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Vol. 294, Issue 1, 302-307, July 2000
Department of Pharmacology, Institute of Experimental Medicine, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary
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Abstract |
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The complex effect of lobeline on [3H]norepinephrine
([3H]NE) release was investigated in this study.
Lobeline-induced release of [3H]NE from the vas deferens
was strictly concentration-dependent. In contrast, electrical
stimulation-evoked release was characterized by diverse effects of
lobeline depending on the concentration used: at lower concentration
(10 µM), it increased the release and at high concentration (100 and
300 µM), the evoked release of [3H]NE was abolished.
The effect of lobeline on the basal release was
[Ca2+]-independent, insensitive to mecamylamine, a
nicotinic acetylcholine receptor antagonist, and to desipramine, a
noradrenaline uptake inhibitor. However, lobeline-induced release was
temperature-dependent: at low temperature (12°C), at which the
membrane carrier proteins are inhibited, lobeline failed to increase
the basal release. Lobeline dose dependently inhibited the uptake of
[3H]NE into rat hippocampal synaptic vesicles and
purified synaptosomes with IC50 values of 1.19 ± 0.11 and 6.53 ± 1.37 µM, respectively. Lobeline also inhibited
Ca2+ influx induced by KCl depolarization in sympathetic
neurons measured with the Fura-2 technique. In addition, phenylephrine,
an
1-adrenoceptor agonist, contracted the smooth muscle
of the vas deferens and enhanced stimulation-evoked contraction. Both
effects were inhibited by lobeline. Our results can be best explained
as a reversal of the monoamine uptake by lobeline that is facilitated
by the increased intracellular NE level after lobeline blocks vesicular
uptake. At high concentrations, lobeline acts as a nonselective
Ca2+ channel antagonist blocking pre- and postjunctional
Ca2+ channels serving as a counterbalance for the multiple
transmitter releasing actions.
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Introduction |
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Although
lobeline was originally considered as a pure nicotinic agonist, recent
observations suggest that its pharmacological action is more complex
than was thought previously. In our earlier study, it was found that
the inhibition of carrier-mediated processes possibly underlies the
loss of serotonin-releasing effects of lobeline at 7°C in hippocampal
slices. Therefore, it has been proposed that lobeline acts by reversal
of the monoamine uptake (Lendvai et al., 1996
). Teng et al. (1997)
observed that lobeline increased dopamine (DA) release via inhibition
of vesicular DA uptake, which leads to a depletion of vesicular DA
content and to an increase in cytosolic DA level. Furthermore, lobeline
was found to be 28-fold more potent to inhibit vesicular
[3H]DA uptake than to release
[3H]DA from rat striatum (Teng et al., 1998
).
In contrast to plasma membrane carriers, low temperature does not
influence the exocytotic type of transmitter release (for review, see
Vizi, 1998
). Therefore, using low temperature, the two primary types of
transmitter release can be separated.
However, the release process from a nerve terminal is also regulated by
several factors, perhaps fluctuation of resting cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration being most important (Zucker,
1999
). Voltage-dependent Ca2+ channel (VDCC)
activity regulates transmitter release and significantly contributes to
the operation of intracellular [Ca2+] stores.
The finding that lobeline (10-300 µM) antagonized the high
voltage-activated calcium current in a dose-dependent manner in rat
sympathetic neurons suggests that lobeline can cause direct inhibition
of VDCCs (Toth and Vizi, 1998
). None of these effects fit well to the
classic view of nicotinic receptor function, which is thought to
mediate Na+, K+, and
Ca2+ fluxes on activation. Nevertheless, there is
evidence indicating that lobeline is a true nicotinic receptor ligand:
1) because it is able to displace [3H]nicotine
binding from central nicotinic receptors with high affinity (Yamada et
al., 1985
; Lippiello and Fernandes, 1986
; Benerjee and Abood, 1989
;
Broussolle et al., 1989
); 2) it has a positive effect on learning and
memory (Decker et al., 1993
); and 3) it causes tachycardia,
hypertension (Teng et al., 1997
), and hyperalgesia (Hamann and Martin,
1994
), in line with nicotinic receptor-mediated actions.
