British journal of pharmacology
-
1. Mouse cortical wedge preparations were used in order to study the effects of metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR) agonists and antagonists on the depolarization induced by N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) or by (S)-alpha-amino-4-bromo-3-hydroxy-5-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA). 2. (1S,3R)-1-aminocyclopentane-1,3-dicarboxylic acid (1S,3R-ACPD) (30-300 microM) significantly potentiated the depolarizations induced by NMDA, leaving unchanged those mediated by AMPA. This potentiation developed slowly and lasted for up to 60 min provided that the slices were continuously perfused with the mGluR agonist. 3. ⋯ A number of other putative mGluR agents having partial agonist activity on mGluRs in brain slices and in expression systems, such as 1R,3S-ACPD (500 microM), DL-2-amino-3-phosphonopropionic acid (DL-AP3) (300 microM) and (S)-4-carboxy-3-hydroxyphenylglycine (S-4C3HPG; 500 microM), when placed in the experimental protocol we used, did not change NMDA responses. 5. Available mGluR antagonists, such as DL-AP3 (1 mM), (+)-alpha-methyl-4-carboxyphenylglycine (MCPG) (500 microM), S-4-carboxyphenylglycine (4CPG; 500 microM) and S-4-carboxy-3-hydroxyphenylglycine (S-4C3HPG; 500 microM), did not reduce 1S,3R-ACPD potentiation of NMDA responses. 6. It is concluded that the potentiation of NMDA currents induced by the mGluR agonist 1S,3R-ACPD, in mouse cortical wedges, has a pharmacological profile which is different from that of the three mGluR groups so far described in expression systems.
-
1. The location of the B1 bradykinin receptors involved in inflammatory hyperalgesia was investigated. 2. No specific binding of the B1 bradykinin receptor ligand [3H]-des-Arg10-kallidin was detected in primary cultures of rat dorsal root ganglion neurones, even after treatment with interleukin-1 beta (100 iu ml-1). 3. ⋯ Bradykinin (25 nM to 300 nM) evoked ventral root responses when applied to peripheral receptive fields or central terminals of primary afferents in the neonatal rat spinal cord and tail preparation. In contrast, des-Arg9-bradykinin (50 nM to 500 nM) failed to evoke ventral root depolarizations in either control rats or in animals that developed inflammation following ultraviolet irradiation of the tail skin. 6. The results of the present study imply that the B1 bradykinin receptors that contribute to hypersensitivity in models of persistent inflammatory hyperalgesia are located on cells other than sensory neurones where they may be responsible for releasing mediators that sensitize or activate the nociceptors.
-
1. Chronic benzodiazepine treatment of rat cerebellar granule cells induced a transient down-regulation of the gamma-aminobutyric acidA (GABAA) receptor alpha 1 subunit protein, that was dose-dependent (1 nM-1 microM) and prevented by the benzodiazepine antagonist flumazenil (1 microM). After 2 days of treatment with 1 microM flunitrazepam the alpha 1 subunit protein was reduced by 41% compared to untreated cells, which returned to, and remained at, control cell levels from 4-12 days of treatment. ⋯ This study has shown that both flunitrazepam and GABA treatment, via their respective binding sites, caused a reduction in the expression of the GABAA receptor alpha 1 subunit protein; an effect mediated through the same neurochemical mechanism. The results also imply that the benzodiazepine effect is independent of GABA, and that the benzodiazepine and GABA sites may not be equally coupled to the down-regulation process, with the benzodiazepine site being the more dominant. The biochemical mechanism underlying the benzodiazepine-mediated down-regulation of the alpha 1 subunit protein seems to involve the activity of staurosporine-sensitive protein kinases.