Fast and Local Electrochemical Monitoring of Noradrenaline Release from Sympathetic Terminals in Isolated Rat Tail Artery |
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Authors: | F Gonon J X Bao M Msghina M F Suaud-Chagny L Stjärne |
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Institution: | INSERM U 171 and CNRS UA 1195, Centre Hospitalier Lyon-Sud, Pierre-Bénite, France;Department of Physiology I, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden |
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Abstract: | Abstract: Noradrenaline release from sympathetic nerve terminals was evoked by electrical nerve stimulation of an isolated segment of rat tail artery. This release was recorded by a carbon fiber electrode combined with differential pulse amperometry. The active part of the electrode (one carbon fiber 8 μm in diameter and 50 μm in length) was placed in close contact with the arterial surface. The oxidation current appearing at +120 mV and corresponding to the local noradrenaline concentration at the electrode surface was recorded every 0.5 s. No oxidation current was detected under resting conditions, but electrical stimulation evoked an immediate increase in this current. This response was suppressed when tetrodotoxin was added to the perfusion medium and was enhanced when noradrenaline reuptake was inhibited by cocaine. The amplitude of the response was increased with increasing stimulation frequencies (2–25 Hz) and train lengths (1–16 pulses). Finally, the time resolution of the method (0.5 s) was good enough to show that noradrenaline release precedes the postsynaptic response, i.e., the electrically evoked contraction of the artery. |
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Keywords: | Noradrenaline Release Sympathetic nerves Voltammetry Amperometry Carbon fiber electrode |
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