the responses produced by activation of the 'efferent' function of sensory fibres in these preparations. 4. We conclude that NPY exerts a prejunctional inhibitory action on transmitter release from peripheral endings of capsaicin-sensitive nerves. Failure of NPY to modulate responses activated by capsaicin provides further evidence for the existence of two independent modes of activation of the 'efferent' function of capsaicin-sensitive sensory nerves.  相似文献   

6.
Summary (1) The effect of perineal pinching and distension of a balloon inserted into the colon on motility of the urinary bladder has been investigated in adult urethane-anesthetized rats pretreated with capsaicin (50 mg/kg s.c.) or its vehicle 4 days before the experiments. (2) At bladder volumes which were sufficient to elicit reflex micturition, perineal pinching or colonic distension transiently inhibited the ongoing bladder voiding contraction. The somato-vesical inhibitory response was markedly reduced or even abolished by division of pudendal nerves. Neither the somato-vesical nor the colovesical inhibitory response were modified by desensitization with systemically administered capsaicin. (3) Intraurethral administration of capsaicin produced a transient inhibition of the reflexly-activated bladder contractions. A second administration of the drug was less effective, indicating desensitization. Intravenously administered capsaicin had a similar inhibitory effect on bladder motility. (4) The vesico-inhibitory response produced by intraurethral administration of capsaicin was not affected by phentolamine, propranolol, guanethidine, picrotoxin or naloxone, while it was greatly reduced or even abolished by bilateral section of the pudendal nerves. (5) These findings provide evidence that capsaicin-sensitive chemoreceptors in the rat urethra are involved in generating a vesico-inhibitory response via pudendal nerves. On the other hand, no evidence was found for the participation of capsaicin-sensitive nerves in the generation of the somato- or colo-vesical inhibitory response. Send offprint requests to C. A. Maggi at the above address  相似文献   

7.
1. The effect of neuropeptide Y (NPY) on motor responses produced by activation of capsaicin-sensitive primary afferents in the guinea-pig isolated ileum was determined by use of capsaicin itself and electrical mesenteric nerve stimulation as stimuli. 2. NPY inhibited or suppressed the cholinergic contractile response produced by electrical mesenteric nerve stimulation while leaving the contractile response to a threshold concentration of capsaicin. 3. NPY had no effect on motor responses produced by a submaximal concentration of substance P, the putative endogenous mediator of the 'efferent' function of sensory fibres in this preparation. 4. It is concluded that NPY exerted a prejunctional inhibitory action on transmitter release from peripheral endings of capsaicin-sensitive nerves at interneuronal synapses.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the effect of intravaginal application of capsaicin on micturition reflex in female rats. Urinary bladder contractility was measured by transurethral pressure recording at isovolumetric and subthreshold conditions in anaesthetized rats. The intravaginal application of capsaicin (15 mug/50 mul rat) induced reproducible bladder phasic contractions, without desensitization upon repeated applications, that were blocked by intravenous atropine (1 mg/kg) or hexamethonium (5 mg/kg) and prevented by removal of paracervical ganglia or systemic capsaicin pretreatment (125 mg/kg, s.c.). The inhibition of sympathetic transmission by guanethidine (30 mg/kg, s.c.) produced significant increase of the bladder reflex contractions activated by intravaginal capsaicin. Intravenous administration of the TRPV1 antagonist, capsazepine (3 mg/kg), significantly reduced the excitatory reflex response to capsaicin. Intravaginal administration of capsaicin (15 mug/50 mul), during distension-induced reflex bladder contractions, produced a transient block of reflexes, unaffected by guanethidine pretreatment. In conclusion, the stimulation of capsaicin-sensitive sensory nerve endings in the rat cervix-vagina induced a dual excitatory or inhibitory bladder response in anaesthetized female rats depending on the degree of bladder distension.  相似文献   

