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1.
Summary Excitatory junction potentials (e.j.ps) evoked by nerve stimulation with 15 pulses at 1 Hz were recorded from muscle cells of rabbit isolated jejunal arteries. LY 171555 1 mol/l, SKF 38393 10 mol/l, dopamine 10 ol/l and clonidine 0.1 mol/l depressed all e j.ps in the train. The percentage inhibition was inversely related to the number of pulses. S- and R-sulpiride, 10 mol/l, domperidone 1 mol/l, SCH 23390 1 mol/l and rauwolscine 1 mol/l did not change, or even depressed the first e j.ps. Of these compounds only S- and R-sulpiride, 10 mol/l and rauwolscine 1 mol/l facilitated the late e.j.ps. The percentage facilitation increased with the number of pulses until a maximum was reached; rauwolscine 1 ol/l had the largest effect. S- and R-sulpiride, 10 mol/l, as well as domperidone 1 ol/l antagonized the action of LY 171555 1 mol/l. S-Sulpiride was more potent than its R-isomer. SCH 23390 1 mol/l and rauwolscine 1 mol/l blunted the effect of SKF 38393 10 mol/l. Rauwolscine 1 mol/l slightly reduced the inhibition by dopamine 10 mol/l; S-sulpiride 10 mol/l was antagonistic only in the presence of rauwolscine 1 mol/l. When rauwolscine 1 mol/l, prazosin 0.1 mol/l, propranolol 1 mol/l and cocaine 10 mol/l was added to the medium, dopamine 10 mol/l continued to produce the same depression of e j.ps, as in the absence of these compounds. Under such conditions S-sulpiride 10 mol/l also counteracted dopamine 10 gmol/l. Rauwolscine 1 mol/l prevented the effect of clonidine 0.1 mol/l. The antagonists were not absolutely selective against only one type of agonist. We suggest that both presynaptic DA2- and postsynaptic DA1-receptors are present in rabbit jejunal arteries. The activation of either receptor-type may depress the e j.ps. Dopamine interferes with neuroeffector transmission due to 2-adrenoceptor agonist properties; its DA2-effect is unmasked only after 2-adrenoceptor blockade. There was no evidence for a co-transmitter function of dopamine. Send offprint requests to P. Illes at the above address  相似文献   

2.
Summary In pontine slices of the rat brain, the frequency of spontaneous action potentials of locus coeruleus (LC) neurones was recorded extracellularly. Noradrenaline 0.1–100 mol/l, UK 14,304 0.01–100 nmol/l, [Met5]-enkephalin 1–10,000 nmol/l and [D-Ala2, D-Leu5]enkephalin 0.1–1,000 nmol/l, all depressed the firing rate. Rauwolscine 1 mol/l antagonized the effects of both noradrenaline and UK 14,304, but potentiated the effects of [Met']enkephalin and [D-Ala2, D-Leu5]enkephalin. Idazoxan 1 mol/l acted in a similar manner. Prazosin 1 mol/l did not change the effects of either noradrenaline or [Met5]enkephalin. Naloxone 0.1 mol/l antagonized both [Met']enkephalin and [D-Ala2, D-Leu5]enkephalin, but failed to alter the effects of either noradrenaline or UK 14,304. Rauwolscine, idazoxan and prazosin, all 1 mol/l, as well as naloxone 0.1 mol/l, did not influence the firing rate when given alone. Desipramine 1 mol/l inhibited the discharge of action potentials in a rauwolscine-antagonizable manner. Noradrenaline 10 mol/l produced the same depression of firing, both in the presence of noradrenaline 1 mol/l and [Met5]enkephalin 0.03 mol/l. Likewise, the effect of [Met5]enkephalin 0.3 mol/l was the same, irrespective of whether it was added to a medium containing [Met5]enkephalin 0.03 mol/l or noradrenaline 1 mol/l. The spontaneous activity of LC neurones is inhibited by somatic 2-adrenoceptors and opioid -receptors. We suggest that the two receptors interact with each other at a site located between themselves and not in the subsequent common signal transduction system.Send offprint requests to: P. Illes at the above address  相似文献   

