Inhibitory effect of somatostatin on vagal motoneurons in the rat brain stem in vitro

1989 ◽  
Vol 256 (1) ◽  
pp. C155-C159 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Nabekura ◽  
Y. Mizuno ◽  
Y. Oomura

Effects of somatostatin-14 (SRIF) on membrane electrical properties were studied in rat brain stem slice preparations maintained in vitro. SRIF hyperpolarized the resting membrane potential and decreased the input resistance of more than two-thirds of the 85 vagal motoneurons tested in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus. These effects persisted under synaptic blockade caused by perfusion with a solution containing tetrodotoxin or a Ca2+-free/high-Mg2+ solution and were dependent on the extracellular SRIF concentration (5 X 10(-8) to 1 X 10(-8) M). The Hill coefficient was estimated to be 2. The reversal potential of SRIF-induced hyperpolarization was affected by changing external K+ concentration. The results suggest that, in addition to its well-known peripheral action, SRIF may inhibit secretomotor functions of visceral organs by reducing vagal output in the central nervous system.

2004 ◽  
Vol 91 (5) ◽  
pp. 2330-2343 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenjun Tan ◽  
Ronald Fogel ◽  
Chunhui Jiang ◽  
Xueguo Zhang

Galanin plays an important role in the regulation of food intake, energy balance, and body weight. Many galanin-positive fibers as well as galanin-positive neurons were seen in the dorsal vagal complex, suggesting that galanin produces its effects by actions involving vagal neurons. In the present experiment, we used tract-tracing and neurophysiological techniques to evaluate the origin of the galaninergic fibers and the effect of galanin on neurons in the dorsal vagal complex. Our results reveal that the nucleus of the solitary tract is the major source of the galanin terminals in the dorsal vagal complex. In vivo experiments demonstrated that galanin inhibited the majority of gut-related neurons in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus. In vitro experiments demonstrated that galanin inhibited the majority of stomach-projecting neurons in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus by suppressing spontaneous activity and/or producing a fully reversible dose-dependent membrane hyperpolarization and outward current. The galanin-induced hyperpolarization and outward current persisted after synaptic input was blocked, suggesting that galanin acts directly on receptors of neurons in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus. The reversal potential induced by galanin was close to the potassium ion potentials of the Nernst equation and was prevented by the potassium channel blocker tetraethylammonium, indicating that the inhibitory effect of galanin was mediated by a potassium channel. These results indicate that the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus is inhibited by galanin derived predominantly from neurons in the nucleus of the solitary tract projecting to the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus nerve. Galanin is one of the neurotransmitters involved in the vago-vagal reflex.


1990 ◽  
Vol 64 (1) ◽  
pp. 273-281 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Spigelman ◽  
E. Puil

1. Responses of primary sensory neurons to substance P applications by perfusion were studied with intracellular recording techniques in in vitro slice preparations of trigeminal root ganglia (guinea pigs). Application of substance P in micromolar doses produced reversible depolarizations of 2–47 mV in 48 out of 64 neurons. The depolarizing influence facilitated repetitive spike discharge evoked by current-pulse injection. Evidence of desensitization was observed during prolonged or repeated applications of the peptide. 2. The responses to substance P were associated with decreased input resistance, although increased input resistance was observed in neurons where the resting membrane potential was compensated with DC injection. In single-electrode voltage-clamp (SEVC) recordings, substance P evoked an inward shift in the holding current and reduced an outwardly rectifying component in the I-V relationships. The reversal potential for the substance P response could not be determined. These results suggested that the perikaryal response to substance P has a complex ionic mechanism involving activation and deactivation of membrane conductances. 3. Substance P-induced depolarizations were greatly attenuated during perfusion with solutions that were deficient in [Na+] or [Mg2+] and were not significantly affected during perfusion with low-[Ca2+]-, CO2(+)-containing solutions. 4. In the voltage-clamp investigations, an inward current contributed to the substance P responses during combined application with the K(+)-channel blockers, 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) and tetraethylammonium (TEA). This current was not abolished by the inclusion of CsCl in the perfusing solution or by internal Cs+ application from the recording electrode, suggesting that an anomalous inward rectifier was not involved in the responses to substance P.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


1997 ◽  
Vol 272 (3) ◽  
pp. G654-G661 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Bertolino ◽  
S. Vicini ◽  
R. Gillis ◽  
A. Travagli