9.
In the rat isolated urinary bladder, NaHS (30 microm-3 mm) and capsaicin (10 nm-3 microm) produced concentration-dependent contractile responses (pEC(50)=3.5+/-0.02 and 7.1+/-0.02, respectively) undergoing dramatic tachyphylaxis. In preparations in which sensory nerves were rendered desensitized (defunctionalized) by high-capsaicin (10 microm for 15 min) pretreatment, neither capsaicin itself nor NaHS produced any motor effect. NaHS-induced contractile effects were totally prevented by the simultaneous incubation with tachykinin NK(1) (GR 82334; 10 microm) and NK(2) (nepadutant; 0.3 microm) receptor-selective antagonists. Tetrodotoxin (1 microm) only partially reduced the response to NaHS. These results provide pharmacological evidence that H(2)S stimulates capsaicin-sensitive primary afferent nerve terminals, from which tachykinins are released to produce the observed contraction by activating NK(1) and NK(2) receptors. While the molecular site of action of H(2)S remains to be investigated, our discovery may have important physiological significance since H(2)S concentrations capable of stimulating sensory nerves overlap those occurring in mammalian tissues under normal conditions.  相似文献   

10.
1. Capsaicin produced a prompt release of substance P-like immunoreactivity (SP-LI) from superfused mucosa-free muscle strips excised from the guinea-pig urinary bladder. A second application of capsaicin had no further effect, indicating desensitization. 2. Neither tetrodotoxin (1 microM) or nifedipine (10 microM) had any inhibitory effect on SP-LI release by capsaicin nor influenced the establishment of the desensitized state. Nifedipine produced per se some SP-LI release. 3. SP-LI release by capsaicin was abolished by incubation in a Calcium(Ca)-free medium containing EDTA (1.0 mM) which also afforded a partial protection toward desensitization. A lower EDTA concentration (0.1 mM) did not suppress SP-LI release by capsaicin but still inhibited desensitization. 4. When the concentration of CaCl2 in the medium was lowered to 1/10-1/100 of that present in normal Krebs solution, capsaicin still evoked a marked SP-LI release and desensitization occurred. In a nominally Ca free medium (maximal Ca concentration due to impurities was 6.7 microM) SP-LI release was still observed and desensitization was incomplete. 5. In a nominally Ca free medium, removal of Mg ions enhanced the SP-LI release induced by capsaicin and enhanced desensitization. 6. In functional studies, nifedipine greatly reduced or abolished the capsaicin- or SP-induced contraction of the rat or guinea-pig isolated bladder but did not prevent desensitization. Likewise, SP-LI depletion in the rat bladder following systemic capsaicin desensitization was not prevented by nifedipine pretreatment. On the other hand, the protective action of Ca free media (containing EDTA) was confirmed in organ bath studies (guinea-pig bladder). 7. These findings indicate that: (a) the requirements of extracellular calcium for activation of neuropeptide release from sensory nerves by capsaicin are very low; (b) both excitation of sensory fibers (SP-LI release) and desensitization are dependent upon the presence of extracellular calcium and (c) L-type voltage-sensitive Ca channels are not likely to be involved in the actions of capsaicin on sensory nerve terminals.  相似文献   

11.
1. Intravesical instillation of xylene (10-100%, dissolved in silicone oil) through a catheter implanted into the bladder of conscious, freely-moving rats produced behavioural effects (licking of lower abdomen or perineal region) suggestive of intense visceral pain, not mimicked by topical application of the irritant on the urethral outlet. 2. The xylene-induced visceral pain was prevented, to the same extent, by systemic desensitization to capsaicin (50 mg/kg s.c.) performed in either adult or newborn rats, as well as by extrinsic bladder denervation (pelvic ganglionectomy), thus indicating the involvement of primary afferents in the bladder wall. 3. Other behavioural responses induced by xylene instillation into the bladder (hind limb hyperextension, grooming) were not affected by systemic capsaicin desensitization in either adult or newborn rats, but were abolished by bladder denervation. 4. Systemic capsaicin desensitization produced an almost complete depletion of substance P-, neurokinin A-like and calcitonin gene-related peptide-like immunoreactivity in the rat urinary bladder. 5. These findings indicate that, in addition to their role in activating reflex micturition, the neuropeptides-containing capsaicin-sensitive sensory nerves of the rat bladder are involved in chemogenic visceral pain.  相似文献   