In this study, we made an attempt to understand further the complex effect of lobeline on transmitter release using different model systems. It was demonstrated that lobeline can induce norepinephrine (NE) release from peripheral tissues using several distinct mechanisms, including the reversal of membrane carrier and the inhibition of vesicular uptake. In addition, these effects are also accompanied by a "brake" mechanism, the inhibition of VDCCs.
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Experimental Procedures |
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Release of Tritiated NE from Guinea Pig Vas Deferens. The experiments were performed on male guinea pigs (body weight, 200-300 g). The vasa deferentia were excised and incubated for 40 min at 37°C in 1 ml of Krebs' solution containing 1-[7,8-3H]NE (10 µCi/ml, 36.0 Ci/mmol; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Arlington Heights, IL). Experiments were performed at 37°C in modified Krebs' solution 118 NaCl, 4.7 KCl, 2.5 CaCl2, 1.2 KH2PO4, 1.2 MgSO4, 25 NaHCO3, 0.03 Na2EDTA, ascorbic acid, 0.3, and D-glucose 12.5, which was continuously saturated with carbogen gas (95% O2 + 5% CO2). After incubation the vasa were transferred to thermoregulated (37°C) organ baths (internal volume, 3 ml). In some experiments, the bath temperature was reduced to 12°C using FRIGOMIX R (B. Braun Biotech International, Allentown, PA) from the sixth fraction (18th min after starting the collection) until the end of the experiment. The preparation was perfused at a rate of 1 ml/min. After 60 min of preperfusion, the outflow was collected in 3-ml (3-min) fractions for an additional 60 min. Tissues were stimulated at 60 V, 8 Hz, 1-ms impulse duration for 1 min (480 pulses), via platinum electrodes using a Grass S88 stimulator during the 3rd and 15th collection periods (S1 and S2). Mecamylamine and desipramine (DMI) were added at the 6th fraction to the perfusion fluid. Lobeline was perfused from the 8th collection period until the end of the experiment. At the end of the perfusion period, the tissue was removed from the organ bath and suspended in 500 µl of 10% trichloroacetic acid. To determine radioactivity released from the tissue, aliquots (0.5 ml) of the perfusate samples were assayed, and a 100-µl aliquot was assayed for tissue radioactivity. Radioactivity was determined in a liquid scintillation counter (Packard 1900; Packard, Meriden, CT). The outflow of tritium was expressed as fractional release (FR), i.e., as the percentage of the amount of radioactivity in the tissue at the time of the release. To calculate electrical field stimulation-induced overflow, the mean of the basal release determined before and after the stimulation was subtracted from the total efflux of radioactivity from the tissue in response to electrical stimulation. The effects of drugs on electrical stimulation-induced outflow were expressed by the calculated ratio of FR S2 over FR S1 (FRS2/FRS1). The drug effect on baseline release of [3H]NE was calculated as a ratio of the averages of the FR values of the 13th and 14th fractions (FRR2) and the 1st and the 2nd fractions (FRR1). The mechanical response of the vas deferens smooth muscle was simultaneously recorded with a force displacement transducer and a potentiometric recorder (Omniscribe, Gistel, Belgium) under a resting tension of 1 g.
Hippocampal Synaptic Vesicle Preparation.
The hippocampi of
male rats (180-200 g) were dissected out on ice, and the preparation
of vesicles was performed according to Erickson et al. (1990)
. Tissues
were pooled and homogenized in 0.32 M sucrose (1:10 g/ml) with a Teflon
pestle, and the homogenate was centrifuged at 2000g for 10 min. The supernatant was centrifuged at 10,000g for 30 min
at 4°C, and the pellet (buffy coat) was gently suspended in 2 ml of
0.32 M ice-cold sucrose and subjected to osmotic shock with distilled
water and homogenized as above. After keeping the preparation on ice
for 15 min, the osmolarity was restored by adding of 0.25 M potassium
HEPES (pH 6.5) and 1 M potassium tartrate (pH 7.4) in 1/10 volume and
centrifuged at 20,000g for 20 min. The supernatant was
centrifuged (55,000g for 60 min). The resulting pellet was
discarded, and the vesicles were sedimented at 100,000g for
60 min.
