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Muscarinic inhibition of nicotinic transmission in rat sympathetic neurons and adrenal chromaffin cells
Author(s) -
Linling He,
Quan-Feng Zhang,
Liecheng Wang,
Jing-Xia Dai,
Changhe Wang,
Lianghong Zheng,
Zhuan Zhou
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
philosophical transactions of the royal society b biological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1471-2970
pISSN - 0962-8436
DOI - 10.1098/rstb.2014.0188
Subject(s) - muscarine , muscarinic acetylcholine receptor , nicotinic agonist , superior cervical ganglion , chromaffin cell , neuroscience , second messenger system , acetylcholine , metabotropic receptor , pertussis toxin , muscarinic acetylcholine receptor m4 , adrenal medulla , biology , protein kinase c , oxotremorine , acetylcholine receptor , cholinergic , medicine , protein kinase a , g protein , endocrinology , microbiology and biotechnology , agonist , intracellular , signal transduction , receptor , catecholamine , kinase , biochemistry
Little is known about the interactions between nicotinic and muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs and mAChRs). Here we report that methacholine (MCh), a selective agonist of mAChRs, inhibited up to 80% of nicotine-induced nAChR currents in sympathetic superior cervical ganglion neurons and adrenal chromaffin cells. The muscarine-induced inhibition (MiI) substantially reduced ACh-induced membrane currents through nAChRs and quantal neurotransmitter release. The MiI was time- and temperature-dependent. The slow recovery of nAChR current after washout of MCh, as well as the high value of Q10 (3.2), suggested, instead of a direct open-channel blockade, an intracellular metabotropic process. The effects of GTP-γ-S, GDP-β-S and pertussis toxin suggested that MiI was mediated by G-protein signalling. Inhibitors of protein kinase C (bisindolymaleimide-Bis), protein kinase A (H89) and PIP2 depletion attenuated the MiI, indicating that a second messenger pathway is involved in this process. Taken together, these data suggest that mAChRs negatively modulated nAChRs via a G-protein-mediated second messenger pathway. The time dependence suggests that MiI may provide a novel mechanism for post-synaptic adaptation in all cells/neurons and synapses expressing both types of AChRs.

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