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1.
Clinical studies implicate adenosine acting on esophageal nociceptive pathways in the pathogenesis of noncardiac chest pain originating from the esophagus. However, the effect of adenosine on esophageal afferent nerve subtypes is incompletely understood. We addressed the hypothesis that adenosine selectively activates esophageal nociceptors. Whole cell perforated patch-clamp recordings and single-cell RT-PCR analysis were performed on the primary afferent neurons retrogradely labeled from the esophagus in the guinea pig. Extracellular recordings were made from the isolated innervated esophagus. In patch-clamp studies, adenosine evoked activation (inward current) in a majority of putative nociceptive (capsaicin-sensitive) vagal nodose, vagal jugular, and spinal dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons innervating the esophagus. Single-cell RT-PCR analysis indicated that the majority of the putative nociceptive (transient receptor potential V1-positive) neurons innervating the esophagus express the adenosine receptors. The neural crest-derived (spinal DRG and vagal jugular) esophageal nociceptors expressed predominantly the adenosine A(1) receptor while the placodes-derived vagal nodose nociceptors expressed the adenosine A(1) and/or A(2A) receptors. Consistent with the studies in the cell bodies, adenosine evoked activation (overt action potential discharge) in esophageal nociceptive nerve terminals. Furthermore, the neural crest-derived jugular nociceptors were activated by the selective A(1) receptor agonist CCPA, and the placodes-derived nodose nociceptors were activated by CCPA and/or the selective adenosine A(2A) receptor CGS-21680. In contrast to esophageal nociceptors, adenosine failed to stimulate the vagal esophageal low-threshold (tension) mechanosensors. We conclude that adenosine selectively activates esophageal nociceptors. Our data indicate that the esophageal neural crest-derived nociceptors can be activated via the adenosine A(1) receptor while the placodes-derived esophageal nociceptors can be activated via A(1) and/or A(2A) receptors. Direct activation of esophageal nociceptors via adenosine receptors may contribute to the symptoms in esophageal diseases.  相似文献   

2.
Several esophageal pathologies are associated with an increased number of mast cells in the esophageal wall. We addressed the hypothesis that activation of esophageal mast cells leads to an increase in the excitability of local sensory C fibers. Guinea pigs were actively sensitized to ovalbumin. The mast cells in the esophagus were selectively activated ex vivo by superfusion with ovalbumin. Action potential discharge in guinea pig vagal nodose esophageal C-fiber nerve endings was monitored in the isolated (ex vivo) vagally innervated esophagus by extracellular recordings. Ovalbumin activated esophageal mast cells, leading to the rapid release of approximately 20% of the tissue histamine stores. This was associated with a consistent and significant increase in excitability of the nodose C fibers as reflected in a two- to threefold increase in action potential discharge frequency evoked by mechanical (increases in intraluminal pressure) stimulation. The increase in excitability persisted unchanged for at least 90 min (longest time period tested) after ovalbumin was washed from the tissue. This effect could be prevented by the histamine H1 receptor antagonist pyrilamine, but once the increase in excitability occurred, it persisted in the nominal absence of histamine and could not be reversed even with large concentrations of the histamine receptor antagonist. In conclusion, activation of esophageal mast cells leads to a pronounced and long-lived increase in nociceptive C-fiber excitability such that any sensation or reflex evoked via the vagal nociceptors will likely be enhanced. The effect is initiated by histamine acting via H1 receptor activation and maintained in the absence of the initiating stimulus.  相似文献   