Measurement of [3H]NE Uptake into Synaptic
Vesicles.
The pellet was suspended in assay buffer (pH 7.4)
containing 25 mM HEPES, 100 mM potassium tartrate, 0.1 mM EDTA, 0.05 mM EGTA, 0.5 mM ascorbic acid, and 2 mM magnesium-ATP. In a final volume
of 250 µl of assay buffer, an aliquot of the pellet suspension (0.1-0.2 mg of protein) was incubated with 5 nM
[3H]NE and with lobeline (0.001-100 µM) for
10 min at 37°C. Uptake was terminated by the addition of 3 ml of
ice-cold assay buffer containing 2 mM magnesium sulfate (washing
buffer). Samples were filtered with a Brandel cell harvester using GF/B
filters soaked in 0.1% polyethylenimine. Filters were washed three
times with washing buffer, and the radioactivity trapped on the filters
was counted in a Packard scintillation counter. Nonspecific uptake was
determined by incubation of the samples at 0°C. The protein content
of the preparation was measured by the method of Lowry et al. (1951)
using CuEDTA.
Preparation of Synaptosomes from Hippocampus.
Purified
synaptosomes were prepared according to the method of Dodd et al.
(1981)
. Hippocampi of male rats (160-180 g) were homogenized in 0.32 M
sucrose (1:10 g/ml) by Teflon pestle and centrifuged at
1000g (
2t = 1.57 × 108 rad2/s). The
supernatant was layered onto 1/2 volume of 1.2 M sucrose and
centrifuged at 220,000g
(
2t = 1.6 × 1010 rad2/s). The gradient
interface was carefully collected, diluted with 0.32 M sucrose, and
layered onto 1/2 volume of 0.8 M sucrose and centrifuged as described
above. The pellet containing synaptosomes was used for uptake experiments.
Measurement of [3H]NE Uptake into Hippocampal Synaptosomes. Synaptosomal pellet was suspended in carbogenated Krebs' assay buffer containing 118 mM NaCl, 4.7 mM KCl, 2.5 mM CaCl2, 1.2 mM KH2PO4, 1.2 mM MgSO4, 10 mM D-glucose, 25 mM NaHCO3, 0.3 mM ascorbic acid, and 0.01 mM pargyline (pH 7.4). Aliquots of synaptosomal suspension were preincubated with lobeline (0.001-100 µM) for 5 min at 37°C in a final volume of 1 ml of assay solution. After preincubation, [3H]NE (5 nM) was added to the tubes and incubation was continued for 5 min. Uptake was terminated by adding 3 ml of assay buffer. Samples were filtered through GF/B filters by using a Brandel cell harvester. Filters were washed with Krebs' solution. Nonspecific uptake was determined by incubation of the samples at 0°C.
Measurement of Intracellular Calcium.
Intracellular calcium
measurements were performed on single sympathetic neuronal cells
prepared from the superior cervical ganglion of 1- to 3-day-old Wistar
rat pups as described by Toth and Miller (1995)
. The cells, plated on
22-mm diameter coverslips, were loaded with 3 µM Fura-2/AM
[(Teflabs, Austin, TX) dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide containing 20%
w/v Pluronic F-127 (Molecular Probes Inc., Eugene, OR)] for 60 min in
the dark at room temperature. Cells were then rinsed three times and
incubated further for 30 min to complete hydrolysis of acetoxymethyl
ester groups. Dye loading, de-esterification, and the entire experiment
were performed in a HEPES-buffered salt solution, pH 7.4, composed of
154 mM NaCl, 5 mM KCl, 2 mM CaCl2, 1 mM
MgCl2, 10 mM D-glucose, and 10 mM
HEPES. After de-esterification, the coverslips were mounted on a metal
recording chamber (Intracell Ltd., Herts, UK) and placed on the
stage of a Nikon Diaphot inverted epifluorescence microscope. A Photon
Technology International (South Brunswick, NJ) microfluorimetric system was used for the ratio measurements. Fura-2 was excited with
light from a 75-W xenon arc lamp, alternately at 340 and 380 nm
with a bandwidth of 4 nm through a Nikon Fluor ×100 oil immersion
objective. Fluorescence intensity at 510 ± 20 nm was measured by
means of a photomultiplier tube. Measurements were limited to a field
of view slightly larger than the cells, with a rectangular diaphragm.