12.
Capsaicin applied on the serosal surface of the urinary bladder in urethane-anaesthetized rats produces two distinct types of motor effects: a tetrodotoxin-, hexamethonium- and lidocaine-insensitive 'tonic' contraction and a series of tetrodotoxin-, hexamethonium- and lidocaine-sensitive rhythmic contractions. Both 'tonic' and rhythmic contractions are abolished by bladder denervation indicating their neurogenic origin. The rhythmic but not the 'tonic' component of the contractile effect of capsaicin is abolished by spinal cord transection indicating activation of a supraspinal micturition reflex. The motor effects of topical capsaicin are unaffected by pretreatment with indomethacin or diphenhydramine plus cimetidine. Pretreatment with a large dose of subcutaneous (SC) capsaicin increases both volume and pressure threshold for micturition while amplitude of micturition contraction is unaffected. Moreover the spinal somatovesical reflex elicited by pinching of the perineal skin is unaffected by capsaicin-desensitization. The intracerebroventricular (ICV) administration of capsaicin reproduces the effects of SC capsaicin on the bladder response to saline filling. Rats pretreated with ICV capsaicin are as sensitive as controls in reacting to noxious heat (hot plate test) while the wiping response to instillation of capsaicin into one eye was abolished. These findings provide functional evidence for the presence in the rat urinary bladder of a capsaicin-sensitive innervation which subserves a sensory function in relaying volume/pressure information from detrusor muscle to central nervous system. Information carried through these capsaicin-sensitive fibers appears to be relevant for initiation of a supraspinal vesico-vesical micturition reflex. Functional evidence indicates that these fibers may terminate at supraspinal level.  相似文献   

13.
1. The ability of capsazepine, a recently developed capsaicin receptor antagonist, to prevent the effects of capsaicin on the rat isolated urinary bladder (contraction) and vas deferens (inhibition of electrically-evoked twitches) was compared to that of ruthenium red, a dye which behaves as a functional antagonist of capsaicin. 2. In the rat bladder, capsazepine (3-30 microM) produced a concentration-dependent rightward shift of the curve to capsaicin without any significant depression of the maximal response to the agonist. By contrast, ruthenium red (10-30 microM) produced a non-competitive type of antagonism, characterized by marked depression of the maximal response attainable. Similar findings were obtained in the rat isolated vas deferens in which capsazepine (10 microM) produced a rightward shift of the curve to capsaicin while ruthenium red (3 microM) depressed the maximal response to the agonist. 3. At the concentrations used to block the effect of capsaicin, neither capsazepine nor ruthenium red affected the contractile response of the rat urinary bladder produced by either neurokinin A or electrical field stimulation or the twitch inhibition produced by rat alpha-calcitonin gene-related peptide (alpha CGRP) in the vas deferens. 4. These findings provide additional evidence that both capsazepine and ruthenium red are valuable tools for exploration of the function of capsaicin-sensitive primary afferent neurones. The antagonism of the action of capsaicin by capsazepine is entirely consistent with the proposed interaction of this substance with a vanilloid receptor located on primary afferents, while the action of ruthenium red apparently involves a more complex, non-competitive antagonism.  相似文献   

14.
Galanin inhibited, in a concentration-dependent manner (EC50 7.2 nM), the positive inotropic response produced by field stimulation of isolated left atria from reserpine-pretreated guinea-pigs (in the presence of atropine). These responses were shown to involve antidromic activation of capsaicin-sensitive primary afferents. On the other hand, galanin did not affect the inotropic response to capsaicin or calcitonin gene-related peptide, the putative endogenous mediator released from sensory nerves. Galanin-(1-10) was at least 10,000 times less potent than the parent peptide, while galanin-(25-29) was ineffective. Likewise, galanin inhibited the non-cholinergic contraction produced by field stimulation of the isolated guinea-pig bronchus but not the contraction produced by exogenous neurokinin A. These findings indicate a prejunctional neuromodulatory action of galanin on the excitability of peripheral terminals of capsaicin-sensitive sensory nerves.  相似文献   

