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Vol. 284, Issue 3, 858-867, March 1998
Department of Chemical Pharmacology, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Meijo University, Nagoya 468, Japan and Department of Neuropsychopharmacology and Hospital Pharmacy (T.N.), Nagoya University School of Medicine, Nagoya 466, Japan
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Abstract |
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The role of kappa opioid receptor agonists in learning and memory is controversial. In the present study, the effects of U-50,488H on scopolamine-, mecamylamine- and dizocilpine-induced learning and memory impairments in rats were investigated. Scopolamine (3.3 µmol/kg s.c.), a muscarinic cholinergic antagonist, and mecamylamine (40 µmol/kg s.c.), a nicotinic cholinergic antagonist, significantly impaired learning and memory in rats in a step-through type passive avoidance test. Administration of U-50,488H (0.17 or 0.51 µmol/kg s.c.) 25 min before the acquisition trial reversed the impairment of learning and memory induced by scopolamine and mecamylamine. Although low doses of scopolamine (0.17 µmol/kg) and mecamylamine (12 µmol/kg) had no effect, concurrent administration of both antagonists induced impairment of learning and memory. Scopolamine significantly increased acetylcholine release in the hippocampus as determined by in vivo brain microdialysis. On the other hand, mecamylamine significantly decreased acetylcholine release. U-50,488H completely blocked the decrease in acetylcholine release induced by mecamylamine, whereas it only partially blocked the increase of acetylcholine induced by scopolamine. On the other hand, an endogenous kappa opioid receptor agonist, dynorphin A (1-13), did not block the increase in acetylcholine release induced by scopolamine. The antagonistic effect of U-50,488H was abolished by pretreatment with nor-binaltorphimine (4.9 nmol/rat i.c.v.), a selective kappa opioid receptor antagonist. U-50,488H did not affect the impairment of learning and memory induced by the blockade of NMDA receptors by dizocilpine ((+)-MK-801). These results suggest that U-50,488H reverses the impairment of learning and memory induced by the blockade of cholinergic transmission and abolishes the decrease of acetylcholine release induced by mecamylamine via the kappa receptor-mediated opioid neuronal system.
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Introduction |
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Cholinergic
neuronal systems play an important role in the cognitive deficits
associated with aging and neurodegenerative diseases (Bartus et
al., 1982
; Beninger et al., 1989
; Coyle et al., 1983
; Kameyama et al., 1986
; Levin, 1992
;
Newhouse, 1990
; Sarter, 1991
). Although investigations of learning and
memory have focused primarily on cholinergic neurotransmission, reports of increased kappa opioid receptor density in the brains of
patients with Alzheimer's disease (Hiller et al., 1987
) and
dynorphin A (1-8)-like immunoreactivity in the hippocampus of aged
rats (Jiang et al., 1989
) suggest that disruption of
opioidergic neurotransmission may also play a role in the cognitive
deficits associated with Alzheimer's disease and aging. Recent studies
have indicated that neuropeptides modulate learning and memory
processes in experimental animals. Of particular interest was the
observation that an endogenous kappa opioid agonist,
dynorphin A (1-13), reverses the scopolamine-induced impairment of
spontaneous alternation performance (Itoh et al., 1993a
) and
CO-induced delayed amnesia in mice (Hiramatsu et al., 1995
,
1997b
). We have reported recently that a selective kappa opioid receptor agonist, U-50,488H, also improves the impairment of
learning and memory induced by CO exposure (Hiramatsu et
al., 1996a
) and by carbachol (Hiramatsu et al., 1997a
,
1998
, in press). However, whether kappa opioid agonists
improve memory function is controversial, and neurochemical mechanism
underlying the memory improvement by kappa opioid agonists
is still unknown. For example, post-training administration of
dynorphin A (1-13) has no effect on inhibitory avoidance or shuttle
avoidance responses (Izquierdo et al., 1985
) and impairs
retention of inhibitory avoidance but not of Y-maze discrimination
(Introini-Collison et al., 1987
). Colombo et al.
(1992)
reported that dynorphin A (1-13) impaired memory in a
dose-dependent manner. However, injection of U-50,488H showed a
biphasic effect on memory; low doses tended to enhance, albeit not
significantly, whereas high doses significantly impaired memory in
2-day-old chicks (Colombo et al., 1992
). Therefore, the role
of kappa opioid receptors in memory formation may depend biphasically on the dosage of agonist used.
