Abstract
The acetylcholine (ACh) stores of cholinergic neurons of the myenteric plexus of guinea pig ileum were labeled by preincubation with 3H-(methyl)-choline. The secretion of labeled transmitter evoked by electrical field stimulation at 1 Hz in the presence of eserine increased by 55% after addition of 0.5 mM 8-Br- cAMP. Atropine further enhanced the secretory response, but not more than in the absence of 8-Br-cAMP. 8-Br-cGMP (0.5 mM) did not change the secretory response to 0.5 or 1 Hz stimulation, either at 1.8 mM or at 0.6 mM Ca, in the absence of eserine. Nor did 1 mM 8-Br-cGMP alter the effects of atropine or of oxotremorine. Activation of guanylate cyclase by 0.1 mM N-methyl-N''-nitro-N-nitroso guanidine failed to alter the secretory response to 0.5 Hz stimulation in the absence of eserine, or to influence the depression of the secretion caused by oxotremorine. The phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (1 mM) neither altered the secretory response in the presence of eserine, nor the enhancing effect of atropine. Cyclic nucleotides are probably not critically involved as 2nd messengers in the muscarinic autoinhibition of ACh secretion from cholinergic myenteric neurons of guinea pig ileum.