15.
Specificity of the effect is a crucial factor in using antagonists for detecting the physiological/pathophysiological roles of receptors. Here we examined the capsaicin receptor antagonist effects of three commercially-available substances, capsazepine, iodo-resiniferatoxin (I-RTX) and BCTC, on isolated smooth muscle preparations, including the human intestine. Care was taken to observe possible non-specific effects, to find out safe and effective concentrations. Capsazepine appeared to have a low margin of safety. I-RTX (up to 1μM) specifically inhibited capsaicin-induced contractions in the guinea-pig ileum and urinary bladder. I-RTX showed agonist activity on the rat urinary bladder. BCTC (1μM) abolished the contractile effects of capsaicin (1 or 2μM) on all preparations tested (guinea-pig ileum, bladder, trachea, as well as rat and mouse bladder), and on the guinea-pig renal pelvis, where it failed to influence capsaicin-sensitive, sensory neuron-mediated positive inotropy in response to field stimulation. On human intestinal preparations BCTC prevented the relaxant effect of capsaicin. It is concluded that of the three antagonists tested BCTC seems the safest one for inhibiting TRPV-1 receptors. The effect of capsazepine may be complicated by non-specific inhibition of smooth muscle contractility and that of I-RTX by agonist activity. The "local efferent" function of capsaicin-sensitive sensory neurons is not influenced by BCTC, as shown by the results obtained in the renal pelvis. In conclusion, of the TRPV-1 receptor antagonists studied, BCTC (1μM) seems the most reliable in isolated organ experiments. This substance is also effective in the human intestine.  相似文献   

16.
Summary 1. The effects of capsaicin, substance P (SP) and neurokinin A (NKA) on motor activity and vascular permeability was investigated in the rat lower urinary tract (bladder dome and neck, proximal urethra and ureters). 2. Capsaicin produced contractions of the rat bladder dome and neck and of the proximal urethra in vitro, which were unaffected by tetrodotoxin and abolished by ganglionectomy. SP and NKA were almost equipotent in producing a contraction of the rat isolated bladder dome or neck and urethra. However, the maximal response to NKA was about twice that of SP on the urethra and bladder neck. 3. Capsaicin did not affect motility of the unstimulated rat isolated ureter, while NKA or SP activated rhythmic contractions, NKA being about 850 times more potent than SP. Either capsaicin or field stimulation produced a transient inhibition of the NKA-activated rhythmic contractions of the rat isolated ureter which was prevented by capsaicin-desensitization. 4. The capsaicin-(1 M) or field stimulation-induced inhibition of NKA-activated rhythmic contractions of the rat isolated ureter were unaffected by removal of pelvic ganglia but abolished by cold storage (72 h at 4°C). 5. Intravenous capsaicin induced an inflammatory response (Evans blue leakage) in the bladder, proximal urethra and ureters in vivo. Plasma extravasation was greater in the ureters, urethra and bladder neck than in the dome. SP, NKA and histamine produced a dose-dependent dye leakage in all segments of the rat urinary tract, the response being slightly greater in the bladder neck than in the dome. 6. The capsaicin-induced inflammatory response was abolished by systemic capsaicin-desensitization and reduced, to a variable extent, by pelvic ganglionectomy, in the various tissues examined. Topical application of tetrodotoxin on the bladder dome failed to affect the capsaicin-induced plasma extravasation in the urinary bladder. 7. These findings indicate that chemoceptive, capsaicin-sensitive nerves are present throughout the whole rat lower urinary tract and their activation determines a variety of visceromotor responses and an increase of vascular permeability. In various instances the response to capsaicin may be explained by the action of tachykinins but some effects may involve other sensory neuropeptides. Send offprint requests to C. A. Maggi at the above address  相似文献   

17.
Relations between P2 purinoceptors and capsaicin-sensitive sensory neurons include an excitatory action of P2 purinoceptor agonists on spinal afferent neurons, as well as release of ATP from afferents at their central and peripheral endings, and a possible participation of ATP in nociception and/or in 'local efferent' responses mediated by sensory nerves at the periphery. The present paper briefly summarizes available evidence on these interrelations. Ample evidence shows that ATP and other P2 purinoceptor agonists can activate primary afferent neurons, through P2X3 receptors and probably other purinoceptors as well, but evidence for an involvement of P2 purinoceptors in nociception or in 'local efferent' responses due to activation of primary afferents is, at best, circumstantial. The possibility is also dealt with that P2 purinoceptor activation may cause small intestinal contraction with the mediation of capsaicin-sensitive sensory neurons and that the motor response to capsaicin in this tissue may involve the release of a P2 purinoceptor stimulant from sensory nerves. Our data show that cholinergic contractions of the guinea-pig ileum in response to the P2 purinoceptor agonist alpha,beta-methylene ATP (alpha,beta-meATP) are blocked by atropine, but not by in vitro capsaicin pretreatment (which completely blocks the contractile action of capsaicin). Cholinergic ileum contractions due to capsaicin (2 microM) are insensitive to suramin (a P2 purinoceptor antagonist; 100 microM). In the presence of antagonists acting at tachykinin NK1 and NK2 receptors, however, suramin (100 microM) causes a significant inhibition of the capsaicin-evoked contraction. These data indicate that capsaicin-sensitive nerves are not involved in the excitatory effect of alpha,beta-methylene ATP on myenteric neurons. On the other hand, ATP is probably involved in the 'non-tachykininergic' component of the capsaicin-induced excitatory response of the small intestine. ATP may originate from sensory neurons and probably acts as activator of myenteric nerves.  相似文献   