Evidence that high concentrations of dynorphin decrease
[14C]acetylcholine release (Mulder et
al., 1984
) corresponds with this hypothesis. On the other hand,
the activation of kappa opioid receptors by dynorphin had no
effect on high potassium or glutamate-evoked acetylcholine release in
rat striatal slices (Arenas et al., 1990
), and electrical
stimulation or high potassium concentration evoked release of
acetylcholine output in brain slices (Lapchak et al., 1989
;
Heijna et al., 1990
). Furthermore, recent results from our laboratory indicated that low doses of dynorphin have no effect on
acetylcholine release in normal rats as measured by microdialysis (Mori
et al., 1995
).
Scopolamine, a muscarinic acetylcholine receptor antagonist, is used
widely to investigate cholinergic influence on learning ability in
experimental animals. Blockade of nicotinic receptors by mecamylamine
also induces the impairment of learning ability. Furthermore, in
patients with Alzheimer's disease, not only the muscarinic but also
the nicotinic receptors were decreased markedly (Nordberg and Winblad,
1986
; Quirion et al., 1986
; Whitehouse et al.,
1986
). Therefore, blockade of both receptors may offer a better amnesia
model (Levin et al., 1989
; Levin, 1992
). Because mecamylamine acts partly as an NMDA receptor antagonist and cholinergic systems modulate glutamatergic systems in the hippocampus (Faden, 1992
), we also tested the effects of U-50,488H on learning impairment induced by the typical NMDA receptor antagonist, dizocilpine
[(+)-MK-801].
The present study, therefore, was designed to test the hypothesis that a kappa opioid receptor agonist ameliorates both scopolamine-, mecamylamine- and (+)-MK-801-induced learning and memory impairment and the disruption of cholinergic neurotransmission via kappa opioid receptors.
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Methods |
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Animals. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (Japan SLC Inc., Shizuoka, Japan), weighing between 250 and 350 g, were used. The animals were housed in a room with controlled lighting (12-h light/dark cycle, lights on 8 A.M. to 8 P.M.) and temperature (23 ± 2°C) for at least 5 days before the experiments and were given free access to food and water. Experimental protocols concerning the use of laboratory animals were approved by the committee of Meijo University and followed the guidelines of the Japanese Pharmacological Society [(1992) Guiding Principles for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals. Folia Pharmacol Jpn 99:35A] and the interministerial decree of May 25, 1987 (the Ministry of Education).
Surgical procedure.
Rats were anesthetized with sodium
pentobarbital (50 mg/kg) administered intraperitoneally (i.p.). With
use of coordinates from the stereotaxic atlas of Paxinos and Watson
(1986)
, a guide cannula for the microdialysis probe was implanted
unilaterally into the hippocampus, and the cannula for drug injection
was implanted into the lateral ventricle. The tips of the cannulae were
positioned just above the hippocampus (A:
4.1, L: 2.0, V: 3.2 mm from
the bregma) and the lateral ventricle (A:
1.0, L: 1.2, V: 4.5 mm from
the bregma) of each rat. The animals were allowed to recover from the
procedure for 3 to 7 days before the experiment. In the experiment, the
dialysis probe (CMA/10, Bioanalytical Systems, Inc., Tokyo, Japan) was
inserted through the guide cannula and a 3-mm length of dialysis
membrane was then advanced into the hippocampus.
Passive avoidance test. One group of rats was trained in a passive avoidance apparatus which consisted of two compartments, one light (25 × 15 × 15 cm high) and one dark, of the same size connected via a guillotine door. On day 1, each rat was placed in the light compartment and then allowed to enter the dark compartment. Rats that had latencies greater than 60 s were discarded as being outside the normal range (preacquisition trial). The acquisition trial was carried out 15 min after the preacquisition trial. Rats were placed in the light compartment and 30 s later the guillotine door was opened. Once the rat entered the dark compartment, the guillotine door was closed and an electric shock (0.5 mA for 3 s) was delivered to the animal via the floor. The animal was then put back into the home cage and the retention trial was carried out 24 h later. The rat was put in the light compartment and the time taken to enter the dark compartment was recorded (step-through latency). A maximum latency of 300 s was set.
