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1.
We sought to test the hypotheses that closely related alcohols would have effects on GABAA receptor function that were not predicted by differences in lipid solubility, and that the subunit structure of the GABAA receptor would significantly affect the actions of different alcohols. Cloned subunits of human GABAA receptors were expressed in Xenopus oocytes, and two-electrode voltage-clamp recording was used to quantify the membrane current response to GABA in the presence and absence of different alcohols. 1-Butanol and 2-butanol differentially potentiated the response to 20 microM GABA in oocytes expressing the alpha 1 beta 2 gamma 2L and alpha 2 beta 2 gamma 2L receptor isoforms. In the alpha 1 beta 2 gamma 2L receptor construct, 1-butanol was more potent than 2-butanol to potentiate GABAA receptor function, but 2-butanol had a greater efficacy. In the alpha 2 beta 2 gamma 2L receptor construct, 1-butanol and 2-butanol were equipotent, but 2-butanol again had a greater efficacy. In the alpha 2 beta 2 receptor construct, both 1-butanol and 2-butanol produced large potentiations of the current response to 3 microM GABA. The efficacy for butanol potentiation of GABA responses in the absence of a gamma 2L subunit was greater, but the potency was greatly reduced. Low concentrations (20 mM) of ethanol potentiated GABA responses in the alpha 1 beta 2 gamma 2L receptor construct. Ethanol potentiation of GABAA receptor function was completely blocked by the benzodiazepine receptor partial inverse agonist RO15-4513 at a concentration (0.5 microM) that did not alter the control GABA response. In contrast, RO15-4513 did not block potentiation of GABAA receptor activity induced by n-propanol, 1-butanol, 2-butanol, 1-heptanol, or propofol (2,6-diisopropylphenol). These results suggest that alcohols have specific interactions with GABAA receptors, and that ethanol may have unique effects not shared by other longer chain alcohols.  相似文献   

2.
Septal cholinergic neurons are known to play an important role in cognitive processes including learning and memory through afferent innervation of the hippocampal formation and cerebral cortex. The septum contains not only cholinergic neurons but also various types of neurons including GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)-ergic neurons. Although synaptic transmission in the septum is mediated primarily by the activation of excitatory and inhibitory amino-acid receptors, it is possible that a distinct phenotype of neuron is endowed with a different type for each of the amino-acid receptors and thus they play different roles from each other, since it has been demonstrated within the septum that there is a regional distribution of various types of amino-acid receptor subunits, their expression as different combinations within a specific cell may produce receptor channels with disparate functional properties. As a first step towards knowing the various functions of septal cholinergic neurons, we characterized the functional properties of glutamate, GABA (type A; GABAA) and glycine receptor channels on cultured rat septal neurons which were histologically identified to be cholinergic. These were similar to those of receptor channels on other types of neurons, except for the actions of some neuromodulators. The septal N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor channel was distinct in being less sensitive to Mg2+ and in a voltage-dependent action of Zn2+. The septal GABAA receptor channel exhibited a lanthanide site whose activation resulted in a positive allosteric interaction with a binding site of pentobarbital. The septal glycine receptor channel was only positively modulated by Zn2+; this action of Zn2+ was not accompanied by an inhibitory effect. Our data suggest that the amino-acid receptors on septal cholinergic neurons may play a distinct role compared to other types of neurons; this difference depends on the actions of neuromodulators and metal cations. It would be interesting to compare these effects recorded in tissue culture to those observed with septal cholinergic neurons in slice preparations.  相似文献   

3.
The polyamine spermine has multiple effects on N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors, including "glycine-independent" stimulation, which is seen in the presence of saturating concentrations of glycine; "glycine-dependent" stimulation, which is due to an increase in the affinity of the receptor for glycine; and voltage-dependent block. These effects may involve three separate polyamine binding sites on the receptor. To identify amino acid residues that are important for spermine binding, we used site-directed mutagenesis to alter amino acids in and around a region of the NR1 subunit of the NMDA receptor that shows homology with PotD, a polyamine binding protein from Escherichia coli. Mutated subunits, expressed in heteromeric and homomeric NMDA receptors, were studied by voltage-clamp recording in Xenopus oocytes. Mutation of two acidic residues (E339-E342) to neutral amino acids reduced or abolished glycine-independent stimulation by spermine without affecting glycine-dependent stimulation or voltage-dependent block by spermine. Mutation of these residues also had modest effects on sensitivity to protons and to ifenprodil but did not alter sensitivity to glutamate and glycine or to voltage-dependent block by Mg2+. Residue E342 in NR1 appears to be critical for glycine-independent spermine stimulation. Mutations at equivalent positions in NR2A(E352Q) or NR2B(E353Q) had no effect on sensitivity to spermine, pH, or ifenprodil. Residue E342 in NR1 may form part of a discrete spermine binding site on the NMDA receptor or be involved in the mechanism of modulation by polyamines. This residue may also be involved in modulation by protons and ifenprodil.  相似文献   