The synaptic connection between the commissural portion of the nucleus tractus solitarius (ComNTS) and the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus (DMV) was studied in rat brain stem slices, using the patch-clamp technique. The excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSC) evoked by stimulation of the ComNTS were blocked by kynurenic acid (1 mM) and, in Mg2+-free solution, were sensitive to both the N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptor blocker 3-[(RS)-2-carboxypiperazine-4-yl] -propyl-1-phosphonic acid (20 microM) and the non-NMDA receptor blocker 2,3-dihydro-6-nitro-7-sulfamoyl-benzo(f)quinoxaline (5 microM). Norepinephrine (NE, 1-100 microM) inhibited the EPSC, and the inhibition was attenuated by the alpha2-adrenoceptor antagonists idazoxan (1 microM) and yohimbine (10 microM) but not by the beta-adrenoceptor antagonist nadolol (50 microM). The NE-releasing agent tyramine (100 microM) reduced the EPSC, and the inhibition was attenuated by 1 microM idazoxan. NE (30 microM) did not affect the membrane input resistance but reduced the paired-pulse depression, demonstrating that NE acts on presynaptic alpha2-adrenoceptors. The results indicate the existence of a glutamatergic pathway from the ComNTS to the DMV neurons modulated by presynaptic NE receptors. This pathway might be a component of the vagovagal reflex regulating gastrointestinal function.


2005 ◽  
Vol 288 (5) ◽  
pp. G1066-G1073 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhongling Zheng ◽  
Mark W. Lewis ◽  
R. Alberto Travagli

Using whole cell patch clamp in thin brain stem slices, we tested the effects of cholecystokinin (CCK) on identified gastric-projecting neurons of the rat dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus (DMV). Perfusion with the sulfated form of CCK octapeptide (CCK8s, 30 pM–300 nM, EC50 ∼4 nM) induced a concentration-dependent inward current in 35 and 41% of corpus- and antrum/pylorus-projecting DMV neurons, respectively. Conversely, none of the fundus-projecting DMV neurons responded to perfusion with CCK8s. The CCK8s-induced inward current was accompanied by a 65 ± 17% increase in membrane input resistance and reversed at 90 ± 4 mV, indicating that the excitatory effects of CCK8s were mediated by the closure of a potassium conductance. Pretreatment with the synaptic blocker TTX (0.3–1 μM) reduced the CCK8s-induced current, suggesting that a portion of the CCK8s-induced current was mediated indirectly via an action on presynaptic neurons apposing the DMV membrane. Pretreatment with the selective CCK-A receptor antagonist lorglumide (0.3–3 μM) attenuated the CCK8s-induced inward current in a concentration-dependent manner, with a maximum inhibition of 69 ± 12% obtained with 3 μM lorglumide. Conversely, pretreatment with the selective CCK-B antagonist triglumide did not attenuate the CCK8s-induced inward current; pretreatment with triglumide (3 μM) and lorglumide (1 μM) attenuated the CCK8s-induced current to the same extent as pretreatment with lorglumide alone. Immunohistochemical experiments showed that CCK-A receptors were localized on the membrane of 34, 65, and 60% of fundus-, corpus-, and antrum/pylorus-projecting DMV neurons, respectively. Our data indicate that CCK-A receptors are present on a subpopulation of gastric-projecting neurons and that their activation leads to excitation of the DMV membrane.


1990 ◽  
Vol 69 (4) ◽  
pp. 1509-1517 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. G. Haddad ◽  
D. F. Donnelly ◽  
P. A. Getting

A brain stem slice preparation from adult and neonatal (less than or equal to 12 days old) rats and intracellular recordings were used to examine the cellular properties of neurons within the hypoglossal (HYP) nucleus. Resting membrane potential (Vm) for adult hypoglossal neurons was -80 +/- 2 (SE) mV. Rheobase was 2.1 +/- 0.4 nA, and input resistance (RN) was 20.8 +/- 1.5 M omega and decreased during the hyperpolarizing period ("sag"). Compared with adult HYP cells, newborn HYP neurons had significantly lower resting potentials (Vm = -73 +/- 2 mV), lower rheobase (0.7 +/- 0.2 nA), and higher RN (27.6 +/- 3.9 M omega). Single action potentials, elicited by short depolarizing-current pulses, were followed by a slow afterhyperpolarization in adult [6.4 +/- 0.3 mV, time constant (tc) 31.0 +/- 1.2 ms] and newborn cells (7.4 +/- 0.2 mV, tc 37.2 +/- 8.2 ms). Prolonged outward current (2 s) produced little spike frequency adaptation in either adult or newborn neurons. Onset of spike activity was not delayed by hyperpolarizing pulses preceding depolarizations. In addition, pharmacological experiments showed that HYP neurons have a tetrodotoxin-sensitive Na+ current and a delayed and an inward rectifier current but no major Ca2+ current. We conclude the following. 1) Electrophysiological membrane properties mature postnatally in HYP neurons; some of these developmental changes can be ascribed to an increase in soma size and dendritic outgrowth but others cannot. 2) Adult HYP neurons, compared with other brain stem neurons (i.e., vagal cells or cells in the nucleus tractus solitarius), are not endowed with major Ca2+ currents or K+ currents such as the A current and the Ca2(+)-activated K+ current.