Sampling procedure. The other group of rats was used for microdialysis experiments. The dialysis probe was perfused with Ringer's solution (composition in mM: NaCl, 127.6; KCl, 2.5; CaCl2, 1.3, pH 6.4-6.8, containing 0.01 mM eserine) at a rate of 2 µl/min, connected to a microinfusion pump (Syringe Infusion Pump 22, Harvard Apparatus, South Natick, MA) via a single-channel liquid swivel. The rats were placed in individual acrylic cages (30 × 30 × 35 cm high) and allowed to adapt for at least 60 min before the experiment was started. The dummy cannulae were replaced with dialysis probes and the perfusate was collected in small (250 µl) disposable microcentrifuge tubes secured to the middle of the tether. The total dead volume from the tip of the probe to the collection tube was usually 4 µl. About 3 h after the probe was inserted, samples (40 µl) were collected at 20-min intervals, and when at least three base-line samples were stable, the drugs were administered. Perfusate samples from the brain were taken up to 120 min after treatment with drugs or saline. The locations of dialysis probes were confirmed after the experiments.
Analysis of dialysates.
Acetylcholine and choline in the
dialysate were quantified by HPLC with an immobilized enzyme column and
an ECD (ECD-300, Eicom Corp., Kyoto, Japan). The mobile phase consisted
of 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer (pH 8.5) containing 1.23 mM
1-decanesulfonate sodium salt and 593 µM tetramethylammonium chloride
(Fujimori and Yamamoto, 1987
) was delivered by a pump (P-300, Eicom
Corp., Kyoto, Japan) at a flow rate of 0.6 ml/min. To protect the
analytical column from impurities in the mobile phase and samples, a
precolumn (Eicom Corp. Kyoto, Japan) was placed between the pump and
injector. Aliquots (25 µl) of the perfusate samples were injected
into the HPLC system and separated by a column of Eicompak AC-GEL
(6.0 × 150 mm). The enzyme column containing acetylcholinesterase
and choline oxidase catalyzed the formation of hydrogen peroxide from acetylcholine and choline. The resultant
H2O2 was detected by ECD
with a platinum electrode at +450 mV. The average basal values of
acetylcholine and choline (recorded in the presence of 0.01 mM eserine)
were 0.22 ± 0.06 and 2.45 ± 0.46 pmol/min in the
hippocampus. Although relatively high concentrations of eserine had to
be used to measure extracellular acetylcholine levels, acetylcholine
release was able to detect in a similar time course when samples were collected during longer periods.
Locomotor activity. Locomotor activity was measured with Scanet SV-10 (Toyo Sangyo, Co. Ltd., Nakashinkawa, Japan). Interruptions of any of the infrared photocells were recorded on an NEC personal computer (PC-9801 RX). Rats were injected subcutaneously with vehicle or drug, injected subcutaneously with U-50,488H 5 min later and then placed individually in polypropylene cages (41.5 × 24.5 × 18 cm). Locomotor activity was then measured for 120 min, with data recorded separately for 12 consecutive periods of 10 min each. Experiments were conducted during the light phase of the light/dark cycle in a quiet room.
Drugs. The following drugs were used: sodium pentobarbital (Tokyo Chemical Industry Co., Ltd., Japan); U-50,488H (Sigma, St. Louis, MO); n-BNI (Research Biochemicals, Inc., Natick, MA); scopolamine hydrobromide (scopolamine, Tokyo Chemical Industry, Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan); dizocilpine [(+)-MK-801, a generous gift from Dr. A.K. Cho, UCLA] mecamylamine hydrochloride (Sigma, St. Louis, MO); dynorphin A (1-13) (Peptide Institute, Inc., Osaka, Japan). All doses were calculated as those of the bases. Drugs were dissolved in isotonic saline solution (Otsuka Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Tokyo, Japan).
