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Vol. 282, Issue 3, 1373-1378, 1997
Departments of Medicine and Pediatrics, Uniformed Services
University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland
Previous electrophysiological studies have shown that
tachykinin-mediated excitatory junction potentials are enhanced in a ricin model of inflammatory bowel disease. The present study extends these findings by investigating the contractile response to stimulation of noncholinergic nerves and tachykinin agonists. According to rank
order potencies, the rabbit ileal circular muscle was neurokinin (NK)1 preferring, and the response to these agonists was
down-regulated by acetylcholine and up-regulated by nitric oxide. In
ricin-treated tissue, cholinergic and nitridergic modulation was lost;
in the presence of atropine and N-nitro-L-arginine methyl
ester, or tetrodotoxin, the response to NK1 and
NK2 agonists was enhanced. The noncholinergic response to
nerve stimulation was predominantly mediated by NK1 receptors, and the enhanced response of ricin-treated tissue to NK1 agonists probably contributes to the increased response
to electrical field stimulation observed under these conditions. Increased tachykinin response and loss of control of this response by
acetylcholine and nitric oxide are likely to have profound effects on
intestinal motility and could contribute to some of the symptomology of
inflammatory bowel disease.
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