4.
A cDNA, HGl, encoding an inhibitory amino-acid receptor subunit has been cloned from a mixed egg population of the parasitic nematode Haemonchus contortus. The predicted amino-acid sequence of the subunit shows 24% to 32% homology with other vertebrate and invertebrate GABAA and glycine receptor subunits and has all the expected motifs for a member of the ligand-gated ion channel superfamily. When expressed in Xenopus oocytes HGl gives a small response to 1 mM glycine, but not to 1 mM GABA, glutamate, taurine or L-alanine.  相似文献   

5.
The role of GABA receptors in regulating the mesolimbic dopamine (DA) system and drug reinforced behaviors has not been well characterized. Using fast-cyclic voltammetry, the effects of specific GABA receptor modulation on DA release in the nucleus accumbens (NAcc) and heroin self-administration (SA) behavior was investigated. The GABAA agonist muscimol, administered either intravenously or directly into the ventral tegmental area (VTA), significantly increased DA release in the NAcc in 7 of the 10 rats tested. DA release decreased in the remaining three rats; both effects were blocked by pretreatment with the GABAA receptor antagonist bicuculline. In contrast, the GABAB agonist baclofen decreased, while 2-OH-saclofen (a GABAB antagonist) increased DA release in the NAcc. However, when VTA GABAB receptors were previously activated or inactivated by microinjections of baclofen or 2-OH-saclofen, systemic injections of muscimol caused an inhibition of NAcc DA release. These results suggest that GABAA receptors may be co-localized on both DA neurons and non-DA (GABAergic) interneurons in the VTA, with the effects of GABAA determined by the net effect of both direct inhibition and indirect disinhibition of DA neurons. Finally, although a DA releaser, muscimol was neither self-administered in drug naive rats, nor did it substitute for heroin in rats previously trained to self-administer heroin, suggesting that GABAA receptors appear to play a complex role in mediating drug reinforcement, depending upon the dynamic functional state of GABAA receptors on both tegmental DA and non-DA neurons.  相似文献   

6.
Molecular mechanisms of anesthetic action on neurotransmitter receptors are poorly understood. The major excitatory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system is glutamate, and recent studies found that volatile anesthetics inhibit the function of the alpha-amino-3-hydroxyisoxazolepropionic acid subtype of glutamate receptors (e.g. glutamate receptor 3 (GluR3)), but enhance kainate (GluR6) receptor function. We used this dissimilar pharmacology to identify sites of anesthetic action on the kainate GluR6 receptor by constructing chimeric GluR3/GluR6 receptors. Results with chimeric receptors implicated a transmembrane region (TM4) of GluR6 in the action of halothane. Site-directed mutagenesis subsequently showed that a specific amino acid, glycine 819 in TM4, is important for enhancement of receptor function by halothane (0. 2-2 mM). Mutations of Gly-819 also markedly decreased the response to isoflurane (0.2-2 mM), enflurane (0.2-2 mM), and 1-chloro-1,2, 2-trifluorocyclobutane (0.2-2 mM). The nonanesthetics 1, 2-dichlorohexafluorocyclobutane and 2,3-dichlorooctafluorobutane had no effect on the functions of either wild-type GluR6 or receptors mutated at Gly-819. Ethanol and pentobarbital inhibited the function of both wild-type and mutant receptors. These results suggest that a specific amino acid, Gly-819, is critical for the action of volatile anesthetics, but not of ethanol or pentobarbital, on the GluR6 receptor.  相似文献   