Nor-binaltorphimine was administered i.c.v. 30 min before the first training session. U-50,488H, scopolamine, mecamylamine and (+)-MK-801 were administered (s.c.) 25, 30, 30 and 30 min, respectively, before the training session of the passive avoidance test. Dynorphin A (1-13) was administered i.c.v. 5 min before scopolamine injection.Data analysis. The behavioral data are expressed in terms of median, interquartile and 10th and 90th percentile ranges. Significant differences were evaluated using the Mann-Whitney U test for comparisons between two groups and Kruskal-Wallis non-parametric one-way analysis of variance followed by Bonferroni's test for multiple comparisons. Dialysis data are shown as means ± S.E.M of the percentage of base-line level obtained from each rat before drug treatment. To compare the effects of drugs, data were analyzed by two-way repeated measures analysis of variance followed by Bonferroni's test. The data for individual time points was analyzed by one-way analysis of variance followed by Bonferroni's test. P < .05 was taken as the criterion for significance.
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Results |
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Effects of U-50,488H on scopolamine-induced learning impairment. Scopolamine (3.3 µmol/kg s.c.) significantly impaired the acquisition of learning when administered 30 min before the acquisition trial (fig. 1). U-50,488H (0.51 µmol/kg s.c.) 25 min before the acquisition trial significantly attenuated the impairment of learning and memory induced by scopolamine in rats, whereas a lower dose of U-50,488H (0.17 µmol/kg s.c.) showed no such effect (fig. 1). U-50,488H (0.17 and 0.51 µmol/kg s.c.) itself administered 25 min before acquisition trials had no effect on learning and memory when administered alone (fig. 1).
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Effects of U-50,488H on mecamylamine-induced learning impairment. The effects of U-50,488H on passive avoidance performance in mecamylamine-treated rats are shown in figure 2. Mecamylamine (40 µmol/kg s.c.), a nicotinic acetylcholine receptor antagonist, significantly impaired the acquisition of learning when administered 30 min before acquisition trial (fig. 2). In this model, U-50,488H (0.17 µmol/kg s.c.) administered 25 min before the test session significantly attenuated the impairment of learning and memory induced by mecamylamine in rats. The dose-effect function for U-50,488H was bell shaped (fig. 2).
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Effects of U-50,488H on low doses of scopolamine + mecamylamine-induced learning impairment. Scopolamine (0.17 µmol/kg s.c.) and mecamylamine (12 µmol/kg s.c.) itself did not induce impairment of learning and memory in rats (fig. 3). When given together 30 min before the acquisition trial, these drugs significantly impaired the acquisition of learning (fig. 3). U-50,488H (0.17 µmol/kg s.c.) significantly attenuated the impairment of learning and memory induced by scopolamine + mecamylamine in rats when administered 5 min after the injection of these antagonists (fig. 3).
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Effects of U-50,488H on (+)-MK-801-induced learning impairment. As shown in figure 4, administration of (+)-MK-801 (2.9 µmol/kg s.c.) 30 min before the acquisition trial significantly impaired the acquisition of learning (fig. 4). U-50,488H (0.17 and 0.51 µmol/kg s.c.) did not attenuate the impairment of learning and memory induced by (+)-MK-801 in rats when administered 25 min before acquisition.
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Effects of U-50,488H and dynorphin A (1-13) on scopolamine-induced increase in extracellular acetylcholine levels. Scopolamine (3.3 µmol/kg s.c.) significantly increased the synaptic overflow of acetylcholine in the hippocampus (P < .01) by about 1500% of the base-line levels from 20 to 120 min after injection (fig. 5). In behavioral experiments, U-50,488H attenuated scopolamine-induced impairment of learning and memory (fig. 1). To investigate the possible mechanism of this behavioral effect, the extracellular acetylcholine levels were measured after administration of U-50,488H. U-50,488H (0.51 µmol/kg s.c.) partially but significantly suppressed the increase in extracellular acetylcholine level induced by scopolamine 20 to 100 min after injection in the hippocampus (fig. 5).
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Effects of U-50,488H on mecamylamine-induced decrease in extracellular acetylcholine levels. Mecamylamine (40 µmol/kg s.c.) significantly decreased the extracellular levels of acetylcholine in the hippocampus (P < .01) by about 25% of the base-line levels from 20 to 120 min after injection (fig. 6). This decrease elicited by mecamylamine lasted for at least 120 min. U-50,488H (0.17 µmol/kg s.c.) abolished the decrease in the extracellular acetylcholine level induced by mecamylamine almost completely in the hippocampus (fig. 6).
