Nitric Oxide Inhibits Smooth Muscle Responses Evoked by Cholinergic Nerve Stimulation in the Guinea Pig Gastric Fundus.
- 1 January 2001
- journal article
- Published by Physiological Society of Japan in The Japanese Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 51 (6) , 693-702
- https://doi.org/10.2170/jjphysiol.51.693
Abstract
In circular smooth muscle tissues of the guinea pig gastric fundus, transmural nerve stimulation (TNS) evoked an atropine-sensitive cholinergic excitatory junction potential (e.j.p.) and, after inhibiting the e.j.p. with atropine, an apamin-sensitive nonadrenergic noncholinergic (NANC) inhibitory junction potential (i.j.p.). The amplitude of e.j.p.s was similar when the frequency of TNS was low (1 Hz). The depression phenomenon was attenuated after inhibiting the production of nitric oxide (NO) with N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine (NOLA), but was not altered by inhibiting the i.j.p. with apamin. The e.j.p.s were increased in amplitude by the inhibition of cholinesterase activity, but they were decreased by NO produced from SNP with no alteration of their depression phenomenon. Isometric twitch contractions were depressed during high-frequency TNS. NOLA caused an increase in the amplitude of twitch contractions and the attenuation of their depression that changed the transient contraction produced by high-frequency TNS (1 Hz) to a tetanic one. SNP reduced the amplitude of twitch contractions, with no alteration of the depression phenomena. Contractions produced by low concentrations of acetylcholine, but not by high concentrations, were attenuated by SNP, with no alteration of the membrane depolarization. The results suggest that NO produced during TNS has inhibitory actions on cholinergic transmission; the depression of e.j.p.s is mainly prejunctional events, and the depression of mechanical responses is mainly postjunctional events.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mediators and Intracellular Mechanisms of NANC Relaxation of Smooth Muscle in the Gastrointestinal TractJournal of Smooth Muscle Research, 2000
- Properties of the inhibitory junction potential in smooth muscle of the guinea‐pig gastric fundusBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1996
- Properties of Junction Potentials in Gastric Smooth Muscle of the Rat.The Japanese Journal of Physiology, 1996
- Histochemical, pharmacological, biochemical and chromatographic evidence that pituitary adenylyl cyclase activating peptide is involved in inhibitory neurotransmission in the taenia of the guinea-pig caecumJournal of the Autonomic Nervous System, 1995
- Nitric oxide, and not vasoactive intestinal peptide, as the main neurotransmitter of vagally induced relaxation of the guinea pig stomachBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1994
- S-nitrosocysteine, but not sodium nitroprusside, produces apamin-sensitive hyperpolarization in rat gastric fundusBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1993
- Nitric oxide involvement in the peptide VIP‐associated inhibitory junction potential in the guinea‐pig ileum.The Journal of Physiology, 1993
- Involvement of nitric oxide in the reflex relaxation of the stomach to accommodate food or fluidNature, 1991
- Mechanical, electrical and cyclic nucleotide responses to peptide VIP and inhibitory nerve stimulation in rat stomach.The Journal of Physiology, 1990
- Neuromuscular transmission in the gastrointestinal tractPublished by American Geophysical Union (AGU) ,1989