Role of Autoinhibitory Feedback in Cardiac Sympathetic Transmission

Abstract
The relationship between two indices of transmitter release measured simultaneously and the frequency of 4 field pulses (0.125–2 Hz) were obtained from superfused guinea pig right atria after labelling with 3H-noradrenaline. The relationships between 3H-efflux or rate responses and frequency were hyperbolic. Autoinhibitory feedback did not play a role since phentolamine (1 μM) did not alter the 3H-efflux or rate responses to 4 field pulses that gave 50–60% of the maximum rate response. In the presence of neuronal uptake block (desipramine (0.1 μM) phentolamine enhanced 3H-efflux and rate responses to 4 field pulses at all frequencies. In the absence of desipramine prolonged trains of field pulses (8–12 pulses) at low frequency (0.25 Hz) were not sufficient to activate autoinhibitory feedback. At 2 Hz phentolamine enhanced both responses at 12 field pulses. We conclude that in the right atrium autoinhibitory feedback plays little role in the modulation of transmitter release at levels of stimulation that cause 50–60% of maximum tissue response. The presence of neuronal uptake inhibition or high stimulus strengths are necessary to evoke autoinhibitory feedback.