3.
Metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluR) are classified into group I, II, and III mGluR. Group I (mGluR1, mGluR5) are excitatory, whereas group II and III are inhibitory. mGluR5 antagonism potently reduces triggering of transient lower esophageal sphincter relaxations and gastroesophageal reflux. Transient lower esophageal sphincter relaxations are mediated via a vagal pathway and initiated by distension of the proximal stomach. Here, we determined the site of action of mGluR5 in gastric vagal pathways by investigating peripheral responses of ferret gastroesophageal vagal afferents to graded mechanical stimuli in vitro and central responses of nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) neurons with gastric input in vivo in the presence or absence of the mGluR5 antagonist 2-methyl-6-(phenylethynyl)pyridine (MPEP). mGluR5 were also identified immunohistochemically in the nodose ganglia and NTS after extrinsic vagal inputs had been traced from the proximal stomach. Gastroesophageal vagal afferents were classified as mucosal, tension, or tension-mucosal (TM) receptors. MPEP (1-10 microM) inhibited responses to circumferential tension of tension and TM receptors. Responses to mucosal stroking of mucosal and TM receptors were unaffected. MPEP (0.001-10 nmol icv) had no major effect on the majority of NTS neurons excited by gastric distension or on NTS neurons inhibited by distension. mGluR5 labeling was abundant in gastric vagal afferent neurons and sparse in fibers within NTS vagal subnuclei. We conclude that mGluR5 play a prominent role at gastroesophageal vagal afferent endings but a minor role in central gastric vagal pathways. Peripheral mGluR5 may prove a suitable target for reducing mechanosensory input from the periphery, for therapeutic benefit.  相似文献   

4.
In this study, we evaluated the vagal afferent response to secretin at physiological concentrations and localized the site of secretin's action on vagal afferent pathways in the rat. The discharge of sensory neurons supplying the gastrointestinal tract was recorded from nodose ganglia. Of 91 neurons activated by electrical vagal stimulation, 19 neurons showed an increase in firing rate in response to intestinal perfusion of 5-HT (from 1.5 +/- 0.2 to 25 +/- 4 impulses/20 s) but no response to intestinal distension. A close intra-arterial injection of secretin (2.5 and 5.0 pmol) elicited responses in 15 of these 19 neurons (from 1.5 +/- 0.2 impulses/20 s at basal to 21 +/- 4 and 43 +/- 5 impulses/20 s, respectively). Subdiaphragmatic vagotomy and perivagal application of capsaicin, but not supranodose vagotomy, completely abolished the secretin-elicited vagal nodose neuronal response. In a separate study, 9 tension receptor afferents among 91 neurons responded positively to intestinal distension but failed to respond to luminal 5-HT. These nine neurons also showed no response to administration of secretin. As expected, immunohistochemical studies showed that secretin administration significantly increased the number of Fos-positive neurons in vagal nodose ganglia. In conclusion, we demonstrated for the first time that vagal sensory neurons are activated by secretin at physiological concentrations. A subpopulation of secretin-sensitive vagal afferent fibers is located in the intestinal mucosa, many of which are responsive to luminal 5-HT.  相似文献   

5.
It has been shown that airway exposure to eosinophil-derived cationic proteins stimulated vagal pulmonary C fibers and markedly potentiated their responses to lung inflation in anesthetized rats (Lee LY, Gu Q, Gleich GJ, J Appl Physiol 91: 1318-1326, 2001). However, whether the effects resulted from a direct action of these proteins on the sensory nerves was not known. The present study was therefore carried out to determine the effects of these proteins on isolated rat vagal pulmonary sensory neurons. Our results obtained from perforated whole cell patch-clamp recordings showed that pretreatment with eosinophil major basic protein (MBP; 2 microM, 60 s) significantly increased the capsaicin-evoked inward current in these neurons; this effect peaked approximately 10 min after MBP and lasted for >60 min; in current-clamp mode, MBP substantially increased the number of action potentials evoked by both capsaicin and electrical stimulation. Pretreatment with MBP did not significantly alter the input resistance of these sensory neurons. In addition, the sensitizing effect of MBP was completely abolished when its cationic charge was neutralized by mixing with a polyanion, such as low-molecular-weight heparin or poly-L-glutamic or poly-L-aspartic acid, before its delivery to the neurons. Moreover, a similar sensitizing effect was also generated by other eosinophil granule-derived proteins (e.g., eosinophil peroxidase). These results demonstrate a direct, charge-dependent, and long-lasting sensitizing effect of cationic proteins on pulmonary sensory neurons, which may contribute to the airway hyperresponsiveness associated with airway infiltration of eosinophils under pathophysiological conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Using a recently developed in vitro preparation of vagal afferent pathways, we examined the role of TRPV1 and ASIC3 on the mechano- and chemosensitive properties of gastroesophageal sensory neurons. Esophagus, stomach, and the intact vagus nerves up to the central terminations were carefully dissected from TRPV1 and ASIC3 knockout mice and wild-type controls. The organ preparation was placed in a superfusion chamber to obtain intracellular recordings from the soma of nodose neurons during luminal stimulation of esophagus and stomach. The proximal esophagus and distal stomach were separately intubated to allow perfusion and graded luminal distension. In wild-type mice, mechanosensitive neurons were activated by low distension pressures and encoded stimulus intensity over the entire range tested. Luminal acidification significantly transiently increased the resting frequency but did not alter responses to subsequent mechanical stimulation. ASIC3 and TRPV1 knockout significantly blunted responses to distension compared with wild-type controls, with deletion of TRPV1 having a more significant effect than ASIC3 deletion. Luminal acidification did not activate mechanosensory neurons in ASIC3 and TRPV1 knockout mice. Our data demonstrate a role of TRPV1 in chemo- and mechanosensation of gastroesophageal afferents. ASIC3 may contribute to acid sensation but plays a more subtle role in responses to distending stimuli. Considering the importance of acid in dyspeptic symptoms and gastroesophageal reflux, TRPV1 or ASIC3 may be an attractive target for treatment strategies in patients who do not respond to acid suppressive therapy.  相似文献   