3.
Summary Vasoconstriction or excitatory junction potentials (e.j.ps) evoked by nerve stimulation (15 field pulses at 2 Hz every 3 min) were recorded in rabbit isolated jejunal arteries. The resting diameter of the arteries and its decrease in response to stimulation was measured by a photoelectric method. Vasoconstriction was insensitive to prazosin 0.1 or 1 mol/l. Yohimbine 1 mol/l considerably enhanced, whereas ,-methylene ATP (,-meATP) 1 mol/l abolished the contractile response. In order to test the effect of exogenously applied transmitter candidates, noradrenaline (0.1–1 mol/l) and ATP (10–30 mol/l) were added in concentrations which evoked a vasoconstriction comparable to that induced by electrical stimulation. The action of noradrenaline was prevented by prazosin 0.1 mol/l, but was unaffected by both yohimbine 1 mol/l and ,-meATP 1 mol/l. ,-meATP 1 mol/l depressed the effect of ATP. The e.j.ps evoked by a train of 15 pulses showed facilitation up to the third response and thereafter depression; a partial summation was also observed. Prazosin 0.1 mol/l did not change the e j.p. amplitudes. By contrast, when yohimbine 0.1 or 1 mol/l was added to the prazosin-containing medium, both the late e j.ps in the train and the summation were enhanced in a concentration-dependent manner. ,-meATP 1 mol/l almost abolished the e.j.ps. In conclusion, in rabbit jejunal arteries, stimulation of postganglionic sympathetic nerves may release noradrenaline together with ATP which is probably the sole neuroeffector transmitter under our conditions. Transmitter release seems to be modulated by the activation of presynaptic 2-adrenoceptors. Under the stimulation conditions of the present experiments the released transmitter does not activate postsynaptic 1-adrenoceptors. Send offprint requests to P. Illes  相似文献   

4.
Summary The effects of the at-adrenoceptor agonist methoxamine and the 2-adrenoceptor agonist bromoxidine (UK 14034) on the stimulation induced (S-1) outflow of radioactivity at 100 Hz/6 pulses from rat isolated kidney preincubated with 3H-noradrenaline were investigated. Methoxamine (0.3 – 30 mol/l) inhibited S-1 outflow of radioactivity to a maximum of 83% with a pEC50 of 5.85 (5.71–5.94). UK 14304 (0.0003-0.3 mol/l) inhibited S-I outflow of radioactivity to a maximum of 99% with a pEC50 of 8.35 (8.26–8.47). a Adrenoceptor antagonist affinities (pKD) against methoxamine and UK 14304 at prejunctional -adrenoceptors were determined. The concentration response curve of methoxamine was shifted to the right by the 1/2B-adrenoceptor antagonist prazosin (0.1 mol/l) with a pKD of 7.41 and that of UK 14304 by prazosin (0.3 mol/l) with a pKD of 6.24. The 2-adrenoceptor antagonist rauwolscine (0.1 mol/l) shifted the concentration response curve of UK 14304 potently to the right with a pKD of 8.34. The concentration response curve of methoxamine was shifted also to the right by rauwolscine (0.1 mol/l) and the 2-adrenoceptor antagonist idazoxan (0.1 mol/l), however, both antagonists suppressed the maximum response of methoxamine to 466% and 56%, respectively. A ten times lower concentration of rauwolscine (0.01 mol/l) did not shift the concentration response curve of methoxamine but the inhibitory effect of methoxamine still reached only a maximum of 59%. The concentration response curve of methoxamine obtained in the presence of rauwolscine (0.01 mol/l) was shifted to the right by further addition of prazosin (0.1 mol/l) with a pKD of 8.80 but was also shifted to the right by either the purinoceptor antagonist 8-(p-sulfophenyl) theophylline (8-SPT; 100 mol/l) or the prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor indomethacin (20 mol/l). These results suggest that methoxamine inhibits S-1 outflow of radioactivity in rat isolated kidney probably through three different mechanisms. 1. Activation of postjunctional 1-adrenoceptors and prostaglandin mediated transjunctional inhibition. 2. Activation of postjunctional 2-adrenoceptors and purine mediated transjunctional inhibition. 3. Activation of prejunctional inhibitory 2-adrenoceptors at which methoxamine seems to be a partial agonist. Correspondence to L. C. Rump at the above address  相似文献   

5.
Summary Using the hemisected spinal cord of the neonate rat, the effects of altered external Ca, thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (TRH) and a number of antagonists were tested on depolarizations evoked by 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT). Responses of populations of motoneurones were recorded via a ventral root. 5-Hydroxytryptamine depolarizations were not Ca-dependent but were enhanced in amplitude in Ca-free solutions. Raised Mg reversed this enhancement. 5-Hydroxytryptamine depolarizations persisted in the presence of Mn (1.53 mmol/l). TRH depolarized motoneurones; there was no evidence of modulation of 5-HT responses on concurrent application of TRH. Ritanserin (0.1 mol/l) had a modest blocking action on 5-hydroxytryptamine depolarizations reducing the maximum; 1mol/l ritanserin caused a greater antagonism which was unsurmountable (pIC50 5.2). Ritanserin (0.1 or 1 mol/l) did not depress responses to noradrenaline (NA). Ketanserin (0.1 mol/l) caused a blockade of slow onset, equilibrium with the receptors requiring 1 h. Blockade by 0.01, 0.1 and 1 mol/l ketanserin was concentration-dependent (pIC50 6.2). Ketanserin 1 mol/l, but not at lower concentrations, depressed noradrenaline responses. Mianserin (0.1 mol/l) also caused a blockade of slow onset; 0.1 or 1 mol/l produced a flattening of the 5-hydroxytryptamine concentration-response curve but did not depress noradrenaline responses (pIC50 4.7). The pIC50 for spiperone was 8.0. DOI (10–100 mol/l) had no detectable agonist action but at concentrations of 0.01 and 0.1 mol/l it acted as an antagonist. Equilibration with the receptors occurred over 2 h. DOI (0.01 mol/l) depressed 5-hydroxytryptamine but not noradrenaline responses; higher concentrations of DOI also depressed noradrenaline responses. The pharmacological profile of the 5-hydroxytryptamine receptor mediating depolarization of spinal and facial motoneurones suggests that it belongs to the 5-HT1C-5-HT2, group of 5-hydroxytryptamine receptors but is not identical to 5-HT1C or the 5-HT2 CNS binding sites. Alternatively, the response might arise from a mixed population of 5-HT1-like and 5-HT2 receptors. Send offprint requests to D. I. Wallis at the above address  相似文献   

