Journal of neurophysiology
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Nociceptive neurons in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) are activated by extracellular ATP, implicating P2X receptors as potential mediators of painful stimuli. However, the P2X receptor subtype(s) underlying this activity remain in question. Using electrophysiological techniques, the effects of P2X receptor agonists and antagonists were examined on acutely dissociated adult rat lumbar DRG neurons. ⋯ These characteristics most closely resemble those of rat P2X2/3 receptors. These data suggest that there are at least two populations of P2X receptors present on adult DRG nociceptive neurons, P2X3 and P2X2/3. These receptors are expressed either separately or together on individual neurons and may play a role in the processing of nociceptive information from the periphery to the spinal cord.
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The subthalamic nucleus (STN) is one of the principal sources of excitatory glutamatergic input to dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra, yet stimulation of the STN produces both excitatory and inhibitory effects on nigral dopaminergic neurons recorded extracellularly in vivo. The present experiments were designed to determine the sources of the excitatory and inhibitory effects. Synaptic potentials were recorded intracellularly from substantia nigra pars compacta dopaminergic neurons in parasagittal slices in response to stimulation of the STN. ⋯ These data indicate that electrical stimulation of the STN elicits a mixed EPSP-IPSP in nigral dopaminergic neurons due to the coactivation of an excitatory monosynaptic and an inhibitory polysynaptic connection between the STN and the dopaminergic neurons of substantia nigra pars compacta. The EPSP arises from a direct monosynaptic excitatory glutamatergic input from the STN. The IPSP arises polysynaptically, most likely through STN-evoked excitation of GABAergic neurons in substantia nigra pars reticulata, which produces feed-forward GABA(A)-mediated inhibition of dopaminergic neurons through inhibitory intranigral axon collaterals.
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Whole cell and cell-attached patch-clamp techniques characterized the neurosteroid anesthetic alphaxalone's (5alpha-pregnane-3alpha-ol-11,20-dione) effects on GABAA receptors and on Cl- currents in cultured embryonic (5- to 8-wk old) human dorsal root ganglion neurons. Alphaxalone applied by pressure pulses from closely positioned micropipettes failed to potentiate the inward Cl- currents produced by application of GABA. In the absence of GABA, alphaxalone (0.1-5.0 microM) directly evoked inward currents in all dorsal root ganglion neurons voltage-clamped at negative membrane potentials. ⋯ The current-voltage determinations for the single-channels activated by alphaxalone demonstrated a linear relationship. Mean open and shut times of single alphaxalone-activated channels were described by two exponential decay functions. Taken together, the results indicate that in embryonic human DRG neurons, micromolar concentrations of alphaxalone directly activate Cl- channels whose electrophysiological and pharmacological properties are distinct from those of Cl- channels associated with GABAA receptors.
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Impulses were recorded from unmyelinated afferents innervating the forearm skin of human subjects using the technique of microneurography. Units responding to innocuous skin deformation were selected. The sample (n = 38) was split into low-threshold units (n = 27) and high-threshold units (n = 11) on the basis of three distinctive features, i.e., thresholds to skin deformation, size of response to innocuous skin deformation, and differential response to sharp and blunt stimuli. ⋯ It was concluded that human hairy skin is innervated by a system of highly sensitive mechanoreceptive units with unmyelinated afferents akin to the system previously described in other mammals. The confirmation that the system is present in the forearm skin and not only in the face area where it first was identified suggests a largely general distribution although there are indications that the tactile C afferents may be lacking in the very distal parts of the limbs. The functional role of the system remains to be assessed although physiological properties of the sense organs invite to speculations that the slow tactile system might have closer relations to limbic functions than to cognitive and motor functions.
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Both N- and P-type high-threshold calcium channels are located presynaptically in the CNS and are involved in the release of transmitters. To investigate the importance of P-type calcium channels in the generation of inflammation-evoked hyperexcitability of spinal cord neurons, electrophysiological recordings were made from wide-dynamic-range neurons with input from the knee joint in the anesthetized rat. The responses of each neuron to innocuous and noxious pressure onto the knee and the ankle were continuously assessed before and during the development of an inflammation in the knee joint induced by the injections of K/C into the joint cavity. ⋯ Thus the development of inflammation-evoked hyperexcitability was attenuated by omega-agatoxin, and this suggests that P-type calcium channels in the spinal cord are involved in the generation of inflammation-evoked hyperexcitability of spinal cord neurons. Finally, when omega-agatoxin was administered to the spinal cord 4 h after the kaolin injection, i.e., when inflammation-evoked hyperexcitability was fully established, the responses to innocuous and noxious pressure onto the knee were reduced by 20-30% on average. The shift in the effect of omega-agatoxin, from slight facilitation or no change of the responses before inflammation to inhibition in the state of hyperexcitability, indicates that P-type calcium channels are important for excitatory synaptic transmission involved in the maintenance of inflammation-evoked hyperexcitability.