Generation of an unusual depolarizing response in rabbit primary afferent neurones in the absence of divalent cations
The effects of divalent cations on responses to 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and 1,1-dimethyl-4-phenyl piperazinium (DMPP) were investigated using a sucrose-gap method to record population responses. In Ca-free medium responses to 5-HT were enhanced, those to DMPP depre...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1984-07, Vol.352 (1), p.49-72 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The effects of divalent cations on responses to 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and 1,1-dimethyl-4-phenyl
piperazinium (DMPP) were investigated using a sucrose-gap method to record population responses. In Ca-free medium responses
to 5-HT were enhanced, those to DMPP depressed and those to GABA unchanged. In Mg-free medium responses to 5-HT were unchanged,
while those to DMPP and GABA were depressed. Removal of both Ca and Mg from the superfusion medium caused a small reduction
of GABA responses and a large reduction of DMPP responses. Responses to 5-HT were not only greatly potentiated but were changed
in character; the depolarizing phase became sigmoid and the dose dependence between quantity of 5-HT and response magnitude
was lost as if 5-HT were triggering an all-or-nothing phenomenon. Dose--response relationships for GABA were normal in the
large majority of preparations. In about 10% of preparations, supramaximal amounts of GABA or DMPP evoked large responses
of a similar character to those evoked by 5-HT. The large responses, generated by an unknown mechanism, were termed X responses.
Further reduction in tissue divalent cations by EGTA (1 mM) caused X responses to be generated spontaneously. Ca, Mg, Mn or
Co (1 mM) could suppress X responses. DMPP responses, reduced in Ca/Mg-free medium, were largely restored by 1 mM-Ca. Depression
of GABA responses in Ca/Mg-free medium could be entirely attributed to the absence of Mg, Mn being able to substitute for
Mg. X responses were generated only after equilibration for 1 h with Ca/Mg-free medium. Attempts to manipulate [Ca]i with
dinitrophenol or caffeine did not produce the conditions under which X responses were generated. Intracellular records of
responses to 5-HT, GABA or DMPP showed that cells with A fibres responded to GABA but not to 5-HT or DMPP. Fifty-four out
of sixty-seven cells with C fibre axons (80%) were depolarized by 5-HT, thirty-seven out of forty-nine (76%) by DMPP and forty
out of fifty-seven (70%) by GABA. Eighteen out of thirty-eight (47%) C cells were depolarized by all three agents. Some C
cells were very sensitive to 5-HT, 10(-6) M evoking a substantial response. In most, responses to 10(-5) M-5-HT had a slower
rate of rise than responses to 10(-4) or 10(-3) M-GABA or DMPP, yet lower 5-HT concentrations normally elicited X responses
in sucrose-gap experiments whereas GABA or DMPP normally did not. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1984.sp015277 |