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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (
pertussis
)
19,595
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acetylcholine has long been known to excite sympathetic neurons via M1 muscarinic receptors through an inhibition of M-currents. Nevertheless, it remained controversial whether activation of muscarinic receptors is also sufficient to trigger noradrenaline release from sympathetic neurons. In primary cultures of rat superior cervical ganglia, the muscarinic agonist oxotremorine M inhibited M-currents with half-maximal effects at 1 microM and induced the release of previously incorporated [3H]noradrenaline with half-maximal effects at 10 microM. This latter action was not affected by the nicotinic antagonist mecamylamine which, however, abolished currents through nicotinic receptors elicited by high oxotremorine M concentrations. Ablation of the signalling cascades linked to inhibitory G proteins by
pertussis
toxin potentiated the release stimulating effect of oxotremorine M, and the half-maximal concentration required to stimulate noradrenaline release was decreased to 3 microM. Pirenzepine antagonized the inhibition of M-currents and the induction of release by oxotremorine M with identical apparent affinity, and both effects were abolished by the muscarinic toxin 7. These results indicate that one muscarinic receptor subtype, namely M1, mediates these two effects.
Retigabine
, which enhances M-currents, abolished the release induced by oxotremorine M, but left electrically induced release unaltered. Moreover, retigabine shifted the voltage-dependent activation of M-currents by about 20 mV to more negative potentials and caused 20 mV hyperpolarisations of the membrane potential. In the absence of retigabine, oxotremorine M depolarised the neurons and elicited action potential discharges in 8 of 23 neurons; in its presence, oxotremorine M still caused equal depolarisations, but always failed to trigger action potentials. Action potential waveforms caused by current injection were not affected by retigabine. These results indicate that the inhibition of M-currents is the basis for the stimulation of transmitter release from sympathetic neurons via M1 muscarinic receptors.
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PMID:Activation of M1 muscarinic receptors triggers transmitter release from rat sympathetic neurons through an inhibition of M-type K+ channels. 1455 21
KCNQ2 and KCNQ3 subunits encode for the muscarinic-regulated current (I(KM)), a sub-threshold voltage-dependent K+ current regulating neuronal excitability. In this study, we have investigated the involvement of I(KM) in dopamine (DA) release from rat striatal synaptosomes evoked by elevated extracellular K+ concentrations ([K+]e) and by muscarinic receptor activation. [3H]dopamine ([3H]DA) release triggered by 9 mmol/L [K+]e was inhibited by the I(KM) activator retigabine (0.01-30 micromol/L; Emax = 54.80 +/- 3.85%; IC50 = 0.50 +/- 0.36 micromol/L). The I(KM) blockers tetraethylammonium (0.1-3 mmol/L) and XE-991 (0.1-30 micromol/L) enhanced K+-evoked [3H]DA release and prevented retigabine-induced inhibition of depolarization-evoked [3H]DA release.
Retigabine
-induced inhibition of K+-evoked [3H]DA release was also abolished by synaptosomal entrapment of blocking anti-KCNQ2 polyclonal antibodies, an effect prevented by antibody pre-absorption with the KCNQ2 immunizing peptide. Furthermore, the cholinergic agonist oxotremorine (OXO) (1-300 micromol/L) potentiated 9 mmol/L [K+]e-evoked [3H]DA release (Emax = 155 +/- 9.50%; EC50 = 25 +/- 1.80 micromol/L). OXO (100 micromol/L)-induced [3H]DA release enhancement was competitively inhibited by pirenzepine (1-10 nmol/L) and abolished by the M3-preferring antagonist 4-diphenylacetoxy N-methylpiperidine methiodide (1 micromol/L), but was unaffected by the M1-selective antagonist MT-7 (10-100 nmol/L) or by
Pertussis
toxin (1.5-3 microg/mL), which uncouples M2- and M4-mediated responses. Finally, OXO-induced potentiation of depolarization-induced [3H]DA release was not additive to that produced by XE-991 (10 micromol/L), was unaffected by retigabine (10 micromol/L), and was abolished by synaptosomal entrapment of anti-KCNQ2 antibodies. Collectively, these findings indicate that, in rat striatal nerve endings, I(KM) channels containing KCNQ2 subunits regulate depolarization-induced DA release and that I(KM) suppression is involved in the reinforcement of depolarization-induced DA release triggered by the activation of pre-synaptic muscarinic heteroreceptors.
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PMID:Involvement of KCNQ2 subunits in [3H]dopamine release triggered by depolarization and pre-synaptic muscarinic receptor activation from rat striatal synaptosomes. 1743 47