7.
We investigated the mechanisms of esophageal distension-induced reflexes in decerebrate cats. Slow air esophageal distension activated esophago-upper esophageal sphincter (UES) contractile reflex (EUCR) and secondary peristalsis (2P). Rapid air distension activated esophago-UES relaxation reflex (EURR), esophago-glottal closure reflex (EGCR), esophago-hyoid distraction reflex (EHDR), and esophago-esophagus contraction reflex (EECR). Longitudinal esophageal stretch did not activate these reflexes. Magnitude and timing of EUCR were related to 2P but not injected air volume. Cervical esophagus transection did not affect the threshold of any reflex. Bolus diversion prevented swallow-related esophageal peristalsis. Lidocaine or capsaicin esophageal perfusion, esophageal mucosal layer removal, or intravenous baclofen blocked or inhibited EURR, EGCR, EHDR, and EECR but not EUCR or 2P. Thoracic vagotomy blocked all reflexes. These six reflexes can be activated by esophageal distension, and they occur in two sets depending on inflation rate rather than volume. EUCR was independent of 2P, but 2P activated EUCR; therefore, EUCR may help prevent reflux during peristalsis. All esophageal peristalsis may be secondary to esophageal stimulation in the cat. EURR, EHDR, EGCR, and EECR may contribute to belching and are probably mediated by capsaicin-sensitive, rapidly adapting mucosal mechanoreceptors. GABA-B receptors also inhibit these reflexes. EUCR and 2P are probably mediated by slowly adapting muscular mechanoreceptors. All six reflexes are mediated by vagal afferent fibers.  相似文献   

8.
Mediators of inflammation, such as PGE(2), are known to sensitize the airways to inhaled irritants and circulating autacoids. Evidence from in vivo studies has shown the involvement of vagal pulmonary C-fiber afferents in the PGE(2)-elicited airway hypersensitivity. However, whether PGE(2) acts directly on these sensory nerves is unclear. The present study aimed to investigate whether PGE(2) has direct potentiating effects on nodose and jugular pulmonary C neurons cultured from adult Sprague-Dawley rats and, if so, determine whether the EP(2) prostanoid receptor is involved. Pulmonary neurons were identified by retrograde labeling with a fluorescent tracer 1,1'-dioctadecyl-3,3,3',3'-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate. Using perforated patch-clamp technique, our results showed that 1) PGE(2) pretreatment (1 microM) increased the whole cell current density elicited by capsaicin and phenylbiguanide, chemical agents known to stimulate pulmonary C fibers; 2) selective activation of the EP(2) prostanoid receptor by butaprost (3-10 microM) increased the whole cell current density elicited by capsaicin; and 3) PGE(2), as well as butaprost, increased the number of action potentials evoked by current injection. Therefore, we conclude that PGE(2) directly sensitizes vagal pulmonary C neurons to chemical and electrical stimulation. Furthermore, butaprost modulates the neurons in a manner similar to that of PGE(2), suggesting that the effects of PGE(2) are mediated, at least in part, through the EP(2) prostanoid receptor.  相似文献   

