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- Title
4-aminopyridine- and dendrotoxin-sensitive potassium channels influence excitability of vagal mechano-sensitive endings in guinea-pig oesophagus.
- Authors
Zagorodnyuk, Vladimir P.; Bao Nan Chen; Costa, Marcello; Brookes, Simon J.H.; Chen, Bao Nan
- Abstract
1. Distension-sensitive vagal afferent fibres from the guinea-pig oesophagus were recorded extracellularly in vitro. Most recorded units were spontaneously active firing at 3.2+/-0.3 Hz (n=41, N=41) and had low thresholds (less than 1 mm) to circumferential stretch. Dynamic and adapted phases of stretch-evoked firing, as well as a silent period were linearly dependent on the amplitude of stretch. 2. High K+ (7-12 mM) Krebs solution dose-dependently increased both spontaneous and stretch-evoked firing and reduced the duration of the silent period. 3. Charybdotoxin (ChTX, 100 nM) slightly increased spontaneous and stretch-evoked firing and decreased the silent period, while neither iberiotoxin (100 nM) nor apamin (0.5 microM) had significant effects. omega-Conotoxin GVIA (0.5 microM) did not significantly affect firing of vagal mechanoreceptors. 4. In the majority of single units, 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) concentration-dependently (EC(50) approximately 28 microM) increased spontaneous firing, strongly reduced the silent period but did not affect stretch (3 mm)-induced firing. Firing evoked by 1-2 mm was increased by 4-AP. 5. Alpha-dendrotoxin (DnTX, 300 nM) and DnTX K (30 nM) slightly increased spontaneous and stretch-evoked firing. There was no additive effect on spontaneous firing when ChTX and DnTX K were applied simultaneously. 6. Barium (100 microM) increased stretch-induced firing, probably due to an increase in intramural tension. Glibenclamide (10 microM) had no effect on spontaneous or stretch-induced firing. 7. The results indicate that voltage-gated 4-AP- and dendrotoxin-sensitive K+ channels are the main type of K+ channels that influence excitability of vagal mechano-sensitive endings of the guinea-pig oesophagus. They were involved in control of spontaneous firing and in stretch-induced firing evoked by moderate stretch, but none of the K+ channels appeared to be involved in adaptation to maintained stretch by their slowly adapting vagal mechanoreceptors.
- Subjects
ESOPHAGUS; AMINOPYRIDINES; VAGUS nerve; ESOPHAGEAL physiology; POTASSIUM metabolism; VAGUS nerve physiology; ANIMAL experimentation; COMPARATIVE studies; DOSE-effect relationship in pharmacology; GUINEA pigs; RESEARCH methodology; MECHANORECEPTORS; MEDICAL cooperation; SNAKE venom; POTASSIUM; RESEARCH; EVALUATION research; POTASSIUM antagonists; PHARMACODYNAMICS; PHYSIOLOGY
- Publication
British Journal of Pharmacology, 2002, Vol 137, Issue 8, p1195
- ISSN
0007-1188
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1038/sj.bjp.0704964