7.
The NMDA type of ligand-gated glutamate receptor requires the presence of both glutamate and glycine for gating. These receptors are hetero-oligomers of NR1 and NR2 subunits. Previously it was thought that the binding sites for glycine and glutamate were formed by residues on the NR1 subunit. Indeed, it has been shown that the effects of glycine are controlled by residues on the NR1 subunit, and a "Venus flytrap" model for the glycine binding site has been suggested by analogy with bacterial periplasmic amino acid binding proteins. By analysis of 10 mutant NMDA receptors, we now show that residues on the NR2A subunit control glutamate potency in recombinant NR1/NR2A receptors, without affecting glycine potency. Furthermore, we provide evidence that, at least for some mutated residues, the reduced potency of glutamate cannot be explained by alteration of gating but has to be caused primarily by impairing the binding of the agonist to the resting state of the receptor. One NR2A mutant, NR2A(T671A), had an EC50 for glutamate 1000-fold greater than wild type and a 255-fold reduced affinity for APV, yet it had single-channel openings very similar to those of wild type. Therefore we propose that the glutamate binding site is located on NR2 subunits and (taking our data together with previous work) is not on the NR1 subunit. Our data further imply that each NMDA receptor subunit possesses a binding site for an agonist (glutamate or glycine).  相似文献   

8.
Murine gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptor beta 1, beta 2, and beta 3 subunits were expressed in Xenopus oocytes and studied using the two electrode voltage clamp technique. Although all three beta-subunits were unresponsive to GABA when expressed as homomers, the intravenous general anaesthetics pentobarbital, etomidate and propofol induced currents in beta 2 and beta 3 homomers. The pentobarbital-induced currents in beta 3 homomers showed a dose dependence with an ED50 of 89 +/- 8.9 microM and a Hill coefficient of 0.94 +/- 0.08. Zinc (50 microM) blocked (61.1 +/- 5.6% of control) and 200 microM lanthanum potentiated (139 +/- 8.6% of control) the pentobarbital-induced current. This current was also blocked by picrotoxin but was insensitive to the GABAA receptor antagonist bicuculline. These observations indicate that the full expression of the agonistic action of GABA requires the presence of an alpha-subunit, in contrast to the agonistic action of intravenous general anesthetics, where the presence of a beta2 or beta 3-subunit is sufficient. The difference in the agonistic action of intravenous anaesthetics among these highly homologous beta-subunits suggests that the beta-subunit homomeric receptors may be useful to further define the molecular sites of action of intravenous general anaesthetics and other functional domains on GABAA receptors.  相似文献   

9.
Pit1 is the human receptor for gibbon ape leukemia virus (GALV) and feline leukemia virus subgroup B (FeLV-B), while the related human protein Pit2 is a receptor for amphotropic murine leukemia virus (A-MuLV). The A-MuLV-related isolate 10A1 can utilize both Pit1 and Pit2 as receptors. A stretch of amino acids named region A was identified in Pit1 (residues 550 to 558 in loop 4) as critical for GALV and FeLV-B receptor function. We have here investigated the role of region A in A-MuLV and 10A1 entry. Insertion of a single amino acid in region A of mouse Pit1 resulted in a functional A-MuLV receptor, showing that region A plays a role in A-MuLV infection. Moreover, the downregulation of 10A1 receptor function by changes in region A of human Pit1 indicates that this region is also involved in 10A1 entry. Therefore, region A seems to play a role in infection by all viruses utilizing Pit1 and/or Pit2 as receptors.  相似文献   

10.
GABA is the primary transmitter released by neurons of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), the circadian clock in the brain. Whereas GABAB receptor agonists exert a significant effect on circadian rhythms, the underlying mechanism by which GABAB receptors act in the SCN has remained a mystery. We found no GABAB receptor-mediated effect on slow potassium conductance, membrane potential, or input resistance in SCN neurons in vitro using whole-cell patch-clamp recording. In contrast, the GABAB receptor agonist baclofen (1-100 microM) exerted a large and dose-dependent inhibition (up to 100%) of evoked IPSCs. Baclofen reduced the frequency of spontaneous IPSCs but showed little effect on the frequency or amplitude of miniature IPSCs in the presence of tetrodotoxin. The activation of GABAB receptors did not modulate postsynaptic GABAA receptor responses. The depression of GABA release by GABAB autoreceptors appeared to be mediated primarily through a modulation of presynaptic calcium channels. The baclofen inhibition of both calcium currents and evoked IPSCs was greatly reduced (up to 100%) by the P/Q-type calcium channel blocker agatoxin IVB, suggesting that P/Q-type calcium channels are the major targets involved in the modulation of GABA release. To a lesser degree, N-type calcium channels were also involved. The inhibition of GABA release by baclofen was abolished by a pretreatment with pertussis toxin (PTX), whereas the inhibition of whole-cell calcium currents by baclofen was only partially depressed by PTX, suggesting that G-protein mechanisms involved in GABAB receptor modulation at the soma and axon terminal may not be identical. We conclude that GABAB receptor activation exerts a strong presynaptic inhibition of GABA release in SCN neurons, primarily by modulating P/Q-type calcium channels at axon terminals.  相似文献   

