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Vol. 298, Issue 2, 493-500, August 2001
Department of Pharmacology, College of Medicine, National Taiwan
University, Taipei, Taiwan
ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channels were reported
to be involved in morphine analgesia in vivo. The present study, using
patch-clamp technique in brain slices of neonatal (P12-P16) and adult
rats, investigated cellular actions of KATP channel ligands
and their interactions with morphine in the ventrolateral
periaqueductal gray (PAG), a crucial site for morphine analgesia. In
neonatal PAG neurons, morphine depressed evoked inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) in almost all tested neurons and elicited an inwardly
rectifying K+ current in one-third of tested neurons.
Glibenclamide (1-10 µM), a KATP channel blocker, did not
affect the membrane current or synaptic current per se but also failed
to affect the effects of morphine. No outward current was elicited upon
using microelectrodes containing ATP-free internal solution. In adult
neurons, morphine, at the concentration up to 300 µM, failed to
activate K+ current in all 25 neurons tested but depressed
IPSCs to a comparable extent as that in neonatal neurons. Glibenclamide
also failed to alter the effect of morphine in adult neurons. The
openers of KATP channels, lemakalim (10-30 µM) and
diazoxide (10-500 µM), unlike morphine, did not increase membrane
currents in both neonatal and adult neurons. However, diazoxide induced
a glibenclamide-sensitive outward current in hippocampal CA1 neurons.
It is concluded that KATP channels display little
functional role per se and might not be involved in effects of morphine
in the ventrolateral PAG. The correlation between the insensitivity in
K+ channel activation and the less antinociceptive response
to morphine in adults was discussed.