6.
Summary The effects of the classical dopamine DA2-receptor agonist quinpirole (LY 171555) and the recently characterized DA2-receptor agonist, carmoxirole (EMD 45609), on neurotransmission in rat isolated kidney were investigated. After preincubation with 3H-noradrenaline, the renal nerves were electrically stimulated. The stimulation induced (S-I) outflow of radioactivity was taken as an index of noradrenaline release. Quinpirole (0.3 mol/l) inhibited S-I outflow of radioactivity and pressor responses to renal nerve stimulation (RNS) at 1 Hz. Both effects of quinpirole were blocked by the DA2-receptor antagonist S(–)-sulpiride (10 mol/l). The 1, 2-adrenoceptor antagonist phentolamine (1 mol/l) did not block the inhibitory effect of quinpirole. Carmoxirole (0.003 and 0.03 mol/l) did not alter and carmoxirole (0.3 mol/l) even enhanced S-I outflow of radioactivity, however, pressor responses to RNS were markedly reduced by carmoxirole (0.003–0.3 mol/l). Pressor responses to RNS were also markedly reduced by the 1-adrenoceptor antagonist prazosin (0.1 mol/l). Carmoxirole (0.3 mol/l), prazosin (0.1 mol/l) and phentolamine (1 mol/l) totally abolished pressor responses to exogenous noradrenaline (0.05 mol/l). In contrast, quinpirole (0.3 mol/l) did not alter pressor responses to exogenous noradrenaline (0.05 mol/l). Furthermore, carmoxirole (0.003–0.3 mol/l) markedly reduced pressor responses induced by the 1-adrenoceptor agonist methoxamine (1 mol/l) but even the highest concentration of carmoxirole (0.3 mol/l) had no effect on pressor responses induced by bolus injections of either neuropeptide Y (1.5 ng) or angiotensin II (1 ng). Phentolamine (1 mol/l) by itself markedly enhanced S-1 outflow of radioactivity and pressor responses to RNS were virtually unchanged. In the presence of phentolamine carmoxirole (0.03 and 0.3 mol/l) and quinpirole inhibited S-I outflow of radioactivity and pressor responses to RNS. Phentolamine resistant pressor responses to RNS were also inhibited by the P2X-receptor desensitizing agent , -methylene adenosine triphosphate (mATP, 1 mol/l), which by itself in the presence of phentolamine did not alter S-I outflow of radioactivity. The inhibitory effects of carmoxirole (0.3 mol/l) in the presence of phentolame (1mol/l) were antagonized by S(–)-sulpiride (10 mol/l). The data suggest that activation of prejunctional DA2-receptors by quinpirole inhibits noradrenaline release and thereby reduces pressor response to RNS at 1 Hz in rat isolated kidney. Carmoxirole activates prejunctional inhibitory DA2-receptors, but this effect is masked by simultaneous blockade of inhibitory prejunctional -adrenoceptors. Pressor responses to RNS at 1 Hz in rat isolated kidney are largely due to neuronally released noradrenaline whereas phentolamine resistant pressor responses to RNS at 1 Hz are most likely due to ATP, which is co-released with noradrenaline. Carmoxirole inhibits pressor responses to RNS at 1 Hz as well as pressor responses induced by either exogenous noradrenaline or methoxamine by blocking postjunctional 1-adrenoceptors. In addition carmoxirole and quinpirole seem to block phentolamine resistant pressor responses by inhibiting ATP release through activation of prejunctional DA2-receptors. Send offprint requests to L. C. Rump at the above address  相似文献   