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Effects of U-50,488H on scopolamine + mecamylamine-induced increase in extracellular acetylcholine levels. The low dose of scopolamine (0.17 µmol/kg s.c.) also significantly increased the extracellular levels of acetylcholine in the hippocampus (P < .01) by about 230% of the base-line levels at 40 min after injection (fig. 7), although the increment was less than after a higher dose of scopolamine (fig. 5). However, a lower dose of mecamylamine (12 µmol/kg s.c.) did not affect the extracellular levels of acetylcholine. Combined treatment with these two antagonists significantly increased the extracellular levels of acetylcholine in the hippocampus but less than with scopolamine alone. U-50,488H (0.17 µmol/kg s.c.) partially antagonized the increase in acetylcholine level induced by scopolamine + mecamylamine (fig. 7).
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Effects of U-50,488H on (+)-MK-801-induced increase in extracellular acetylcholine levels. (+)-MK-801 (2.9 µmol/kg s.c.) significantly increased the extracellular levels of acetylcholine in the hippocampus (P < .01) by about 300% of the base-line levels from 60 to 120 min after injection (fig. 8). U-50,488H (0.17 µmol/kg s.c.) partially antagonized the increase in acetylcholine levels induced by (+)-MK-801 (fig. 8).
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Effects of U-50,488H on scopolamine- and (+)-MK-801-induced increases in locomotor activities. It has been reported that kappa opioid receptor agonists decreased locomotor activities in mice and rats. To test whether the doses of U-50,488H used in this experiment had such effects, locomotor activities were measured for 120 min. Scopolamine (3.3 µmol/kg s.c.) and (+)-MK-801 (2.9 µmol/kg s.c.) significantly increased the locomotor activities (fig. 10). U-50,488H (0.17 and 0.51 µmol/kg s.c.) did not affect the hyperactivity induced by scopolamine or (+)-MK-801 (fig. 10). U-50,488H itself also did not affect the locomotor activity in normal rats (fig. 10).
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Discussion |
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Systemic administration of muscarinic cholinergic antagonists such
as scopolamine impairs the performance of experimental animals in a
wide variety of learning and memory tasks, including inhibitory
(passive) avoidance (Kameyama et al., 1986
) and spatial maze
tasks (Buresova et al., 1986
; Wirsching et al.,
1984
). However, recent studies have shown that quisqualic acid, an
excitatory amino acid, injected into the nucleus basalis of Meynert
reduces cholinergic input to the cortex more completely than ibotenic acid but produces only minimal memory deficits (Dunnett et
al., 1987
). Furthermore, large decreases in many muscarinic
binding sites, as well as nicotinic sites, have been reported in the
brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease (Nordberg and Winblad,
1986
; Quirion et al., 1986
; Whitehouse et al.,
1986
). Thus, independent manipulation of cholinergic receptor subtypes
in experimental animals may provide an inadequate model of cognitive
dysfunction. Consistent with this conclusion, the cholinergic
dysfunction observed in aging and Alzheimer's disease is accompanied
by changes in other neurotransmitter systems such as peptidergic
(Hiller et al., 1987
; Jiang et al., 1989
) and
noradrenergic (Scarpace and Abrass, 1988
) systems, which may be
important in memory modulation. For example, Jiang et al.
(1989)
reported that dynorphin A (1-8)-like immunoreactivity was
increased in the aged rat brain, and this elevation was found only in
the hippocampus and frontal cortex. The increase in dynorphin A
(1-8)-like immunoreactivity in the aged hippocampus was associated
with a decline in spatial learning memory (Jiang et al.,
1989
).
In our recent studies, dynorphin A (1-13) and U-50,488H reversed
CO-induced impairment of learning and memory (Hiramatsu et al., 1995
, 1996a
, 1997b
), in agreement with previous findings, which indicates reversal of the scopolamine-, mecamylamine-, galanin- and carbachol-induced impairment of learning and memory in mice and
rats (Hiramatsu et al., 1996b
, 1997a
,b
, 1998
, in press; Itoh et al., 1993a
). These ameliorative effects of dynorphin A
(1-13) were antagonized almost completely by n-BNI (Hiramatsu et
al., 1996a
, b
; Itoh et al., 1993a
), a selective
kappa opioid receptor antagonist. n-BNI itself had no
significant effect on locomotor activity or memory process in either
memory-impaired or normal animals. Previously, we reported that one of
the mechanisms underlying memory dysfunction after CO exposure would be
dysfunction of cholinergic neuronal systems (Hiramatsu et
al., 1996c
). Taken together, these results suggest that
kappa opioid receptor agonists can ameliorate cholinergic
dysfunction via the kappa opioidergic system.
