The effect of intravenously administered gamma-aminobutyric acid on afferent fiber polarization. |
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Authors: | R A Levy |
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Institution: | Department of Physiology, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria 3168, Australia |
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Abstract: | (1) The effect of intravenously administered gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) on afferent fiber polarization in the feline spinal cord was ascertained from fluctuations induced in the DC level of dorsal root filaments. (2) A dose-related depolarization of the filament, with a concomitant reduction in the magnitude of the dorsal root potential, was observed after 50 and 100 mg/kg GABA. (3) GABA also depolarized filaments of preparations in which interneuronal activity was suppressed by pretreatment with tetrodotoxin. Since the magnitude of the depolarization induced in these preparations was equal to that observed in nonpretreated animals, it is likely that the depolarization in the latter preparations reflects a direct effect on afferent terminals or fibers rather than an action on interneurons. (4) GABA failed to depolarize filaments in animals pretreated with bicuculline. This suggests that intravenously administered GABA interacted with receptors that are identical with or similar to those involved in neurally evoked primary afferent depolarization (PAD). (5) The direct depolarization of afferent fibers by intravenous GABA and the blockade thereof by bicuculline are characteristics compatible with those of the endogenous axo-axonic transmitter operating in pathways mediating neurally evoked PAD. These data, therefore, support the involvement of GABA at this synapse in the mammalian spinal cord. |
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