1969 ◽  
Vol 47 (5) ◽  
pp. 501-506 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. G. McGeer ◽  
D. A. V. Peters

Over 700 compounds were screened at 10−4 M concentration as inhibitors of the conversion of L-tryptophan-14C to serotonin-14C in crude rat brain homogenates. Most of the compounds had little or no inhibitory effect. Those with strong inhibitory properties were tested as inhibitors of 5-hydroxytryptophan decarboxylase and, if active on the decarboxylase, were assayed as tryptophan hydroxylase inhibitors. Except for a few oxidizing and complexing agents and for some substituted p-phenylenediamines, the compounds found to inhibit tryptophan hydroxylase by >50% belonged to the three types of inhibitors already known, i.e. catechols, phenylalanine and ring-substituted phenylalanines, and 6-substituted tryptophans. The numerous data in this screen make possible some comments as to the structural requirements for activity within each class. A comparison of the results on tryptophan hydroxylase with data on tyrosine hydroxylase inhibition in similar homogenates makes it clear that two separate, if somewhat similar, enzymes are involved.


2003 ◽  
Vol 90 (1) ◽  
pp. 405-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Regula E. Egli ◽  
Danny G. Winder

The bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) is a structure uniquely positioned to integrate stress information and regulate both stress and reward systems. Consistent with this arrangement, evidence suggests that the BNST, and in particular the noradrenergic input to this structure, is a key component of affective responses to drugs of abuse. We have utilized an in vitro slice preparation from adult mice to determine synaptic and membrane properties of these cells, focusing on the dorsal and ventral subdivisions of the anterolateral BNST (dBNST and vBNST) because of the differential noradrenergic input to these two regions. We find that while resting membrane potential and input resistance are comparable between these subdivisions, excitable properties, including a low-threshold spike (LTS) likely mediated by T-type calcium channels and an Ih-dependent potential, are differentially distributed. Inhibitory and excitatory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs and EPSPs, respectively) are readily evoked in both dBNST and vBNST. The fast IPSP is predominantly GABAA-receptor mediated and is partially blocked by the AMPA/kainate-receptor antagonist CNQX. In the presence of the GABAA-receptor antagonist picrotoxin, cells in dBNST but not vBNST are more depolarized and have a higher input resistance, suggesting tonic GABAergic inhibition of these cells. The EPSPs elicited in BNST are monosynaptic, exhibit paired pulse facilitation, and contain both an AMPA- and an N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-mediated component. These data support the hypothesis that neurons of the dorsal and ventral BNST differentially integrate synaptic input, which is likely of behavioral significance. The data also suggest mechanisms by which information may flow through stress and reward circuits.


2002 ◽  
Vol 87 (5) ◽  
pp. 2398-2407 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carmen Cabanes ◽  
Mikel López de Armentia ◽  
Félix Viana ◽  
Carlos Belmonte

Intracellular recordings from neurons in the mouse trigeminal ganglion (TG) in vitro were used to characterize changes in membrane properties that take place from early postnatal stages (P0–P7) to adulthood (>P21). All neonatal TG neurons had uniformly slow conduction velocities, whereas adult neurons could be separated according to their conduction velocity into Aδ and C neurons. Based on the presence or absence of a marked inflection or hump in the repolarization phase of the action potential (AP), neonatal neurons were divided into S- (slow) and F-type (fast) neurons. Their passive and subthreshold properties (resting membrane potential, input resistance, membrane capacitance, and inward rectification) were nearly identical, but they showed marked differences in AP amplitude, AP overshoot, AP duration, rate of AP depolarization, rate of AP repolarization, and afterhyperpolarization (AHP) duration. Adult TG neurons also segregated into S- and F-type groups. Differences in their mean AP amplitude, AP overshoot, AP duration, rate of AP depolarization, rate of AP repolarization, and AHP duration were also prominent. In addition, axons of 90% of F-type neurons and 60% of S-type neurons became faster conducting in their central and peripheral branch, suggestive of axonal myelination. The proportion of S- and F-type neurons did not vary during postnatal development, suggesting that these phenotypes were established early in development. Membrane properties of both types of TG neurons evolved differently during postnatal development. The nature of many of these changes was linked to the process of myelination. Thus myelination was accompanied by a decrease in AP duration, input resistance ( R in), and increase in membrane capacitance (C). These properties remained constant in unmyelinated neurons (both F- and S-type). In adult TG, all F-type neurons with inward rectification were also fast-conducting Aδ, suggesting that those F-type neurons showing inward rectification at birth will evolve to F-type Aδ neurons with age. The percentage of F-type neurons showing inward rectification also increased with age. Both F- and S-type neurons displayed changes in the sensitivity of the AP to reductions in extracellular Ca2+ or substitution with Co2+ during the process of maturation.