Background correction was performed before the fluorescence ratio was
calculated. Background light levels were determined on a cell-free
area. Intracellular calcium levels were expressed as the ratio of
fluorescence intensities at 340 to 380 nm excitations. The metal
recording chamber contained 1 ml of buffer, and the cells were
superfused at a rate of 3 ml/min. Depolarization-induced calcium influx
was produced by changing the perfusion solution for 20 s from low
K+ (5 mM) to high K+ (50 mM) with K+ exchanged for
Na+ reciprocally.
HPLC Analysis. The concentrations of [3H]NE and its 3H-metabolites of the guinea pig vas deferens superfusate fluid were determined using a Gilson HPLC system with electrochemical and liquid scintillation detection. For the separation, Nucleosil 3 C-18 analytical column (150 × 4.0 mm) was used. The mobile phase was 50 mM sodium phosphate, 25 mM citric acid, pH 3.6, 0.25 mM EDTA, 0.75 mM octane sulfonic acid sodium salt, and 5% acetonitrile:methanole (3.5:1.0). The perfusion fluid was centrifuged, and a 750-µl aliquot was mixed with 25 µl of 2.0 µM concentrations of unlabeled standards (dihydroxyphenyl ethylglycol, NE, epinephrine, normetanephrine). The sample was enriched on a guard column in stripping mode. The flow rate was 1.0 ml/min. In each 1-min sample of the effluent, the radioactivity was determined by liquid scintillation counting. The recovery of radiolabeled activity was 91.74 ± 3.74% (n = 28).
Statistics. The statistical significance of the results was determined with one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey's test; P < .05 was considered significant. All data are expressed as mean ± S.E.
Drugs. 1-[7,8-3H]NE was purchased from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, lobeline HCl from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO), phenylephrine was from Serva feinbiochemica (Heidelberg/New York), mecamylamine from Erypharm Italiana, DMI HCl from Research Biochemicals International (Natick, MA), and tetrabenazine (TB) from Fluka AG (Buchs, Switzerland). Drugs were prepared on the day of use.
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Results |
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Effect of Lobeline on the Release of [3H]NE from the
Vas Deferens.
After 60 min of loading with
[3H]NE, followed by a 60-min washout, the
tissue uptake was 2312.4 ± 74.7 kBq/g (n = 40).
The tritium outflow at rest was 0.228 ± 0.008% of the total
content of radioactivity during a 3-min collection period
(n = 40). The electrical field stimulation-evoked
release of [3H]NE from vasa deferentia was
0.776 ± 0.043% (n = 36). When the stimulation
was repeated at the 42nd min, the
FRS2/FRS1 ratio was
0.858 ± 0.046 (n = 4) in the control experiment.
By the end of the experiment, 0.10 ± 0.003% (n = 4) of the total radioactivity taken up was released. Lobeline (10-300
µM), added 24 min after the beginning of the sample collection
period, increased the resting outflow of [3H]NE
from vas deferens in a concentration-dependent manner. To examine
whether the radioactivity of the samples represents the release of
[3H]NE and to further analyze the effect of
lobeline, HPLC combined with electrochemical detection
separation and subsequent radiochemical detection were performed. The
[3H]NE/[3H]3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylene
glycol ([3H]DOPEG) ratio was 0.88 ± 0.17 (n = 4) at rest. Electrical field stimulation
increased the release of tritiated NE (Fig.
1) with a
[3H]NE/[3H]DOPEG ratio
of 4.26 ± 2.45 (n = 4). Lobeline caused a large tritiated NE release (Fig. 1); however, the
[3H]NE/[3H]DOPEG ratio
(0.50 ± 0.01; n = 4) was smaller than in the case of baseline outflow or electrical stimulation that indicates the cytoplasmic origin of the lobeline-induced release. Because the release
of radioactivity faithfully follows the release of
[3H]NE, in the following, we will use the term
[3H]NE release.