Although kappa opioid receptor agonists can ameliorate
learning and memory impairment, endogenous kappa opioid
agonists may not have exerted tonic (inhibitory) control over the
regulation of neurotransmission, because n-BNI did not modify the
step-through latency in normal rats (Hiramatsu et al.,
1996b
). We previously reported that a low dose of dynorphin A (1-13),
which has no effect on acetylcholine release in normal rats, prevents
galanin-induced decreases in acetylcholine release (Hiramatsu et
al., 1996b
). Therefore, we hypothesized that endogenous
kappa opioid agonists such as dynorphins can compensate for
dysfunction in the hippocampal formation and that the kappa
opioidergic system in the brain plays an important role in modulating
learning and memory when the cholinergic system is impaired.
To clarify this hypothesis, in the present study, we investigated the effects of a selective kappa opioid receptor agonist, U-50,488H, on a muscarinic and/or a nicotinic receptor agonist-induced learning and memory impairment by a step-through type passive avoidance task and an in vivo microdialysis technique.
Muscarinic receptor blockade.
Although dynorphin A (1-13) was
not studied in the present behavioral experiments, our previous results
showed that U-50,488H (Hiramatsu et al., 1996a
) and
dynorphin A (1-13) (Itoh et al., 1993a
) ameliorated the
impairment of learning and memory induced by scopolamine. Although
U-50,488H attenuated the increase in acetylcholine release, dynorphin A
(1-13) did not alter this increment (fig. 5). On the other hand,
U-50,488H alone decreased the acetylcholine release in normal rats
(fig. 9), whereas dynorphin A (1-13) did not (Hiramatsu et
al., 1996b
). Therefore, suppression of acetylcholine increase may
not be important in amelioration of the impairment of learning and
memory.
Nicotinic receptor blockade.
Nilsson et al. (1987)
suggested that endogenous acetylcholine could positively modulate its
own release in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease,
possibly through activation of nicotinic receptors, when its enzymatic
cleavage is prevented. Similar results have been obtained in
hippocampal slices from rats in which cholinergic neurons had been
lesioned with the neurotoxin AF64A (Potter and Nitta, 1993
). The
importance of presynaptic nicotinic receptors also was highlighted in a
recent study by McGehee et al. (1995)
. Nicotine was found to
enhance both glutamatergic and cholinergic transmission evoked at 0.1 Hz through activation of presynaptic nicotinic receptors. Sensitivity
of presynaptic nicotinic autoreceptors might increase during
degeneration of cholinergic neurons as a compensatory mechanism. In
agreement with these findings, we also showed that low doses of
nicotine improved CO-induced amnesia (Hiramatsu et al.,
1994
).
Involvement of dopaminergic systems.
Because U-50,488H does
not act exclusively on cholinergic synapses, the possible effects on
other neurotransmitter systems cannot be excluded. Kappa
opioid receptor agonists inhibit dopamine agonist-induced
hyperactivity, diminish striatal and mesolimbic dopamine release and
reduce the release of [3H]dopamine from
cultured neurons (Ronken et al., 1993
; Heijna et
al., 1990
). Moreover, central catecholamines appear to be involved in the acquisition and maintenance of learning associated with aversion
(Ichihara et al., 1989
; Oei and King, 1980
).
Concurrent muscarinic-nicotinic receptor blockade.
If a
preferential activation of nicotinic versus muscarinic
autoreceptors only occurs in the diseased brain, normal brain tissues
may not provide appropriate models for the understanding of cholinergic
mechanisms operative in the damaged brain in Alzheimer's disease and
for testing drugs expected to compensate for altered cholinergic
transmission. Therefore, concurrent blockade of these two components of
acetylcholine systems may provide a better animal model of cognitive
impairment caused by the loss of cholinergic neurons (Levin and Rose,
1991
).
