These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Site(s) and ionic basis of alpha-autoinhibition and facilitation of "3H'noradrenaline secretion in guinea-pig vas deferens.
    Author: Alberts P, Bartfai T, Stjärne L.
    Journal: J Physiol; 1981 Mar; 312():297-334. PubMed ID: 6267264.
    Abstract:
    1. Mechanisms controlling the secretion of [(3)H]noradrenaline from the noradrenergic nerves of guinea-pig isolated vas deferens, prelabelled by incubation with [(3)H]noradrenaline, were studied using (a) different modes of (extramural or transmural) electrical nerve stimulation (a total of 300 shocks of varying strength, and a duration of 2 msec) at 1-30 Hz, or (b) depolarizing concentrations of K(+) (60-110 mm).2. The fractional rise in efflux of (3)H-labelled material (Deltat) was used to measure the secretion of [(3)H]noradrenaline.3. The dependence of [(3)H]noradrenaline secretion on the external Ca(2+) concentration (1-8 mm) was essentially hyperbolic. Double reciprocal plot analysis (1/Deltat vs. 1/Ca(2+)) of the data yields that blockade of alpha-autoinhibition (phentolamine 1 mum) does not increase the maximal secretory velocity, but does enhance the apparent affinity of the secretory mechanism for external Ca(2+). Exogenous noradrenaline has (qualitatively) opposite effects. The interaction between alpha-autoinhibition and external Ca(2+) thus shows a ;competitive' pattern, indicating that restriction of the utilization of external Ca(2+) is a major mechanism in alpha-autoinhibition of noradrenaline secretion, in this system.4. Phenoxybenzamine (10 mum) and phentolamine (1 mum) increased the secretion of [(3)H]noradrenaline evoked by depolarization with K(+) much less than that caused by electrical nerve stimulation (frequencies up to 10 Hz). Exogenous noradrenaline (1-5 mum) depressed the secretion evoked by both modes of stimulation. The results indicate that alpha-autoinhibition of [(3)H]noradrenaline secretion is mainly operative when the secretory stimulus requires conduction of nerve impulses between varicosities.5. The frequency dependence of [(3)H]noradrenaline secretion was hyperbolic, both in the presence and in the absence of alpha-autoinhibition; at each frequency the secretion (Deltat per shock) increased with the Ca(2+) concentration in the medium (0.6-8 mm). Double reciprocal plot analysis (1/Deltat vs. 1/frequency) of the data yields that the pattern of interaction between external Ca(2+) and facilitation depends on the presence or absence of alpha-autoinhibition (phentolamine 1 mum); in the former case it is ;non-competitive', in the latter ;competitive'. Similar analysis of the effect of facilitation by increasing the length of stimulus trains (from 5 to 300 pulses) at a constant frequency (5 Hz), on the Ca(2+) dependence of Deltat (1/Deltat vs. 1/Ca(2+)) in the absence of alpha-autoinhibition also yields that facilitation promotes utilization of external Ca(2+). These results apparently imply that a rise in external Ca(2+), in the presence of alpha-autoinhibition, augments the secretory response to electrical nerve stimulation mainly by promoting recruitment of active units (varicosities?), without markedly altering their ;affinity' for facilitation. In the absence of autoinhibition (when all units are already recruited?), the results seem to imply that facilitation promotes depolarization-secretion coupling in each, by more efficient utilization of external Ca(2+).6. The pattern of interaction between alpha-autoinhibition and facilitation depends on the Ca(2+)concentration in the medium. At or below the physiological level of Ca(2+) in extracellular fluid (1.2 mm) it is ;non-competitive', indicating that alpha-autoinhibition and facilitation act, at least in part, at separate targets under these conditions. At high (5.4 mm) external Ca(2+) the pattern becomes almost purely ;competitive', indicating that facilitation can, under suitable conditions, overcome all manifestations of alpha-autoinhibition.7. The secretion evoked by electrical nerve stimulation (Deltat per shock, at 1 or 10 Hz) increased with the strength of applied shocks, both when applied extra- or transmurally, in the presence or absence of alpha-autoinhibition. In the former case the rise in (Deltat per shock) vs. (current strength) was hyperbolic, in the latter it followed a biphasic pattern. Double reciprocal plot analysis (1/Deltat vs. 1/current) of the data yields a ;non-competitive' pattern of interaction between facilitation or alpha-autoinhibition, and exogenous current, when stimulation was extramural. When it was transmural the pattern is ;competitive'. The results seem to imply that hyperpolarization, or depolarization, of nerve terminals are major mechanisms whereby alpha-autoinhibition and facilitation, respectively, exert their effects on the secretory response to electrical nerve stimulation.8. Neither activation of Na(+), K(+)-ATPase, nor promotion of G(Cl) appear to be critically involved in alpha-autoinhibition. Experiments with known blockers of G(K) (tetraethylammonium, 4-aminopyridine and Rb(+)) did not give support to the notion that promotion of K(+) efflux is a mechanism whereby prejunctional alpha-adrenoceptors cause (hyperpolarization of nerve terminals and) autoinhibition of secretion. If alpha-autoinhibition does involve K(+) channels in the nerve terminal membrane, then these must be different from the (voltage-sensitive) K(+) channels blocked by the above mentioned inhibitors of K(+) efflux.9. The results are discussed in the context of a model that assumes that local control of noradrenaline secretion from noradrenergic nerves may be exerted both by control of invasion of terminals, and by control of depolarization-secretion coupling in each invaded varicosity. Under suitable conditions facilitation and alpha-autoinhibition may interact at both levels. It proposed that utilization of external Ca(2+) plays a pivotal role for both, and that restriction of invasion of nerve terminal varicosities is the main effect of alpha-autoinhibition, while promotion of depolarization-secretion coupling is the main effect of facilitation, at physiological concentrations of Ca(2+) in the medium. For the nerve the role of this dual control system is proposed to be to ensure ;rotational' activation of varicosities, and for the effector cell of noradrenergic junctions, to increase the signal/noise ratio.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]