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  • Title: Cholinergic innervation of the mouse isolated vas deferens.
    Author: Cuprian AM, Solanki P, Jackson MV, Cunnane TC.
    Journal: Br J Pharmacol; 2005 Dec; 146(7):927-34. PubMed ID: 16170331.
    Abstract:
    Recently, a population of nerves has been described in the aganglionic mouse vas deferens, in which electrically evoked contractions were insensitive to high concentrations of the adrenergic neurone blocker, bretylium. In this paper, the pharmacology of this nerve-evoked contraction has been examined in more detail. Bretylium (20 microM) revealed, after 5 h exposure, a new residual neurogenic contraction (20 stimuli at 10 Hz) that was tetrodotoxin-sensitive. The muscarinic antagonist, cyclopentolate (0.1 and 1 microM), reduced this residual component and the inhibition was reversed by the acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, neostigmine (1 and 10 microM). Nicotine (30 microM) enhanced the residual component revealed by bretylium, suggesting that there are prejunctional nicotinic receptors (nAchRs) influencing acetylcholine (Ach) release. In the presence of prazosin (0.1 microM), a selective alpha(1)-adrenoceptor antagonist, and alpha,beta-methylene ATP (1 microM), a purinergic agonist that desensitise P2X receptors, neostigmine increased the hump component of contraction and yohimbine (0.3 microM), an alpha(2)-adrenoceptor antagonist, enhanced both components of the electrically evoked stimulation. The contraction was blocked by cyclopentolate (1 microM). In the absence of bretylium, neostigmine alone increased the hump component of contraction in a frequency-dependent manner. This increase was reversed by atropine (1 microM) and cyclopentolate (1 microM) to control levels. However, in control experiments, atropine or cyclopentolate did not detectably influence the delayed neurogenic contraction. Ach (10 microM) induced a contraction in the mouse vas deferens, either when applied alone or in the presence of neostigmine.Thus, it has been demonstrated unequivocally that the mouse vas deferens is innervated by functional cholinergic nerves, whose action is terminated by cholinesterase. Furthermore, Ach release can be enhanced by activation of prejunctional nAchRs presumably located on the cholinergic nerve terminals.
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