Involvement of excitatory amino acid systems.
In addition to
their potent kappa opioid activities, the
prodynorphin-derived peptides, dynorphin A (1-13) and dynorphin
(1-17) exert so-called `non-opiate effects' (Walker et
al., 1982
). These include various motor and behavioral effects as
well as inhibition of the spontaneous or glutamate-induced firing of
hippocampal pyramidal cells. Administration of dynorphin A (1-17) also
caused marked increases in the extracellular levels of glutamate and aspartate (Faden, 1992
). Therefore, it seems that kappa
opioid receptor agonists improved learning and memory impairment
through the activation of excitatory amino acid neurons. However, the increment in the excitatory amino acid release was not modified by the
opioid receptor antagonists. Further, dynorphin A (2-17), which is
inactive on opioid receptors, produced alterations in excitatory amino
acid similar to dynorphin A (1-17) (Faden, 1992
). Massardier and Hunt
(1989)
showed that dynorphin A (1-13) interacted directly with NMDA
receptors by a nonopiate mechanism. Dynorphin A (1-13) selectively
inhibited the NMDA subtype of excitatory amino acid receptors, but had
no effect on the binding of ligands for the kainate or quisqualate
subtypes. This activity of dynorphin A (1-13) was not related to an
effect at kappa opioid receptors, because U-50,488H did not
have such effects. Our present and previous findings demonstrated that
n-BNI blocked the antiamnesic effects of kappa opioid
receptor agonists and also that kappa opioid receptor agonists, which were sensitive to n-BNI, suppressed the abolishment of
decreases in acetylcholine release induced by galanin, carbachol and
mecamylamine (Hiramatsu et al., 1996b
, 1997a
, 1998
, in
press; fig. 6).
Possible sites of kappa opioid receptor agonists.
Both acetylcholine and glutamate are now thought to play important
roles in memory (Aigner, 1995
), but the nature of the involvement of
cholinergic and glutamatergic systems of the hippocampus in learning
and memory processes is still unclear. Both systems are involved in
learning and memory, which is impaired by mucarinic (Hiramatsu et
al., 1996a
; Itoh et al., 1993a
; Kameyama et
al., 1986
) and NMDA antagonists (Hiramatsu et al.,
1997b
; Maurice et al., 1994
; Morris et al.,
1986
). Recent evidence suggests that the interaction of these two
neurotransmitters may be important for some forms of memory and that
acetylcholine, in particular, may facilitate glutamate activity by
coordinating states of acquisition and recall in the cortex and
hippocampus (Aigner, 1995
). From our present and previous results
(Hiramatsu et al., 1997b
; fig. 4), kappa opioid
receptor agonists could not ameliorate (+)-MK-801-induced learning and
memory impairment. On the other hand, these agonists improved galanin-,
carbachol- and mecamylamine-induced impairment of learning and memory
and abolished the decrease of acetylcholine release induced by those
drugs (Hiramatsu et al., 1996a
, b
, 1998
, in press; figs. 2
and 6).
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication November 5, 1997.
Received for publication July 22, 1997.
1 This study was supported in part by grants from the Kowa Life Science Foundation, the Mochida Memorial Foundation for Medical and Pharmaceutical Research, the Japan Smoking Research Foundation, the Science Research Promotion Fund from Japan Private School Promotion Foundation and INSERM/JSPS Joint Research Project, and by Grants-in-Aids for Scientific Research (No. 09672340) from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, Japan.
Send reprint requests to: Masayuki Hiramatsu, Ph.D., Department of Chemical Pharmacology, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Meijo University, Tenpaku-ku, Nagoya 468, Japan.
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Abbreviations |
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U-50, 488H, trans-(±)-3,4-dichloro-N-methyl-N-(2-[1-pyrrolidinyl] cyclohexyl benzene-acetamide methanesulfonate salt ; NMDA, N-methyl-D-aspartate; (+)-MK-801, (+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo(a,d)cyclohepten-5,10-imine maleate; CO, carbon monoxide; HPLC, high-performance liquid chromatography; ECD, electrochemical detector; n-BNI, nor-binaltorphimine dihydrochloride; i.c.v., intracerebroventricular.
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