7.
Summary In rabbit jejunal arteries, the membrane potential of single smooth muscle cells decreased on the application of noradrenaline 3 mol/1. LY 171555 1 mol/1 did not change, whereas SKF 38393 10 mol/1 reversed the effect of noradrenaline. When prostaglandin F2 (PGF2) was used to evoke depolarization in the presence of prazosin 0.1 mol/1, rauwolscine 1 mol/1 and propranolol 1 mol/1, both SKF 38393 10 mol/1 and dopamine 10 mol/1 repolarized the membrane. SCH 23390 1 mol/1 antagonized the effects of SKF 38393 10 mol/1 and dopamine 10 mol/1. Thus, the change in membrane potential is mediated by a DA1-recep-tor.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Modulation of acetylcholine release was studied in slices of the rabbit hippocampus preincubated with 3H-choline and then continuously superfused with a medium containing 10 mol/l hemicholinium-3. Electrical field stimulation of the superfused slices elicited an increase in tritium outflow, which was tetrodotoxin-sensitive and largely calcium-dependent. Stimulus-evoked acetylcholine release in the rabbit hippocampal slices was modulated by presynaptic muscarinic autoreceptors, as has been shown previously for the rat hippocampus. Drugs with affinity for - and or -adrenoceptors did not affect the evoked overflow of tritium from rabbit hippocampal slices. In contrast, the dopamine receptor agonist apomorphine (0.1 or 1 mol/l) and exogenous dopamine (1 or 10 mol/l) significantly reduced the evoked outflow by about 10 or 20%, respectively. This effect was antagonized by haloperidol (0.01 mol/l) but not by phentolamine (1 mol/l). Attempts to enhance (using nomifensine 10 mol/l) or reduce (using haloperidol, up to 1 mol/l; or bretylium, 1 mmol/l for 5 min) endogenous dopaminergic transmission in the hippocampal slices did not affect stimulation evoked acetylcholine release. In conclusion, presynaptic dopamine receptors modulating acetylcholine release are present in the rabbit hippocampus, but they seem not to be of physiological significance.  相似文献   

9.
Summary In rat vas deferens, Evans blue 100 M increased contractions elicited by high K+ and by noradrenaline but markedly reduced contractions elicited by the P2X-purinoceptor-selective agonist ,-methylene ATP (3 M). The concentration-response curve of ,-methylene ATP was shifted to the right by Evans blue 30 M and the maximal contraction was increased. In tissues incubated with nifedipine 10 M, Evans blue 100 M tended to increase the residual contraction elicited by noradrenaline and abolished the residual response to ,-methylene ATP (3 M). The concentration-response curve of ,-methylene ATP was progressively shifted to the right by increasing concentrations of Evans blue in the presence of nifedipine; maximal contractions were increased by Evans blue 10 and 30 but not 100 M. From the shifts to the right caused by Evans blue 30 M, apparent pKB values of 5.9 (no nifedipine) and 6.0 (nifedipine present) were calculated. It is concluded that Evans blue blocks P2X-purinoceptors in rat vas deferens and in addition causes a non-receptor-specific enhancement of contractions.Correspondence to: R. Bültmann at the above address  相似文献   

10.
Summary Possible antagonist effects of phentolamine at presynaptic serotonin autoreceptors were studied in slices of the occipito-parietal cortices of the rabbit and the rat. The slices were preincubated with 3H-serotonin and then superfused and stimulated electrically with single pulses or pulse trains. Nitroquipazine 1 mol/l, a compound that inhibits the high affinity neuronal uptake of serotonin, was present in the superfusion medium in all one pulse-experiments as well as in experiments in which the effect of unlabelled serotonin was examined.In rabbit cortical slices, unlabelled serotonin reduced the single pulse-evoked overflow of tritium. Its concentrationresponse curve was not changed by the selective 2-adrenoceptor antagonist idazoxan 1 mol/l but was shifted to the right by phentolamine 1 and 10 mol/l. Phentolamine 10 mol/l also shifted to the right the concentration-inhibition curve of the selective 5-HT1-receptor agonist 5-carboxamidotryptamine. When the slices were stimulated by trains of 30 pulses at 3 Hz, phentolamine 1 and 10 mol/l but not 0.1 mol/l increased the evoked overflow of tritium, the maximal increase amounting to 178%; its effect was enhanced in the presence of nitroquipazine 1 mol/l plus idazoxan 10 mol/l (a drug combination that, when given alone, slightly increased the evoked overflow of tritium). The serotonin receptor antagonist metitepin at concentrations of 0.01–1 mol/l also increased the overflow of tritium elicited by 30 pulses/3 Hz, the maximal increase amounting to 280%; its effect was potentiated in the presence of nitroquipazine 1 mol/l plus idazoxan 10 mol/l but was abolished or almost abolished in the presence of nitroquipazine 1 mol/l plus phentolamine 10 mol/l (a drug combination that, given alone, greatly increased the evoked overflow of tritium). When slices were stimulated by trains of 360 pulses at 3 Hz, there was no apparent antagonism of phentolamine 10 mol/l against the inhibitory effect of unlabelled serotonin. In rat brain cortex slices, unlabelled serotonin reduced the overflow of tritium elicited by 4 pulses delivered at 100 Hz. Again, phentolamine 10 mol/l shifted the concentration-response curve to the right.It is concluded that phentolamine blocks presynaptic serotonin autoreceptors in rabbit and rat brain cortex with pA2 values of 6.44 and 5.95, respectively. Previous failures to detect the antagonistic effect against exogenous agonists were probably due to stimulation conditions that led to marked endogenous autoinhibition of serotonin release. At least the major part of the increase by phentolamine of the release of serotonin is due to autoreceptor blockade rather than blockade of the presynaptic a2-adrenoceptors at the cortical serotoninergic axons.Send offprint requests to N. Limberger at the above address  相似文献   

