Abstract: | Superfusion of isolated hemisected spinal cords of 9-13-day old rats with noradrenalin (NA) solution depolarized or hyperpolarized the motoneurons depending on the NA concentration. Both effects were the result of the direct action of NA on the motoneurons, for they were given in medium containing an excess of Mg and deficiency of Ca ions.a-Adrenoblockers depressed both the depolarizing and hyperpolarizing effects of NA. The depolarizing effect of dopamine on motoneurons was abolished in medium containing excess of Mg ions. Its direct hyperpolarizing action of motoneurons was suppressed by haloperidol but unchanged by phentolamine. The depolarizing effect of serotonin and its metabolites — mexamine, kynurenine, and 3-hydroxy-anthranilic acid — persisted in the presence of an excess of Mg and deficiency of Ca ions, but it was suppressed by deseryl (methysergide) and the benzyl analog of serotonin. The hyperpolarizing effect of serotonin at high concentrations (10–4–10–3 M), revealed in some experiments, was abolished in medium containing excess of magnesium ions in the presence of morphine.A. M. Gorkii Donetsk State Medical Institute. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 12, No. 4, pp. 391–396, July–August, 1980. |