11.
Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), the most important inhibitory neurotransmitter, is characterised by rapid effects that are mediated via GABAA, receptors. These receptors are also targets for many drugs including benzodiazepines, barbiturates and general anaesthetics. Recognition of the heterogeneity of GABAA receptors has opened up new possibilities for the development of more selective therapeutic agents. In particular, subtype-specific receptor ligands varying in intrinsic activity are likely to give rise to fewer side effects than do currently available drugs.  相似文献   

12.
We previously reported that corymine, an alkaloidal compound extracted from the leaves of Hunteria zeylanica native to Thailand, potentiated convulsions induced by either picrotoxin or strychnine. Therefore, to clarify the mechanism of action of corymine, the effects of corymine on gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glycine receptors were examined. We used Xenopus oocytes expressing these receptors and the two-electrode voltage-clamp method. The receptors expressed in oocytes injected with rat brain and spinal cord RNA showed the pharmacological properties of GABAA and glycine receptors, respectively. Corymine (1-100 microM) partially (20-30%) reduced the GABA responses in oocytes injected with rat brain RNA, while marked (up to 80%) dose-dependent reductions were observed in the glycine responses in oocytes injected with rat spinal cord RNA. These observations suggest that corymine was more effective against the glycine receptors than the GABA receptors. The ED50 of corymine on the glycine response was 10.8 microM. Corymine, at 30 microM, caused a shift to the right, with a lower maximal response, of the glycine concentration-response curve. This indicated that the action of corymine on glycine receptors is neither competitive nor purely non-competitive. These observations suggest that a binding site other than the glycine recognition site of the glycine receptors is the site of action of corymine.  相似文献   

13.
The relationship between zolpidem sensitivity and GABA(A) receptor alpha subunits was studied in individual dissociated neurons from rat brain. Using whole-cell recording, similar EC50 values were demonstrated for the effect of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) on gated-chloride currents from substantia nigra reticulata (SNR) and lateral septal neurons. Subsequently, many neurons from both the SNR or lateral septum were found to exhibit enhanced GABA-gated chloride currents across concentrations of zolpidem ranging from 10 to 300 nM. Some neurons exhibited a greater than 20% increase in responsiveness to GABA at 30 nM of zolpidem without further increase at higher concentrations of zolpidem. Conversely, zolpidem enhancement of GABA from another group of neurons was not observed at 30 nM zolpidem, but between 100 and 300 nM the response to GABA increased greater than 20%. Finally, a third group of neurons reached both of these criteria for zolpidem enhancement of GABA. This latter spectrum of responses to GABA after varying concentrations of zolpidem was consistent with the presence of either two GABA(A) receptors or a single receptor with differing affinities for zolpidem on an individual neuron. Following determination of the sensitivity of neurons from SNR or lateral septum to zolpidem, cytoplasm was extracted from some individual cells to allow identification of cellular mRNAs for the alpha1, alpha2 and alpha3 GABA(A) receptor subunits with RT-PCR. Those neurons that responded to the 30 nM zolpidem concentration invariably expressed the alpha1-GABA(A) receptor subunit. This result is consistent with the GABA(A) alpha1-receptor subunit being an integral part of a functional high-affinity zolpidem type 1-BZD receptor complex on neurons in brain. Those neurons which showed enhancement of GABA from 100 to 300 nM zolpidem contained mRNAs for the alpha2 and/or the alpha3 receptor subunits, a finding consistent with these alpha subunits forming type 2-BZD receptors. Some individual dissociated SNR neurons were sensitive to both low and high concentrations of zolpidem and contained mRNAs for all three alpha-receptor subunits. These latter individual neurons are proposed to have at least two functional GABA(A) receptor subtypes. Thus, the present investigation emphasizes the importance of characterizing the relationship between endogenous GABA(A) receptor function and the presence of specific structural components forming GABA(A) receptor subtypes on neurons.  相似文献   