11.
Summary In the guinea-pig terminal ileum a maximally effective concentration of prostacyclin (PGI2) (1 ol/l) induced contractions that were partially resistant to tetrodotoxin (TTX) 0.1 mol/l, to low temperature (20°C) and to atropine (30 nmol/l). Half maximum contractions evoked by PGI2 (20 nmol/l) were abolished by TTX and by low temperature, which did not modify the response to exogenous acetylcholine (ACh), as well as by atropine. Procaine (5–500 ol/l) caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of contractions induced by PGI2 (20 nmol/l and 1 mol/l) and by equieffective concentrations of ACh (20 nmol/l and 0.4 ol/l, respectively). The order of magnitude for this inhibition was ACh 20 nmol/l = PGI2 20 nmol/l > PGI21 mol/l > ACh 0.4 mol/l. In preparations exposed to TTX or to low temperature procaine (50 mol/l) did not affect the residual response to PGI2 (1 mol/l). Quercetin (1 and 5 ol/l) inhibited the effect of PGI2 and, at higher concentrations, it also caused partial depression of the responses to ACh. Quercetin did not alter TTX-resistant and low temperature-resistant contractions induced by PGI2 1 mol/l. Carbonyl cyanide-trifluoromethoxyphenyl hydrazone (FCCP) (0.1–1 ol/l) reduced the effect of PGI2 and of ACh to approximately the same extent and inhibited the residual response to PGI2 1 mol/l in preparations treated with TTX or expressed to low temperature. The present results show that PGI2, besides acting on cholinergic neurons, also exerts a direct effect on smooth muscle cells and FCCP can be used to block this effect. In contrast procaine and quercetin selectively inhibit the ACh-mediated component of PGI2 action. Send offprint requests to R. M. Gaion  相似文献   

12.
Summary The effect of the calcium entry blocker flunarizine on a high-potassium induced increase of intracellular free calcium was studied. The experiments were done with neurons isolated from rat dorsal root ganglia and loaded with the calcium-sensitive dye fura-2. The increase of calcium induced by 60 mmol/1 potassium was abolished after removal of extracellular calcium, was reversibly reduced by 50 mol/l cadmium (76% inhibition), 50 mol/1 nickel (25% inhibition) and 10 mol/1 nifedipine (18°10 inhibition), and reversibly increased after removal of extracellular sodium (26% increase). The potassium induced increase of intracellular calcium is, therefore, mediated by transmembrane calcium influx, probably to a large extent through cadmium-sensitive calcium channels. Flunarizine (5 min incubation followed 1 min wash-out) reduced the amplitude of the high-potassium induced calcium increase in a dose-dependent manner (K d = 370 ± 100 nmol/l; mean ± SEM; n = 8), causing complete inhibition at a concentration of 10 mol/1 in the majority of cells. Flunarizine ( 1 mol/1) caused a reversible increase of the resting level of intracellular calcium in some cells, an effect which disappeared in the absence of extracellular calcium. The drug (1 mol/1 had no influence on the time course of recovery of intracellular calcium subsequent to a rise induced by high-potassium or by the calcium ionophore A23187. It is concluded that flunarizine acts as an inhibitor of depolarization-mediated calcium influx. At a concentration of 1 mol/1, the drug presumably has no effect on cellular calcium extrusion and/or sequestration mechanisms. Correspondence to L. Leybaert at the above address  相似文献   

