Is cyclic guanosine monophosphate the internal 'second messenger' for cholinergic actions on central neurons?

Abstract
The most consistent effects produced by intracellular injections of guanosine 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) (but not 5′-guanosine 5′-monophosphate in spinal motoneurons of cats are a rise in membrane conductance, acceleration in time course of spike potentials, and accentuation of the post-spike hyperpolarization. Associated changes in resting potential are smaller, less constant, and more often in the depolarizing than hyperpolarizing direction. cGMP tends to increase electrical excitability but reduces excitatory post-synaptic potential amplitudes. Most of the effects of intracellular cGMP are quite different from, or indeed opposite to, those of either extra- or intracellular applications of acetylcholine and therefore not consistent with the proposal that cGMP is the internal mediator of muscarinic actions.

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