14.
Previous work with recombinant receptors has shown that the identity of the NMDA NR2 subunit influences receptor affinity for both glutamate and glycine. We have investigated the developmental change in NMDA receptor affinity for both glutamate and glycine in acutely dissociated parietal cortex neurons of the rat, together with the expression during ontogeny of NR2A and NR2B mRNA and protein. Whereas there is little change in NMDA receptor glutamate affinity with age, a population of NMDA receptors emerges in 14- and 28-d-old animals with a markedly reduced affinity for glycine (mKD = approximately 800 nM) and a reduced sensitivity to the NR2B subunit-selective NMDA antagonist ifenprodil. These changes are paralleled by a developmental increase in the expression of NR2A. Thus, in mature animals a population of NMDA receptors appears with a lower affinity for glycine that might not be saturated under normal physiological conditions. Ifenprodil (10 microM) inhibits virtually all of the NMDA receptor-evoked current in very young neurons that contain a single population of receptors exhibiting a high affinity for glycine (mKD = approximately 20 nM). In older neurons, which contain NMDA receptors with both high and low affinities for glycine, ifenprodil (10 microM) inhibits both the high-affinity population and a significant proportion of the low-affinity component, thus revealing three pharmacologically distinct populations of NMDA receptors in single neurons. Moreover, these observations suggest that ifenprodil might bind with high affinity to NMDA receptors containing both NR2A and NR2B subunits as well as those containing only NR2B.  相似文献   

15.
GABA is the principal neurotransmitter of inhibition in the adult mammalian brain. However, at early stages of development, including embryonic period and first week of postnatal life, GABA plays the role of main neurotransmitter of excitation. The paradoxical excitatory effect of GABA is due to an inversed chloride gradient and therefore a depolarizing direction of GABA-A receptor mediated responses. In addition, another type of GABAergic inhibition mediated by postsynaptic GABA-B receptors is not functional at early stage of life. In the neonatal rat hippocampus, GABA, acting via GABA-A receptors, activates voltage gated sodium and calcium channels and potentiates the activity of NMDA receptors by reducing their voltage dependent Mg2+ block. The temporal window when GABA exerts excitatory actions coincides with a particular pattern of activity of hippocampal neuronal network that is characterized by periodical giant depolarizing potentials (GDPs) reminiscent of interictal-like epileptiform discharges. Recent studies have shown that GDPs result from the synchronous discharge of GABAergic interneurons and principal glutamatergic pyramidal cells and are mediated by the synergistic excitatory actions of GABA-A and glutamate receptors. GDPs provide synchronous intracellular Ca2+ oscillations and may therefore be implicated in hebbian modulation of developing synapses and activity-dependent formation of the hippocampal network.  相似文献   

16.
The ionotropic type-A and type-C receptors for the neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA(A) and GABA(C) receptors) are the principal sites of fast synaptic inhibition in the central nervous system, but it is not known how these receptors are localized at GABA-dependent synapses. GABA(C) receptors, which are composed of rho-subunits, are expressed almost exclusively in the retina of adult vertebrates, where they are enriched on bipolar cell axon terminals. Here we show that the microtubule-associated protein 1B (MAP-1B) specifically interacts with the GABA(C) rho1 subunit but not with GABA(A) receptor subunits. Furthermore, GABA(C) receptors and MAP-1B co-localize at postsynaptic sites on bipolar cell axon terminals. Co-expression of MAP-1B and the rho1 subunit in COS cells results in a dramatic redistribution of the rho1 subunit. Our observations suggest a novel mechanism for localizing ionotropic GABA receptors to synaptic sites. This mechanism, which is specific for GABA(C) but not GABA(A) receptors, may allow these receptor subtypes, which have distinct physiological and pharmacological properties, to be differentially localized at inhibitory synapses.  相似文献   