13.
Summary To see whether the Na/H antiporter plays a role in digitalis cardiotoxicity, we investigated the influence of modulators of Na/H exchange on the toxic effects of ouabain in isolated, paced (0.4 Hz) rat left atria. Ouabain (1 mmol/l) caused a transient positive inotropic effect followed by toxic events, including a complete loss of developed force and a gradual increase in resting force. In the presence of hexamethyleneamiloride (3 and 10 mo1/l), an inhibitor of Na/H exchange, ouabain (1 mmol/l) caused a sustained positive inotropic effect without toxicity. By contrast, phenylephrine (100 mol/ 1) an -adrenoceptor agonist reported to stimulate the antiporter, hastened the development of ouabain's toxicity. Neither ouabain, at a subtoxic concentration (650 ol/l), nor phenylephrine (100 mol/l) affected diastolic force, but in their combined presence, a substantial contracture developed and twitch contractions disappeared. Phenylephrine (30 or 100 mol/l) or adrenaline (30 mol/l), in the presence of a -adrenoceptor antagonist, increased the intracellular pH by up to 0.15 pH unit, as measured using ion-selective microelectrodes in quiescent preparations. This effect on pH1 was prevented by hexamethyleneamiloride (10 mol/l). Consistent with phenylephrine's ability to stimulate Na+ influx via the Na/H antiporter, phenylephrine (100 mol/l) increased intracellular Na+ activity by about 3 mmol/l in ouabain (650 mol/l)-treated atria. These findings indicate that modulators of Na/H exchange affect the cardiotoxicity of digitalis glycosides and imply that the stimulation of myocardial -adrenoceptors may aggravate digitalis toxicity.This work was conducted in part under the auspices of the Association for US/French Biomedical Cooperation Send offprint requests to S. M. Vogel at the above address  相似文献   

14.
Summary Slices of the rabbit caudate nucleus were preincubated with 3H-dopamine or 3H-choline and then superfused with label-free medium. Release of 3H-dopamine and 3H-acetylcholine was elicited by either electrical stimulation at 8 (in one series 2) Hz, or an increase in the K+ concentration by 50 mmol/l, or addition of L-glutamate 1 mmol/l. Verapamil 1 mol/l, diltiazem 1 and 10 mol/l, and ryosidine 1 mol/l failed to the reduce the electrically-, K+- and glutamate-evoked overflow of tritium. Verapamil 1 mol/l and diltiazem 10 mol/l also failed to reduce the electricallyevoked overflow (2 Hz) when dopamine receptors, neuronal dopamine uptake, and neuronal choline uptake were blocked by domperidone, nomifensine and hemicholinium, respectively. Inhibition of the evoked overflow of tritium was only obtained when concentrations were increased to verapamil 10 mol/l, diltiazem 100 mol/l and ryosidine 10 mol/l. The inhibition was generally small. It was more evident for slices preincubated with 3H-choline than for those preincubated with 3H-dopamine, because in the latter verapamil, diltiazem and (much less) ryosidine accelerated the basal efflux of tritium. The inhibition of the K+-evoked overflow of tritium was probably due to blockade of Ca2+ channels because this overflow was Ca2+-dependent but tetrodotoxin-resistant. In contrast, the inhibition of the electrically- and glutamateevoked overflow possibly involved blockade of Na+ channels as well. The results indicate that three calcium antagonists from different chemical classes are very weak inhibitors of Ca2+ entry into, and hence transmitter release from, the terminal axons of central dopaminergic and cholinergic neurones. The function of the high affinity calcium antagonist binding sites that have been identified in brain remains unknown.  相似文献   