18.
Capsaicin microinjection into the trigeminal caudalis nucleus (the central projection area of trigeminal capsaicin-sensitive nerve) increase extravasation of proteins in rat eye. The effect was inhibited by ruthenium red introduction (a capsaicin receptor antagonist) and by blocking the effector functions of capsaicin-sensitive nerve endings. It is suggested that capsaicin stimulation of central terminations of trigeminal capsaicin-sensitive afferents induce an increase in the microvascular permeability of the eye, which is mediated through the effector function of capsaicin-sensitive nerves.  相似文献   

19.
We have investigated the ability of Ruthenium Red, an inorganic dye with calcium entry blocking properties, to interfere with the ‘efferent’ function of capsaicin-sensitive sensory nerves. These nerves were activated in the guinea-pig isolated bronchus (atropine in the bath) or left atria (reserpine-pretreated animals, atropine in the bath) by electrical field stimulation or with capsaicin. Both stimuli produced a contraction of the bronchus and a positive inotropic response in the atria, responses which are mediated by endogenous neuropeptides (tachykinins in the bronchus, calcitonin gene-related peptide in the atria) released from sensory nerves. Ruthenium Red (10 μM for 20 min in the cases) selectively inhibited the responses produced by the administration of capsaicin, while leaving the responses to electrical field stimulation unaffected. Likewise, the bronchonconstrictor response to exogenous neurokinin A and the atrial positive inotropic response to calcitonin gene-related peptide were unaffected by Ruthenium Red. A prejunctional site of action Ruthenium Red was confirmed in release experiments where the dye strongly inhibited the capsaicin-evoked outflow of calcitonin gene-related peptide, which is taken as a marker of activation in sensory nerves. Together with other observations, these findings support the concept that there are two independent mechanisms for activating the ‘efferent’ function of sensory nerves, one of which is activated by capsaicin and is Ruthenium Red-sensitive but ω-conotoxin-resistant, while the other is activated by propagated action potentials (field stimulation) and is ω-conotoxin-sensitive and Ruthenium Red-resistant.  相似文献   

20.
Either intra-arterial or topical administration of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) had little effect on motility of the urinary bladder in urethane-anaesthetized rats. Only a high concentration (50 microM) of topical CGRP activated the micturition reflex and potentiated the response to exogenous substance P (SP). In the isolated rat bladder CGRP had inconsistent effects on spontaneous or field-stimulated contractions. CGRP neither produced any significant plasma extravasation (Evans blue leakage) in the rat lower urinary tract, nor potentiated the response to exogenous SP. CGRP inhibited motility in the rat isolated proximal urethra and ureters and counteracted the contractile response to neurokinins. An inhibitory effect of capsaicin on stimulated motility of the urethra was observed in all preparations and a small contractile response was evident in about 40% of cases. Lack of desensitization to the action of CGRP prevented the study of its interaction with capsaicin. The inhibitory effect of CGRP in the ureter exhibited a specific desensitization: if the preparations were pre-exposed to exogenous CGRP, the inhibition of motility produced by antidromic activation of the capsaicin-sensitive nerve terminals (field stimulation) as well as the response to capsaicin (1 microM) was prevented but the inhibitory response to isoprenaline was unaffected. These findings indicate that CGRP is able to influence markedly the motility of the rat lower urinary tract, but exhibits marked regional differences in its action. Endogenous CGRP could be the inhibitory transmitter which, when released from capsaicin-sensitive fibers, participate in the control of ureteral motility.  相似文献   

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