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Vol. 294, Issue 1, 363-369, July 2000
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology and the Neuroscience
Program, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan
Experiments were designed to test the hypothesis that nicotinic
acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) are present at sites of
neurotransmission to the guinea pig ileum circular smooth muscle.
Circular smooth muscle preparations, from which the myenteric plexus
had been removed (circular muscle-axon preparation), were used for this purpose. Nicotine and dimethylphenyl piperazinium iodide (10-100 µM)
induced contraction of the circular smooth muscle. Agonist-induced contraction was inhibited by 1 µM scopolamine and abolished in the
combined presence of 1 µM scopolamine and 0.3 µM CP 96,345-01, a
neurokinin-1 receptor antagonist. Contractions induced by
electric field stimulation (30 pulses, 0.5 ms, 70 V, 10 Hz) were
abolished by 0.3 µM tetrodotoxin (TTX); in contrast,
agonist-induced contraction was attenuated but not abolished by 0.3 µM TTX. Mecamylamine (3 or 30 µM), an nAChR antagonist, blocked
agonist-induced contractions. Frequency-response curves for both
"ON" and "OFF" electric field stimulation contractions
were abolished by the combined presence of 1 µM scopolamine and 0.3 µM CP 96,345-01 or by 0.3 µM TTX. At stimulation frequencies
greater than 2 Hz, the ON contraction was increased in the presence of
100 µM nitro-L-arginine. Mecamylamine (3 µM) was used
to block the stimulatory prejunctional nAChRs located near sites of
neurotransmitter release to the circular smooth muscle; however, ON and
OFF contractions were not affected by mecamylamine. Although the
prejunctional nAChRs are not targets for endogenously released
acetylcholine under the conditions tested here, these receptors may be
targets for the development of new prokinetic agents.
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