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Effect of Lobeline on the Uptake of [3H]NE.
The
specific uptake of [3H]NE was determined by
subtracting the uptake value at 0°C from the total value at 37°C.
At a nonsaturating concentration of [3H]NE
(5 × 10
9 M), the uptake into rat
hippocampal vesicles was 16.61 ± 2.10 fmol/mg of protein/10 min.
Lobeline concentration dependently inhibited the uptake of
[3H]NE into vesicles with an
IC50 value of 1.19 ± 0.11 µM (Fig. 3). The specific uptake of
[3H]NE into purified rat hippocampal
synaptosomes was 387 ± 24.4 fmol/mg of protein/5 min using 5 × 10
9 M NE concentration. Lobeline inhibited
the uptake of [3H]NE with an
IC50 value of 6.53 ± 1.37 µM (Fig. 3).
Furthermore, lobeline (100 µM) was able to decrease significantly the
[3H]NE uptake when it was added to the solution
during the loading period in guinea pig vas deferens. The tissue uptake
of [3H]NE was 2609.5 ± 187.5 kBq/g in the
control experiment and 1378.8 ± 56.1 kBq/g with lobeline
(P < .001; n = 4). TB, a specific
high-affinity inhibitor of the vesicular monoamine transporter in 1 µM concentration, inhibited the uptake of
3[H]NE in synaptosomes by 69.2 ± 0.7%.
Additional inhibition was not possible to obtain even using 10 µM
concentration of the drug (71.1 ± 3.1%), indicating that
inhibition of the vesicular uptake of 3[H]NE
was complete. Using 10 µM TB plus 5, 10, and 100 µM lobeline, the
inhibition was increased further (78.8 ± 2.8%, 88.9 ± 2.8%, P
.01, and 93.9 ± 1.1%, P
.01).
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Effect of Lobeline on Prejunctional VDCCs.
When lobeline was
applied at 10 µM, it significantly increased the electrical
stimulation-evoked release. In contrast, at 100 µM and higher
concentrations, it depressed the evoked release of
[3H]NE, i.e., the
FRS2/FRS1 ratio was
0.01 ± 0.01 in the presence of 100 µM lobeline (Fig.
4B). Low temperature did not influence the inhibitory effect of lobeline on stimulation-evoked release.
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Effect of Lobeline on Ca2+-Influx.
Perfusion of
the sympathetic neuronal cells with 50 mM K+
increased the intracellular Ca2+ concentration
([Ca2+]i) in a repeatable
manner (Fig. 4A) by producing depolarization-induced Ca2+ influx (Thayer et al., 1988
). Lobeline (300 µM), in the highest concentration used in the release experiments and
which caused nearly maximal inhibition of Ca2+
channels (Toth and Vizi, 1998
), inhibited the K+
depolarization-evoked
[Ca2+]i increase in
Fura-2 loaded cells. The effect of lobeline was reversible (Fig. 4A).
Effect of Lobeline on Mechanical Responses of Vas Deferens.
The effect of lobeline on the contraction of the vas deferens produced
by field stimulation and phenylephrine was also examined. Electrical
field stimulation at 4 Hz and 480 shocks resulted in a biphasic
response that is known to be the result of the cotransmitter action of
ATP and NE (Vizi et al., 1992
). The electrical stimulation-induced response was completely prevented by lobeline. Phenylephrine, an
1-agonist, increased smooth muscle tone and
spontaneous activity and increased biphasic response to field
stimulation (Fig. 4C/a). When lobeline (300 µM) was added to the
perfusion solution 6 min before phenylephrine (100 µM), the
1-agonist was unable to induce contraction or
to enhance the contraction evoked by electrical stimulation. These
findings indicate that lobeline prevented the direct effect of
phenylephrine on the smooth muscle, i.e., on postjunctional
1-receptors (Fig. 4C/b).