9.
Catecholaminergic cells are transiently present during development of the fetal murine bowel. These transient catecholaminergic (TC) cells appear at Day E10, but by Day E13 can no longer be detected. In order to evaluate the hypothesis that these cells are the precursors of enteric neurons, we investigated the possibilities that TC cells coexpress neuronal and catecholaminergic markers, that they can be found along the presumed path followed by crest-derived cells migrating to the gut, and that they are proliferating. TC cells were identified immunocytochemically using polyclonal or monoclonal antibodies to tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). At Day E9.5, TH-immunoreactive cells were observed to be present along the wall of the primordial esophagus in lines that extended from the developing nodose ganglia down to the boundary of the stomach. At Day E9.5, TC cells were absent from the remaining foregut. These lines of esophageal TH-immunoreactive cells became continuous with similar cells in the wall of the stomach and duodenum on Day E10. Coincident expression of neurofilament immunoreactivity was seen in all of the esophageal TH-immunoreactive cells present at Day E9.5, as well as in the entire set of esophageal and lower enteric TH-immunoreactive cells present at Day E10 (or later); moreover, at Days E9.5 and E10, all of the neurofilament-immunoreactive cells in the esophagus, stomach, or duodenum were also TH-immunoreactive. In contrast, neurofilament immunoreactivity was not expressed by the endodermally derived pancreatic duct and islet cells, which were also TH-immunoreactive; nor could expression of neurofilament immunoreactivity be detected in the TH-immunoreactive cells of the nodose ganglia. It was not until Day E11 that neurofilament-immunoreactive cells, which did not coexpress TH immunoreactivity (the definitive phenotype of enteric neurons) began to appear in the gut. Vagal axons reached as far distally as the nodose ganglion on Day E9.5, the esophagogastric junction on Day E10, and did not enter the stomach until Day E11. When the vagus nerves reached their level, the TH-immunoreactive cells in the wall of the esophagus came to lie among the nerve fibers. TH-immunoreactive cells are thus present on the pathway ultimately followed by the vagus nerves, but they develop before vagal fibers reach their level. The vagal TH-immunoreactive cells, therefore, are probably not initially migrating on vagal fibers, but appear instead to be overtaken by the descending vagus nerves.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Capsaicin treatment destroys vagal afferent C fibers and markedly attenuates reduction of food intake and induction of hindbrain Fos expression by CCK. However, both anatomical and electrophysiological data indicate that some gastric vagal afferents are not destroyed by capsaicin. Because CCK enhances behavioral and electrophysiological responses to gastric distension in rats and people, we hypothesized that CCK might enhance the vagal afferent response to gastric distension via an action on capsaicin-insensitive vagal afferents. To test this hypothesis, we quantified expression of Fos-like immunoreactivity (Fos) in the dorsal vagal complex (DVC) of capsaicin-treated (Cap) and control rats (Veh), following gastric balloon distension alone and in combination with CCK injection. In Veh rats, intraperitoneal CCK significantly increased DVC Fos, especially in nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS), whereas in Cap rats, CCK did not significantly increase DVC Fos. In contrast to CCK, gastric distension did significantly increase Fos expression in the NTS of both Veh and Cap rats, although distension-induced Fos was attenuated in Cap rats. When CCK was administered during gastric distension, it significantly enhanced NTS Fos expression in response to distension in Cap rats. Furthermore, CCK's enhancement of distension-induced Fos in Cap rats was reversed by the selective CCK-A receptor antagonist lorglumide. We conclude that CCK directly activates capsaicin-sensitive C-type vagal afferents. However, in capsaicin-resistant A-type afferents, CCK's principal action may be facilitation of responses to gastric distension.  相似文献   

11.
Evoked potentials can be recorded from the scalp after stimulation of the esophagus by balloon distension. The purpose of this study was to estimate the number and localization of sources contributing to the esophageal evoked potential (EEP). The EEP was recorded from 32 scalp electrodes in 5 healthy subjects. Spatio-temporal dipole modeling was performed in the time interval from 185 msec to 525 msec after stimulation (mean values). The EEP was best explained by the combined activity of 1 dipole located relatively high in the midline and 2 lateral dipoles. Given the anatomical projection of esophageal sensory fibers and the location of these dipoles, the sources were probably located in the cingulate gyri and insular cortex. There was no evidence that sources in the lower brain-stem contributed to the scalp recorded EEP.  相似文献   

