Omega conotoxin and prejunctional modulation of the biphasic response of the rat isolated urinary bladder to single pulse electrical field stimulation
- 1 October 1991
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Autonomic Pharmacology
- Vol. 11 (5) , 295-304
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-8673.1991.tb00253.x
Abstract
1. Single pulse electrical field stimulation (EFS) produces a biphasic response of muscle strips of the rat isolated urinary bladder consisting of an early and a late contraction which were atropine-resistant and atropine-sensitive, respectively. Repeated application of desensitizing doses of the P2 purinoceptor agonist, alpha, beta-methylene ATP (mATP) inhibited the early response while leaving unaffected the late component. 2. Omega conotoxin (CTX, 0.1 microM) inhibited both the early and the late response either in control conditions or after enhancement by physostigmine (0.1 microM). The effect of CTX was, in both cases, more pronounced on the late than the early response to EFS. CTX (0.1 microM) failed to affect contraction produced by ATP or acetylcholine at concentrations (0.3 mM and 0.5 microM) which produced a response similar to that to EFS. 3. The effect of physostigmine was more intense for the late than the early response and was abolished by atropine. In the presence of CTX, physostigmine enhanced both the early and the late components of the mechanical response to EFS. 4. Nifedipine (0.1-1 microM) reduced to a similar extent both the early and late responses. Bay K 8644 (1 microM) produced a marked enhancement of the response to EFS, which, however, did not have a distinct late peak. In the presence of Bay K 8644, either atropine (3 microM) or tetrodotoxin (1 microM) had minor inhibitory effects indicating the myogenic origin of the response. 5. Neurokinin A (0.1-1 nM) enhanced both the early and late responses to EFS without affecting the contraction produced by exogenous acetylcholine or ATP. A consistent potentiation was evident also in the presence of CTX and for the early response, in the presence of atropine. Clonidine (3 microM) inhibited the response to EFS either in the absence or the presence of physostigmine. The inhibitory effect of clonidine, shown previously to depend upon activation of prejunctional alpha 2-adrenoceptors, was still observed in presence of CTX or atropine. 6. It is concluded that CTX-sensitive voltage dependent calcium channels play a more important role in determining the cholinergic rather than the non-cholinergic, putatively purinergic, component of the biphasic response of the rat bladder to single pulse EFS. The action of CTX is likely to be exerted on N-type rather than L-type (dihydropyridine-sensitive) calcium channels. Prejunctional modulation (enhancement by neurokinin A, inhibition by clonidine) occurs even in the presence of CTX-sensitive channels blockade.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- The effects of Bay K 8644 and nifedipine on the responses of rat urinary bladder to electrical field stimulation, β,γ‐methylene ATP and acetylcholineBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1990
- Contractile responses of smooth muscle strips from rat and guinea‐pig urinary bladder to transmural stimulation: effects of atropine and α,β‐methylene ATPBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1990
- CommunicationsBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1989
- Electrical and mechanical responses of guinea‐pig bladder muscle to nerve stimulationBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1989
- Presynaptic α2-adrenoceptor and κ-opiate receptor occupancy promotes closure of neuronal (N-type) calcium channelsEuropean Journal of Pharmacology, 1989
- Differential susceptibility of cholinergic and noncholinergic neurogenic responses to calcium channel blockers and low Ca2+ medium in rat urinary bladderBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1989
- ω-Conotoxin GVIA and pharmacological modulation of hippocampal noradrenaline releaseEuropean Journal of Pharmacology, 1988
- Single‐channel recordings of three types of calcium channels in chick sensory neurones.The Journal of Physiology, 1987
- EFFECTS OF ADENOSINE 5′‐TRIPHOSPHATE (ATP) AND β‐γ‐METHYLENE ATP ON THE RAT URINARY BLADDERBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1979
- PURINERGIC INNERVATION OF THE GUINEA‐PIG URINARY BLADDERBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1978