Intravenous anaesthetics inhibit nicotinic acetylcholine receptor-mediated currents and Ca2+ transients in rat intracardiac ganglion neurons


Autoria(s): Weber, M.; Motin, L.; Gaul, S.; Beker, F.; Fink, R. H. A; Adams, D. J.
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

1 The effects of intravenous (i.v.) anaesthetics on nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR)-induced transients in intracellular free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+](i)) and membrane currents were investigated in neonatal rat intracardiac neurons. 2 In fura-2-loaded neurons, nAChR activation evoked a transient increase in [Ca2+](i), which was inhibited reversibly and selectively by clinically relevant concentrations of thiopental. The half-maximal concentration for thiopental inhibition of nAChR-induced [Ca2+](i) transients was 28 muM, close to the estimated clinical EC50 (clinically relevant (half-maximal) effective concentration) of thiopental. 3 In fura-2-loaded neurons, voltage clamped at -60mV to eliminate any contribution of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels, thiopental (25 muM) simultaneously inhibited nAChR-induced increases in [Ca2+](i) and peak current amplitudes. Thiopental inhibited nAChR-induced peak current amplitudes in dialysed whole-cell recordings by - 40% at - 120, -80 and -40 mV holding potential, indicating that the inhibition is voltage independent. 4 The barbiturate, pentobarbital and the dissociative anaesthetic, ketamine, used at clinical EC50 were also shown to inhibit nAChR-induced increases in [Ca2+](i) by similar to40%. 5 Thiopental (25 muM) did not inhibit caffeine-, muscarine- or ATP-evoked increases in [Ca2+](i), indicating that inhibition of Ca2+ release from internal stores via either ryanodine receptor or inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor channels is unlikely. 6 Depolarization-activated Ca2+ channel currents were unaffected in the presence of thiopental (25 muM), pentobarbital (50 muM) and ketamine (10 muM). 7 In conclusion, i.v. anaesthetics inhibit nAChR-induced currents and [Ca2+](i) transients in intracardiac neurons by binding to nAChRs and thereby may contribute to changes in heart rate and cardiac output under clinical conditions.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:76288

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Nature Publishing Group

Palavras-Chave #Intracardiac Ganglia #Ganglionic Transmission #Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor #Intracellular Ca2+ #Intravenous Anaesthetics #Thiopental #Pentobarbital #Ketamine #Caffeine #Pharmacology & Pharmacy #Gated Ion Channels #Parasympathetic Neurons #Sarcoplasmic-reticulum #Calcium Permeability #Pc12 Cells #Alpha-7 #Transmission #Activation #Release #C1 #730104 Nervous system and disorders #111501 Basic Pharmacology #110999 Neurosciences not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Journal Article