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Discussion |
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In this study, we have shown various aspects of pre- and
postjunctional effects of lobeline to the release of
[3H]NE. Although previous studies have
suggested that the uptake of NE (Lindmar and Loffelholz, 1972
) and
carrier-mediated neurotransmitter release (Vizi et al., 1985
, 1986
) are
temperature-dependent, it has just recently been recognized that
12°C is the cut-off point at which exocytotic and carrier-mediated
release can be separated (Vizi, 1998
; Vizi and Sperlagh, 1999
). In
agreement with this theory, our experiments showed that electrical
stimulation-evoked release of [3H]NE, known to
be the result of vesicular exocytosis, remained unaffected at 12°C.
In contrast, the direct transmitter-releasing effect of lobeline was
low temperature-sensitive. Therefore, it is reasonable to suggest that
the action of lobeline involves a carrier-mediated outward transport of
[3H]NE by a reversal of the flow of
carrier-mediated monoamine uptake in the presynaptic membrane. Simple
inhibition of the plasma membrane carrier by lobeline can be excluded
because low temperature would then further increase the release or, at
least, cause no change.
In agreement with the findings of Teng et al. (1997
, 1998
) on
dopaminergic neurons, our data also suggest that lobeline inhibits vesicular catecholamine uptake that most likely results in a
cytoplasmic NE accumulation in the nerve terminal. Our results that
IC50 values for vesicular and synaptosomal
[3H]NE uptake are in the same order of
magnitude suggest that the inhibitory effect of lobeline on
synaptosomal uptake is primarily attributable to the vesicular
inhibition because the synaptosomal preparation includes synaptic
vesicles, and the effect of lobeline on uptake must include it.
However, the finding that lobeline has a surplus inhibitory effect on
NE uptake after TB treatment needs explanation. When the direction of
the NE transport has already been changed by lobeline, it is
assumed that the transporter is not ready to bind the released
transmitters on the extracellular side. This should result in an
apparent inhibition of the synaptosomal uptake flow after the vesicles
have been depleted by TB. There are drugs such as tyramine (Driessen et
al., 1996
) and histamine (Boudreau and Vohra, 1991
) that can enter the
cell using the membrane uptake carrier to evoke NE release. The uptake
of tyramine and histamine can be blocked by DMI. The fact, that the
monoamine uptake blocker DMI did not influence the effect of lobeline
clearly shows that lobeline operates the carrier in a mode that is
different from the one sensitive to DMI. As a highly lipophilic
compound, lobeline can pass the membrane via passive diffusion. The
failure of DMI to inhibit the effect of lobeline not only shows the
route used by lobeline to enter the cell, but also that the carrier cannot be blocked by DMI when NE transport is reversed by lobeline. Although cytoplasmic NE is available for the monoaminooxidase enzyme, a
significant amount of [3H]NE must have
escaped from intracellular metabolism, because not only the
metabolites but also NE itself considerably contribute to the released
radioactivity in response to lobeline (Fig. 1). Therefore, the
cellular-releasing effect of lobeline is based on multiple sites:
first, it increases the releasable pool of NE in the cytoplasm; second,
lobeline enhances the release from the cytoplasmic transmitter pool by
the reversal of the plasma membrane uptake (Fig.
5).
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The question arises whether lobeline acted on the nicotinic
acetylcholine receptor(s) (nAChRs). It is well known that stimulation of nAChR causes relatively high calcium influx (Patrick et al., 1993
;
Seguela et al., 1993
). The nAChR-induced release of NE from the
hippocampus is [Ca2+]o-dependent
(Vizi et al., 1995
). Lobeline is able to bind to the central nicotinic
receptors with very high affinity (Yamada et al., 1985
; Lippiello and
Fernandes, 1986
; Benerjee and Abood, 1989
; Broussolle et al., 1989
). On
the other hand, lobeline-induced release was independent on the
extracellular Ca2+ level in our experiments, and
the effect of lobeline was insensitive to mecamylamine, a nicotinic
receptor antagonist. Similarly, lobeline-induced outflow has been shown
to be mecamylamine-insensitive in the hippocampus (J. P. Kiss, K. Windisch, and E. S. Vizi, unpublished data) and striatal slices
(Teng et al., 1997
). The participation of the mecamylamine-insensitive
7-nAChR in the effect of lobeline also seems unlikely, because
lobeline acts as an antagonist on human
7-nAChR expressed in
Xenopus oocytes (Briggs and McKenna, 1998
). In sharp
contrast, NE release, induced by other nicotinic agonists such as
1,1-dimethyl-4-phenylpiperazinium and nicotine, can be reversed
by nicotinic antagonists in the vas deferens (Todorov et al., 1991
) and
hippocampus (Kiss et al., 1997
; Sershen et al., 1997
). Therefore, it
appears that lobeline does not behave as a classic nicotinic agonist on
the NE release in the vas deferens.