12.
It has long been known that the esophageal distension produced by swallowing elicits a powerful proximal gastric relaxation. Gastroinhibitory control by the esophagus involves neural pathways from esophageal distension-sensitive neurons in the nucleus tractus solitarius centralis (cNTS) with connections to virtually all levels of the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus (DMV). We have shown recently that cNTS responses are excitatory and primarily involve tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive cells, whereas the DMV response involves both an alpha1 excitatory and an alpha2 inhibitory response. In the present study, using an esophageal balloon distension to evoke gastric relaxation (esophageal-gastric reflex, EGR), we investigated the peripheral pharmacological basis responsible for this reflex. Systemic administration of atropine methyl nitrate reduced the amplitude of the gastric relaxation to 52.0+/-4.4% of the original EGR, whereas NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) reduced it to 26.3+/-7.2% of the original EGR. Concomitant administration of atropine methyl nitrate and L-NAME reduced the amplitude of the gastric relaxation to 4.0+/-2.5% of control. This reduction in the amplitude of induced EGR is quite comparable (4.3+/-2.6%) to that seen when the animal was pretreated with the nicotinic ganglionic blocker hexamethonium. In the presence of bethanechol, the amplitude of the esophageal distension-induced gastric relaxation was increased to 177.0+/-10.0% of control; administration of L-NAME reduced this amplitude to 19.9+/-9.5%. Our data provide a clear demonstration that the gastroinhibitory control by the esophagus is mediated via a dual vagal innervation consisting of inhibitory nitrergic and excitatory cholinergic transmission.  相似文献   

13.
Recent studies suggest that the capsaicin receptor [transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV)1] may play a role in visceral mechanosensation. To address the potential role of TRPV1 in vagal sensory neurons, we developed a new in vitro technique allowing us to determine TRPV1 expression directly in physiologically characterized gastric sensory neurons. Stomach, esophagus, and intact vagus nerve up to the central terminations were carefully dissected and placed in a perfusion chamber. Intracellular recordings were made from the soma of nodose neurons during mechanical stimulation of the stomach. Physiologically characterized neurons were labeled iontophoretically with neurobiotin and processed for immunohistochemical experiments. As shown by action potential responses triggered by stimulation of the upper thoracic vagus with a suction electrode, essentially all abdominal vagal afferents in mice conduct in the C-fiber range. Mechanosensitive gastric afferents encode stimulus intensities over a wide range without apparent saturation when punctate stimuli are used. Nine of 37 mechanosensitive vagal afferents expressed TRPV1 immunoreactivity, with 8 of the TRPV1-positive cells responding to stretch. A small number of mechanosensitive gastric vagal afferents express neurofilament heavy chains and did not respond to stretch. By maintaining the structural and functional integrity of vagal afferents up to the nodose ganglion, physiological and immunohistochemical properties of mechanosensory gastric sensory neurons can be studied in vitro. Using this novel technique, we identified TRPV1 immunoreactivity in only one-fourth of gastric mechanosensitive neurons, arguing against a major role of this ion channel in sensation of mechanical stimuli under physiological conditions.  相似文献   

14.
M Fujiwara  K Kurahashi 《Life sciences》1976,19(8):1175-1180
The superior cervical ganglion was reinnervated by vagal afferent fibers following heterologous cross anastomosis between the superior cervical preganglionic trunk and the vagal trunk at the level of the supranodose ganglion in cats. The contractions of the nictitating membrane and the postganglionic action potentials from the external carotid sinus nerve in response to electrical stimulation of the vagal artificial preganglionic trunk in these operated cats were inhibited by treatment with tetraethylammonium and atropine. The choline acetyltransferase activities were measured by the radiometric method. The activities in cross anastomosed superior cervical ganglion were lower than those of normal superior cervical ganglion, but higher than those of chronically decentralized superior cervical ganglion. The activities in cross anastomosed nodose ganglion were lower than those of normal nodose ganglion, but higher than those of chronically decentralized superior cervical ganglion. These results further support the view that the primary afferent vagus artificially synapsed in the superior cervical ganglion is cholinergic.  相似文献   

15.
大鼠下丘脑室旁核神经元对电刺激迷走神经的反应   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
用玻璃微电极记录了93只大鼠的1059个PVH单位的电活动,观察了电刺激颈部迷走神经对PVH单位自发放电的效应和所引起的PVH单位的诱发反应。电刺激迷走神经分别使46个及10个PVH单位呈诱发兴奋和抑制反应。给予迷走神经以不同强度的刺激时,发现PVH神经元对激活A和C两类纤维的强刺激反应,而对仅激活A类纤维的弱刺激则不反应。PVH单位对电刺激坐骨神经或迷走神经的反应有以下几种:对迷走神经和坐骨神经刺激均作出兴奋或抑制反应;仅对迷走刺激作出兴奋或兴奋-抑制反应,而对坐骨神经刺激不反应;对坐骨神经刺激作出兴奋反应,而对迷走神经刺激不反应。讨论了迷走神经到室旁核的中枢传导特点以及内脏传入和躯体传入信息在PVH单位会聚的可能意义。  相似文献   

16.
The peripheral effect of two analgesics (aspirin and dibencozide) was studied on anaesthetized cats. Several types of neurons and stimulations were performed in this work: traction for periodontal mechanoreceptors connected to small-sized trigeminal fibres, distension for the muscular intestinal mechanoreceptors connected to non-myelinated vagal fibres, chemical stimulation by means of phenyldiguanide for the non-myelinated vagal fibres, electrical stimulation of the myelinated and non-myelinated vagal fibres. In all cases, unitary activities were recorded into corresponding ganglia (nodose or gasserian) with extracellular glass microelectrodes. After injection of analgesics, a decrease of control responses were observed till 30 minutes but the maximum occurred between 1 and 5 minutes. This effect concerned the non-myelinated neurones as well as the myelinated ones. It can be explained by a direct action of analgesics on the ending excitability.  相似文献   

17.
Loop diuretics have been shown to inhibit cough and other airway defensive reflexes via poorly defined mechanisms. We test the hypothesis that the furosemide-sensitive Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter (NKCC1) is expressed by sensory nerve fibers innervating the airways where it plays an important role in regulating sensory neural activity. NKCC1 immunoreactivity was present on the cell membranes of most nodose and jugular ganglia neurons projecting to the trachea, and it was present on the peripheral terminals of putative mechanosensory nerve fibers in the airways. In urethane-anesthetized, spontaneously breathing guinea pigs, bolus application of citric acid (1 mM to 2 M) to an isolated and perfused segment of the tracheal mucosa evoked coughing and respiratory slowing. Removal of Cl- from the tracheal perfusate evoked spontaneous coughing and significantly potentiated cough and respiratory slowing reflexes evoked by citric acid. The NKCC1 inhibitor furosemide (10-100 microM) significantly reduced both the number of coughs evoked by citric acid and the degree of acid-evoked respiratory slowing (P < 0.05). Localized tracheal pretreatment with the Cl- channel inhibitors DIDS or niflumic acid (100 microM) also significantly reduced cough, whereas the GABAA receptor agonist muscimol potentiated acid-evoked responses. These data suggest that vagal sensory neurons may accumulate Cl- due to the expression of the furosemide-sensitive Cl- transporter, NKCC1. Efflux of intracellular Cl-, in part through calcium-activated Cl- channels, may play an important role in regulating airway afferent neuron activity.  相似文献   

18.
This study was carried out to determine whether epinephrine alters the sensitivity of rat vagal sensory neurons. In anesthetized rats, inhalation of epinephrine aerosol (1 and 5 mg/ml, 3 min) induced an elevated baseline activity of pulmonary C fibers and enhanced their responses to lung inflation (20 cm H(2)O, 10 s) and right atrial injection of capsaicin (0.5 microg/kg). In isolated rat nodose and jugular ganglion neurons, perfusion of epinephrine (3 microM, 5 min) alone did not produce any detectable change of the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration. However, immediately after the pretreatment with epinephrine, the Ca(2+) transients evoked by chemical stimulants (capsaicin, KCl, and ATP) were markedly potentiated; for example, capsaicin (50 nM, 15 s)-evoked Ca(2+) transient was increased by 106% after epinephrine (P < 0.05; n = 11). The effect of epinephrine was mimicked by either BRL 37344 (5 microM, 5 min) or ICI 215,001 (5 microM, 5 min), two selective beta(3)-adrenoceptor agonists, and blocked by SR 59230A (5 microM, 10 min), a selective beta(3)-adrenoceptor antagonist, whereas pretreatment with phenylephrine (alpha(1)-adenoceptor agonist), guanabenz (alpha(2)-adrenoceptor agonist), dobutamine (beta(1)-adrenoceptor agonist), or salbutamol (beta(2)-adrenoceptor agonist) had no significant effect on capsaicin-evoked Ca(2+) transient. Furthermore, pretreatment with SQ 22536 (100-300 microM, 15 min), an adenylate cyclase inhibitor, and H89 (3 microM, 15 min), a PKA inhibitor, completely abolished the potentiating effect of epinephrine. Our results suggest that epinephrine enhances the excitability of rat vagal chemosensitive neurons. This sensitizing effect of epinephrine is likely mediated through the activation of beta(3)-adrenoceptor and intracellular cAMP-PKA signaling cascade.  相似文献   

19.
The present study reports the results of physiological and anatomical experiments in which the purpose was to determine whether desheathing the nodose ganglion is a reliable method of vagal de-efferentation in the ferret. In physiological studies, the effects of electrically stimulating the treated and untreated vagal nerves on cardiovascular and intestinal responses were examined and compared with previously obtained data after left supranodose vagotomy. The anatomical studies illustrated the effects of desheathing the left nodose ganglion on the transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) within a thoracic vagal communicating branch. These data were compared to data from control animals and animals that had undergone left supranodose vagotomy. The results demonstrated that severing the fascicles overlying the left nodose ganglion and allowing the nerve fibers to degenerate, caused no reduction in labeled efferent cell bodies in the left dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus as compared to controls. However, after left supranodose vagotomy there were no efferent cell bodies labeled in the left dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus. Following degeneration of the fascicles, electrical stimulation of the peripheral cut end of this nerve did not abolish the efferent responses in 7 out of 9 animals studied, whereas supranodose vagotomy abolished the responses in all animals. These findings demonstrate that desheathing the nodose ganglion and thereby removing the nerve bundles overlying the nodose ganglion is not a guaranteed method of destroying the efferent fibers in the vagus nerve of the ferret. Supranodose vagotomy, therefore, is a more reliable method of de-efferentation in this species.  相似文献   

20.
The inhibitory action of hyperglycemia is mediated by vagal afferent fibers innervating the stomach and duodenum. Our in vitro studies showed that a subset of nodose ganglia neurons is excited by rising ambient glucose, involving inactivation of ATP-sensitive K(+) (K(ATP)) channels and leading to membrane depolarization and neuronal firing. To investigate whether nodose ganglia K(ATP) channels mediate gastric relaxation induced by hyperglycemia, we performed in vivo gastric motility studies to examine the effects of K(ATP) channel activators and inactivators. Intravenous infusion of 20% dextrose induced gastric relaxation in a dose-dependent manner. This inhibitory effect of hyperglycemia was blocked by diazoxide, a K(ATP) channel activator. Conversely, tolbutamide, a K(ATP) channel inactivator, induced dose-dependent gastric relaxation, an effect similar to hyperglycemia. Vagotomy, perivagal capsaicin treatment, and hexamethonium each prevented the inhibitory action of tolbutamide. Similarly, N(G)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester, an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase, also blocked tolbutamide's inhibitory effect. To show that K(ATP) channel inactivation at the level of the nodose ganglia induces gastric relaxation, we performed electroporation of the nodose ganglia with small interfering RNA of Kir6.2 (a subunit of K(ATP)) and plasmid pEGFP-N1 carrying the green fluorescent protein gene. The gastric responses to hyperglycemia and tolbutamide were not observed in rats with Kir6.2 small interfering RNA-treated nodose ganglia. However, these rats responded to secretin, which acts via the vagal afferent pathway, independently of K(ATP) channels. These studies provide in vivo evidence that hyperglycemia induces gastric relaxation via the vagal afferent pathway. This action is mediated through inactivation of nodose ganglia K(ATP) channels.  相似文献   

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