2001 ◽  
Vol 86 (2) ◽  
pp. 629-640 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muthukrishnan Renganathan ◽  
Theodore R. Cummins ◽  
Stephen G. Waxman

C-type dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons can generate tetrodotoxin-resistant (TTX-R) sodium-dependent action potentials. However, multiple sodium channels are expressed in these neurons, and the molecular identity of the TTX-R sodium channels that contribute to action potential production in these neurons has not been established. In this study, we used current-clamp recordings to compare action potential electrogenesis in Nav1.8 (+/+) and (−/−) small DRG neurons maintained for 2–8 h in vitro to examine the role of sodium channel Nav1.8 (α-SNS) in action potential electrogenesis. Although there was no significant difference in resting membrane potential, input resistance, current threshold, or voltage threshold in Nav1.8 (+/+) and (−/−) DRG neurons, there were significant differences in action potential electrogenesis. Most Nav1.8 (+/+) neurons generate all-or-none action potentials, whereas most of Nav1.8 (−/−) neurons produce smaller graded responses. The peak of the response was significantly reduced in Nav1.8 (−/−) neurons [31.5 ± 2.2 (SE) mV] compared with Nav1.8 (+/+) neurons (55.0 ± 4.3 mV). The maximum rise slope was 84.7 ± 11.2 mV/ms in Nav1.8 (+/+) neurons, significantly faster than in Nav1.8 (−/−) neurons where it was 47.2 ± 1.3 mV/ms. Calculations based on the action potential overshoot in Nav1.8 (+/+) and (−/−) neurons, following blockade of Ca2+ currents, indicate that Nav1.8 contributes a substantial fraction (80–90%) of the inward membrane current that flows during the rising phase of the action potential. We found that fast TTX-sensitive Na+ channels can produce all-or-none action potentials in some Nav1.8 (−/−) neurons but, presumably as a result of steady-state inactivation of these channels, electrogenesis in Nav1.8 (−/−) neurons is more sensitive to membrane depolarization than in Nav1.8 (+/+) neurons, and, in the absence of Nav1.8, is attenuated with even modest depolarization. These observations indicate that Nav1.8 contributes substantially to action potential electrogenesis in C-type DRG neurons.


1999 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 557-570 ◽  
Author(s):  
HONGJING TAN ◽  
RICHARD D. MOONEY ◽  
ROBERT W. RHOADES

Intracellular recording techniques were used to evaluate the effects of norepinephrine (NE) on the membrane properties of superficial layer (stratum griseum superficiale and stratum opticum) superior colliculus (SC) cells. Of the 207 cells tested, 44.4% (N = 92) were hyperpolarized by ≥3 mV and 8.7% (N = 18) were depolarized by ≥3 mV by application of NE. Hyperpolarization induced by NE was dose dependent (EC50 = 8.1 μM) and was associated with decreased input resistance and outward current which had a reversal potential of −94.0 mV. Depolarization was associated with a very slight rise in input resistance and had a reversal potential of −93.1 mV for the single cell tested. Pharmacologic experiments demonstrated that isoproterenol, dobutamine, and p-aminoclonidine all hyperpolarized SC cells. These results are consistent with the conclusion that NE-induced hyperpolarization of SC cells is mediated by both α2 and β1 adrenoceptors. The α1 adrenoceptor agonists, methoxamine and phenylephrine, depolarized 35% (6 of 17) of the SC cells tested by ≥3 mV. Most of the SC cells tested exhibited responses indicative of expression of more than one adrenoceptor. Application of p-aminoclonidine or dobutamine inhibited transsynaptic responses in SC cells evoked by electrical stimulation of optic tract axons. Inhibition of evoked responses by these agents was usually, but not invariably, associated with a hyperpolarization of the cell membrane and a reduction in depolarizing potentials evoked by application of glutamate. The present in vitro results are consistent with those of the companion in vivo study which suggested that NE-induced response suppression in superficial layer SC neurons was primarily postsynaptic and chiefly mediated by both α2 and β1 adrenoceptors.


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