Properties of a slow nonselective cation conductance modulated by neurotensin and other neurotransmitters in midbrain dopaminergic neurons
R. H. Farkas, P. Y. Chien, S. Nakajima and Y. Nakajima Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Medicine 60612, USA. 1. A widespread mechanism of slow excitation throughout the nervous system involves overlapping changes in nonselective ion conductance an...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1996-09, Vol.76 (3), p.1968-1981 |
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Zusammenfassung: | R. H. Farkas, P. Y. Chien, S. Nakajima and Y. Nakajima
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Medicine 60612, USA.
1. A widespread mechanism of slow excitation throughout the nervous system
involves overlapping changes in nonselective ion conductance and K+
conductance. We used whole cell patch-clamp recording to characterize such
a nonselective conductance induced by neurotensin (NT) and other
neurotransmitters in immunocytochemically identified dopaminergic neurons
cultured from the rat ventral tegmental area (VTA). 2. The NT-induced
inward current consisted of an initial peak and later "hump." The response
was blocked reversibly by the nonpeptide NT-receptor antagonist SR48692,
suggesting that it resulted from activation of NT receptors. 3. The channel
was almost equally permeable to Na+ and K+, as determined from the reversal
potential shift upon switching from Na+- to K(+)-containing external
solution. The permeability of Cs+ was similar to that of Na+, as determined
from the zero-current equation and average reversal potential in the 75 mM
Na+ solution. Cl- was not significantly permeable. 4. In Ca(2+)-free
external solution, the NT-induced current showed a fourfold increase in
amplitude, and in high Mg2+ (20 mM) external solution, the NT-induced
current showed an 80% decrease in amplitude, suggesting that external Ca2+
and Mg2+ could block the nonselective conductance. 5. The NT response was
unaffected by loading the neurons with either the Ca2+ chelator
1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid or with 1 mM ca2+.
The nonselective conductance was therefore not Ca2+ activated. 6. Loading
the neurons with cyclic GMP or cyclic AMP (each with the phosphodiesterase
inhibitor isobutyl-methylxanthine) did not affect the NT response. The
NT-induced nonselective conductance was therefore not cyclic
nucleotide-activated. 7. The latency of the NT response was long (> or =
185 ms, average 406 ms, 30 degrees C), indicating that NT did not induce
the conductance through ligand-gated channels. Thus, NT activated a slow
nonselective cation conductance. 8. Neurokinin B, a metabotropic glutamate
agonist, and muscarine elicited responses similar to the NT response. The
NT response could be elicited after desensitizing the responses to these
other neurotransmitters, indicating receptor specificity in the activation
of the nonselective conductance. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1996.76.3.1968 |