17.
Gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptors expressed within the medial preoptic area (mPOA) are known to play a critical role in regulating sexual and neuroendocrine functions. In the rat brain, high levels of expression of the gamma1 subunit mRNA of the GABAA receptor are restricted to a limited number of regions that mediate sexual behaviors, including the mPOA. The biophysical and pharmacological profiles of native gamma1-containing receptors in neurons are unknown. Here, we have characterized the properties of GABAA receptor-mediated spontaneous inhibitory postsynaptic currents (sIPSCs) and currents elicited by fast perfusion of GABA to isolated mPOA neurons of juvenile male and female rats. No significant sex-specific differences were evident in the mean peak amplitude, distribution of event amplitudes, kinetics of current decay, or the frequency of sIPSCs. The profile of modulation of sIPSCs by diazepam, beta-CCM and zolpidem, allosteric modulators that act at the benzodiazepine (BZ) site of the GABAA receptor, support the assertion that mPOA neurons of both sexes express functional gamma1-containing receptors. The ability of zolpidem to modulate both sIPSC amplitude and currents elicited by rapid perfusion of GABA to mPOA neurons differed significantly between the sexes. Zolpidem reversibly induced negative modulation of currents in mPOA neurons isolated from male rats, but had no effect in mPOA neurons from female rats. Concentration-response analysis of responses in neurons acutely isolated from male rats indicated an IC50 of 58 nM with maximal decreases of approximately 50% of control peak current amplitude. In situ hybridization analysis demonstrated that levels of the gamma1 subunit mRNA are significantly higher in mPOA neurons from male than female rats. No significant sex-specific differences were detected in the levels of alpha1, alpha2, or alpha5 mRNAs. These results suggest that native gamma1-containing receptors are expressed in primary neurons of the mPOA and that sex-specific differences in the expression of this subunit may contribute to sexual dimorphism in GABAA receptor modulation by compounds acting at the BZ site.  相似文献   

18.
Unilateral microinjections of GABA, glycine, beta-alanine and taurine into the caudal ventrolateral medulla (CVLM) of the rat, led to an increase in blood pressure and heart rate. The responses to glycine, beta-alanine and taurine but not to GABA could be blocked by strychnine. The responses to taurine and beta-alanine but not to GABA and glycine could be blocked by 6-aminomethyl-3-methyl-4H-1,2,4-benzothiadiazine-1,1-dioxide (TAG), an antagonist of taurine. The taurine antagonist alone injected bilaterally into the CVLM produced a decrease in blood pressure. From CVLM areas microperfused with Krebs solution, spontaneous release of GABA, glycine, beta-alanine and taurine was detected and high K+ stimulation caused a calcium-dependent release of GABA, beta-alanine and taurine. These results suggest that beta-alanine and taurine as well as GABA may be involved in modulation of the cardiovascular control within the CVLM.  相似文献   

19.
Gramicidin-perforated patch-clamp recording revealed phasic Cl(-)-mediated hyperpolarizations in respiratory neurons of the brainstem-spinal cord preparation from newborn rats. The in vitro respiratory rhythm persisted after block of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), i.e. GABAA, receptor-mediated inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) with bicuculline and/or glycinergic IPSPs with strychnine. In one class of expiratory neurons, bicuculline unmasked inspiration-related excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs), leading to spike discharge. Bicuculline also blocked hyperpolarizations and respiratory arrest due to bath-applied muscimol, whereas strychnine antagonized similar responses to glycine. The reversal potential of respiration-related IPSPs and responses to GABA, muscimol or glycine was not affected by CO2/HCO3(-)-free solutions, but shifted from about -65 mV to values more positive than -20 mV upon dialysis of the cells with 144 instead of 4 mM Cl-. Impairment of GABA uptake with nipecotic acid or glycine uptake with sarcosine evoked a bicuculline- or strychnine-sensitive decrease of respiratory frequency which could lead to respiratory arrest. Also, the GABAB receptor agonist baclofen led to reversible suppression of respiratory rhythm. This in vitro apnoea was accompanied by a K+ channel-mediated hyperpolarization (reversal potential -88 mV) of tonic cells, whereas membrane potential of neighbouring respiratory neurons remained almost unaffected. Both baclofen-induced hyperpolarization and respiratory depression were antagonised by 2-OH-saclofen, which did not affect respiration-related IPSPs per se. The results show that synaptic inhibition is not essential for rhythmogenesis in the isolated neonatal respiratory network, although (endogenous) GABA and glycine have a strong modulatory action. Hyperpolarizing IPSPs mediated by GABAA and glycine receptors provide a characteristic pattern of membrane potential oscillations in respiratory neurons, whereas GABAB receptors rather appear to be a feature of non-respiratory neurons, possibly providing excitatory drive to the network.  相似文献   

20.
GABA and GABAB receptor agonists were shown to reduce the peak calcium current amplitude with its subsequent recovery, whereas glycine and taurine, the GABAA receptor agonists, did not modify the current. The findings suggest that the GABAB receptors mediate a presynaptic inhibition by suppression of the Calcium currents in the cyclostome spinal cord.  相似文献   

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