15.
Effects of indomethacin, N-nitro-L-arginine (NNA) and naloxone, and of pretreatment with cyclophosphamide (CY), on the interleukin (IL)-I\ induced inhibition of exocytotic noradrenaline release were investigated in the isolated, vascularly perfused spleen of the rat. Neurotransmitter release was evoked by perivascular electrical stimulation (4 Hz) and the overflow of endogenous noradrenaline was determined by HPLC with electrochemical detection.Perfusion of the spleen with Tyrode's solution containing IL-1\ (100 pg/ml) for 90 min caused an inhibition of the stimulation-evoked noradrenaline overflow which persisted for at least 20 min after washout of the IL. The evoked overflow was reduced in the presence of NNA 30 mol/l, but remained unaffected by indomethacin 3 mol/l, naloxone 0.1 mol/l or treatment of the rats with CY (250 mg/kg). The opioid agonist etorphine 10 mol/1 inhibited the evoked overflow of noradrenaline and this effect was prevented by naloxone 0.1 mol/1. The inhibition of evoked overflow by IL-1\ was not affected by indomethacin but was reduced or even prevented in the presence of NNA or naloxone, or after lymphocyte depletion of spleens by CY.The results are compatible with the idea that in the rat spleen exocytotic noradrenaline release is accompanied by a concomitant secretion of a nitric oxide (NO)-like compound which, in turn, reinforces noradrenaline release, and that the release can be inhibited via prejunctional opioid receptors. The IL-1\ induced inhibition of evoked release appears to be a complex process which involves as one of many steps a decrease of the facilitatory NO-like compound and the release of endogenous opioids probably from spleen lymphocytes.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The aim of the present study was to investigate -adrenoceptor modulation of noradrenaline release from sympathetic nerves in superfused cortical kidney slices of 4-week-old spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and age-matched controls (WKY). After preincubation with 3H-noradrenaline the kidney slices were electrically stimulated in superfusion chambers. The stimulation induced (S-I) outflow of radioactivity was mainly composed of unmetabolized 3H-noradrenaline in both strains and thus taken as an index of noradrenaline release. There was a frequency-dependent (1.25–20 Hz) increase in the S-1 outflow of radioactivity. At all stimulation frequencies tested S-I outflow of radioactivity was similar or even slightly lower in SHR than in WKY kidney slices in either the absence or presence of cocaine (10 mol/l). The non-selective -adrenoceptor agonists isoprenaline (0.l gmol/1) and adrenaline (0.01 and 0.1 mol/l) enhanced S-I outflow of radioactivity. The facilitatory effects of isoprenaline (0.1 mol/l) and adrenaline (0.1 mol/l) were blocked by the selective 2-adrenoceptor antagonist ICI 118551 (0.1 mol/l) but not by the selective 1-adrenoceptor antagonist atenolol (0.3 mol/l). The cell-permeable CAMP analogue 8-bromo-cAMP (300 mol/l) enhanced S-1 outflow of radioactivity to a similar extent in both SHR and WKY kidney slices. A combination of 8-bromo-cAMP (300 mol/l) and adrenaline (0.1 mol/l) did not enhance S-1 outflow of radioactivity to a greater extent than 8-bromo cAMP (300 mol/l) alone in both strains. However, the facilitatory effects of isoprenaline (0.1 mol/l) and adrenaline (0.1 mol/l) but not that of adrenaline (0.01 mol/l) were significantly greater in SHR than in WKY. The results suggest that stimulation of prejunctional 2-adrenoceptors by adrenaline even in the absence of a-adrenoceptor blockade enhances noradrenaline release in kidney cortex of young SHR and WKY. This 2-adrenoceptor mediated effect may possibly be dependent on cAMP formation. The greater facilitatory effects of isoprenaline (0.1 mol/l) and adrenaline (0.1 mol/l) in SHR as compared to WKY are in accord with receptor binding studies which show a higher density of 2-adrenoceptors in SHR than in WKY kidney cortex.Abbreviations SHR Spontaneously hypertensive rats - WKY WistarKyoto rats - cAMP 3-5-cyclic adenosine monophosphate - S-I stimulation induced Send offprint requests to: L. C. Rump  相似文献   

17.
Summary In urethane-anaesthetised rats intraventricular (i.c.v.) injections of histamine (0.1–10.0 g) elicited dose-related rises in both the resting blood pressure and heart rate. These cardiovascular effects of histamine were antagonised in a dose-dependent manner by i.c.v. pretreatments with the histamine H1-receptor antagonists mepyramine (10, 50 and 100 g) and diphenylpyraline (100 and 200 g). Pretreatment with the histamine H2-receptor antagonist metiamide (100 and 200 g i.c.v.) failed to modify either of the responses. A dose-related antagonism of the hypertensive response to histamine i.c.v. was elicited by phentolamine (100 and 200 g i.c.v.) but the positive chronotropic effect was not modified by this pretreatment. The cardiovascular responses to histamine i.c.v. were abolished by mecamylamine (5.0 mg/kg i.v.) and greatly reduced by 6-hydroxydopamine (3×250 g i.c.v.), but only the tachycardia was significantly modified by atropine (100 g i.c.v.) and propranolol (1 mg/kg i.v.). Propranolol (100 g i.c.v.), bilateral vagotomy, or acute bilateral adrenal demedullation failed to modify the cardiovascular responses to histamine i.c.v. The results suggest that histamine is able to modify the resting blood pressure and heart rate by independent central modes of action, which involve central adrenergic and cholinergic mechanisms.Preliminary findings of this study were presented at the Autumn meeting of the British Pharmacological Society (Finch and Hicks, 1975).  相似文献   

18.
Summary Alinidine (ST 567, N-Allyl-Clonidine) exerted concentration-dependent negative chronotropic effects in isolated, spontaneously-beating sinus node cells and Purkinje fibres of guinea pigs and in ventricular strips of chick embryonic myocardium. Reduction of beat frequency by 30% was found after addition of 8.6 mol/l alinidine in the former. A chronotropic effect was not seen during Ba2+-induced automaticity or triggered activity in guinea-pig papillary muscles and in enzymatically disaggregated cells of embryonic chick myocardium, which lose the -adrenoceptor responsiveness of the intact embryonic ventricle. In contrast to alinidine, D 600 showed very pronounced and quinidine minor negative chronotropic effects in these latter experiments. Reduction of excitability, rate of rise of the action potential and velocity of repolarization as well as prolongation of the refractory period were seen after applications of very high concentrations of alinidine (285 mol/l). In electrically-driven atria isometric peak tension was only slightly changed (increased by 85.5 mol/l, decreased by 285 mol/l) but it was reduced (to 36.8%) by alinidine (85.5 mol/l) in papillary muscles. Both in atria and in papillary muscles, the maximum rate of rise of the action potential was unchanged by alinidine up to 85.5 mol/l and the slight reduction following 285 mol/l alinidine application was independent of the rate of stimulation. The present findings confirm the selectivity of the bradycardic effects of alinidine which has a main mode of action different to that of membrane stabilizing compounds or inhibitors of the slow inward current.Supported in part by the Austrian Research Fund (2936)  相似文献   

19.
Summary The effects of (±)N-allyl-normetazocine on the release of acetylcholine from different areas of guinea-pig and rat brain were investigated. 1. The drug did not modify the electrically (2 Hz) evoked tritium efflux from guinea-pig cerebral cortex, thalamus and caudate nucleus slices, preloaded with 3H-choline 0.1 mol/l and superfused with Krebs solution containing hemicholinium-3 10 mol/l. 2. (±)N-allyl-normetazocine 10 mol/l. enhanced the evoked 3H efflux from guinea-pig brain slices superfused with Krebs solution containing physostigmine 30 mol/l or oxotremorine 0.3 -1 gmol/l; the effect was naloxone-insensitive and was abolished by atropine 0.15 mol/l, but not by pirenzepine 1 mol/l. 3. (±)N-allyl-normetazocine 5 mol/l enhanced the electrically evoked release of endogenous acetylcholine as well, in a naloxone-insensitive way. 4. Both (±) and (+)N-allyl-normetazocine were without effect on 3H efflux from rat caudate nucleus slices electrically stimulated at 0.2 Hz frequency, after preloading with 3H-choline and during superfusion with hemicholinium-3. 5. The results are discussed in view of the antimuscarinic properties of the drug. Send offprint requests to A. Siniscalchi  相似文献   

20.
Summary 3H-Noradrenaline release in the rabbit hippocampus and its possible modulation via presynaptic dopamine receptors was studied. Hippocampal slices were preincubated with 3H-noradrenaline, continuously superfused in the presence of cocaine (30 mol/l) and subjected to electrical field stimulation. The electrically evoked tritium over-flow from the slices was reduced by 0.1 and 1 mol/l dopamine and apomorphine, but significantly enhanced by 10 mol/l apomorphine or by 0.1 and 1 mol/l bromocriptine. If the 2-adrenoceptor antagonist yohimbine (0.1 mol/l) was present throughout superfusion, the inhibitory effects of dopamine and apomorphine were more pronounced and even 10 mol/l apomorphine and 1 mol/l bromocriptine inhibited noradrenaline release. Qualitatively similar observations were made in the presence of another 2-antagonist, idazoxane (0.1 mol/l). In the presence of the D2-receptor antagonist domperidone (0.1 mol/l) the inhibitory effects of dopamine were almost abolished, whereas both apomorphine (>1 mol/l) and bromocriptine (>0.01 mol/l) greatly facilitated noradrenaline release. The D2-receptor agonist LY 171555 (0.1 and 1 mol/l) significantly reduced the evoked noradrenaline release whereas the D1-selective agonist SK & F 38393 was ineffective at similar concentrations. The effects of LY 171555 were abolished in the presence of domperidone (0.1 mol/l) but remained unchanged in the presence of yohimbine or idazoxane (0.1 mol/l, each).At 1 mol/l the D2-receptor antagonists domperidone and (-)sulpiride significantly increased the evoked noradrenaline release by about 10%. However, at this concentration, domperidone (but not (-)sulpiride) affected also basal tritium outflow. Bulbocapnine and the preferential D1-receptor antagonists SCH 23390 enhanced the evoked noradrenaline release already at 0.1 mol/l. Their marked facilitatory effects (50 to 60% increase at 1 mol/l) were reduced in the presence of idazoxane (0.1 mol/l) and almost abolished in the presence of 0.1 mol/l yohimbine, whereas the increase due to 1 mol/l (-)sulpiride persisted under these conditions.The evoked tritium efflux from rabbit hippocampal slices preincubated with 3H-serotonin was not affected by dopamine receptor agonists.From our results we conclude that hippocampal noradrenaline, but not serotonin release, is modulated via D2-dopamine receptors. In addition, our results provide evidence for more or less pronounced 2-adrenoceptor agonistic properties of dopamine and 2-adrenoceptor antagonistic properties of apomorphine, bromocriptine, SCH 23390 and bulbocapnine in this noradrenaline release model from CNS tissue.  相似文献   

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