Different types of Ca2+ channels take part in the
releasing process in sympathetic neurons of vas deferens that involves
N-, P-, and Q-type VDDCs (Waterman, 1997
). In our experiments, high concentrations (100 and 300 µM) of lobeline inhibited
[3H]NE release evoked by electrical
stimulation. Lobeline inhibited Ca2+ influx
induced by KCl in cultured sympathetic neurons measured by the Fura-2
technique, indicating that lobeline could inhibit the somatic VDCCs.
Our results support the recent observations that lobeline (10-300
µM) antagonized the high voltage-activated calcium current in a
dose-dependent manner using whole-cell patch clamp in rat sympathetic
neurons (Toth and Vizi, 1998
). The inhibition of these channels by
lobeline can stop release-activating mechanisms and appears as an
opposing effect of the releasing action of lobeline. One advantage of
the vas deferens preparation is the possibility of the simultaneous
recording of smooth muscle contractions and the release of
[3H]NE that shows pre- and postjunctional
effects at the same time. Electrical nerve stimulation results in
biphasic contraction mediated by the cotransmitter action of ATP and
NE, released from sympathetic nerve terminals (Kasakov et al., 1988
;
Vizi et al., 1992
) and acting on postjunctional
1-adrenoceptors and P2x
purinoceptors (Burnstock, 1990
). Lobeline abolished the smooth muscle
contraction evoked by electrical field stimulation consistently with
its suggested presynaptic VDCC inhibitory effect. Because muscle
contraction by the
1-adrenoceptor agonist
phenylephrine, which acts on the postjunctional site, can also be
prevented by lobeline, it seems reasonable to conclude that lobeline
inhibits both pre- and postjunctional VDCCs.
Together, the results of our experiments show that two primary routes converge after the application of lobeline to release NE from the cytoplasm, including a vesicular uptake inhibition and a reversal of the plasma membrane carrier. At a higher concentration range (100-300 µM), blockade of the pre- and postsynaptic VDCCs contributes to the complex action of lobeline.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication April 3, 2000.
Received for publication December 10, 1999.
1 This study was supported in part by the Hungarian Research Fund (OTKA) (T022450, T029859), Hungarian Medical Research Foundation (194/96, 195/96, 53/98), and a Philip Morris research grant.
Send reprint requests to: Dr. E. Sylvester Vizi, Institute of Experimental Medicine, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Szigony u. 43., H-1450 P.O. Box 67, Hungary. E-mail: esvizi{at}koki.hu
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Abbreviations |
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DA, dopamine; VDCC, voltage-dependent Ca2+ channel; NE, norepinephrine; FR, fractional release; TB, tetrabenazine; nAChR(s), nicotinic acetylcholine receptor(s); [Ca2+]i, intracellular calcium concentration, DMI, desipramine; DOPEG, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylene glycol.
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197-201[Medline].This article has been cited by other articles:
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B. Lendvai and E. S. Vizi Nonsynaptic Chemical Transmission Through Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors Physiol Rev, April 1, 2008; 88(2): 333 - 349. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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L. Papp, T. Balazsa, A. Kofalvi, F. Erdelyi, G. Szabo, E. S. Vizi, and B. Sperlagh P2X Receptor Activation Elicits Transporter-Mediated Noradrenaline Release from Rat Hippocampal Slices J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., September 1, 2004; 310(3): 973 - 980. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. K. Miller, P. A. Crooks, L. Teng, J. M. Witkin, P. Munzar, S. R. