Abstract
Responses to substance P application were studied with intracellular recording techniques in in vitro preparations of trigeminal root ganglion neurons of guinea pigs. Perfusion of substance P in micromolar concentrations markedly depolarized neurons and reduced their input conductances. Also, the threshold for spikes evoked by injections of depolarizing current pulses was decreased. Single electrode voltage-clamp recordings showed that substance P increased inward, and decreased outward currents evoked by hyperpolarizing voltage steps from holding potentials near rest. Depolarizing responses to substance P were attenuated in Na+-deficient solutions. The excitatory actions of this endogenous peptide on the perikarya of primary sensory neurons give rise to the possibility of physiological actions of substance P at multiple sites in the trigeminal system.