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Effect Of Experimental Diabetes On Gaba‐Mediated Inhibition Of Neurally Induced Contractions In Rat Isolated Trachea
Author(s) -
Özdem Sadi S,
Sadan Gülay,
Usta Coskun,
Tasatargil Arda
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
clinical and experimental pharmacology and physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.752
H-Index - 103
eISSN - 1440-1681
pISSN - 0305-1870
DOI - 10.1046/j.1440-1681.2000.03231.x
Subject(s) - bicuculline , hexamethonium , medicine , endocrinology , baclofen , agonist , gabaa receptor , inhibitory postsynaptic potential , gabab receptor , tetrodotoxin , gaba receptor antagonist , chemistry , cholinergic , acetylcholine , gabaergic , gaba receptor , receptor , biology
SUMMARY 1. In the present study, we investigated the effect of GABA and selective GABA agonists and antagonists on neurally induced tracheal contractions in streptozotocin (STZ) diabetic rats. 2. Contractile responses to electrical field stimulation (EFS) in rat tracheal rings were completely abolished by atropine and tetrodotoxin, but were unaffected by the ganglion blocker hexamethonium, indicating that they were mediated via neuronal release of acetylcholine (ACh). 3. Contractions induced by EFS, but not by exogenous ACh, were inhibited by GABA and the selective GABA B receptor agonist baclofen, but not by the selective GABA A receptor agonist 3‐aminopropane sulphonic acid. The inhibitory effects of GABA or baclofen were not affected by the GABA A antagonist bicuculline, but were significantly reversed by the GABA B antagonist phaclofen. 4. The inhibitory effects of both GABA and baclofen were found to be significantly greater in trachea from control rats compared with tissues from diabetic rats. 5. Non‐adrenergic, non‐cholinergic relaxation responses elicited by EFS in precontracted tracheal rings from diabetic and control rats were similar in magnitude and were unaffected by GABA or GABA analogues. 6. These results suggest that GABA decreases the response to EFS by directly inhibiting the evoked release of ACh through GABA B receptors in rat trachea and that STZ‐induced diabetes causes an impairment in the inhibitory effect of GABA on neurally induced contractions in this tissue.

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