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Effects of pyrethroid molecules on rat nerves in vitro : potential to reverse temperature‐sensitive conduction block of demyelinated peripheral axons
Author(s) -
Lees George
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
british journal of pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.432
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1476-5381
pISSN - 0007-1188
DOI - 10.1038/sj.bjp.0701644
Subject(s) - chemistry , compound muscle action potential , repolarization , medicine , electrophysiology , biophysics , population , endocrinology , biology , environmental health
Prolongation of action potentials by cooling or pharmacological treatment can restore conduction in demyelinated axons. We have assessed the ability of pyrethroids ( in vitro ) to modify action potential kinetics and to reverse conduction block in lesioned peripheral nerve. Fast Na + currents were isolated in mammalian neuroblastoma (NIE115). Pyrethroids (4 μ M ) concurrently slowed inactivation and produced a spectrum of pronounced tail currents: s‐bioallethrin (duration 12.2±7 ms), permethrin (24.2±3 ms) and deltamethrin (2230±100 ms). Deltamethrin (5 μ M ) effected a slowly developing depression of compound action potential (CAP) amplitude in peroneal nerve trunks ( P <0.05). Permethrin produced no net effect on CAP amplitude, area or repolarization time. s‐Bioallethrin (5 μ M ) enhanced CAP area, time for 90% repolarization and induced regenerative activity in a subpopulation of axons. Tibial nerve trunks were demyelinated by lysolecithin (2 μl) injection: 6–14 days later, slowly‐conducting axons in the CAP (and peri‐axonal microelectrode recordings) were selectively blocked by warming to 37°C. At 37°C, s‐bioallethrin (45 min, 5 μ M ) produced much greater after‐potentials in lesioned nerves than in uninjected controls: area ( P <0.05) and relative amplitude ratios ( P <0.0001) were significantly altered. In 3 of 4 cells (single‐unit recording), s‐bioallethrin restored conduction through axons exhibiting temperature‐dependent block by raising blocking temperature (by 1.5 to >3°C) and reducing refractory period. s‐Bioallethrin induced temperature‐dependent regenerative activity only in a sub‐population of axons even after prolonged superfusion (>1 h). It was concluded that pyrethroids differentially alter Na + current kinetics and action potential kinetics. The effects of s‐bioallethrin are consistent with reversal of conduction block by demyelinated axons but regenerative/ectopic firing even in normal cells is likely to underpin its acknowledged neurotoxic actions and severely limit the clinical potential of this and related molecules.British Journal of Pharmacology (1998) 123 , 487–496; doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0701644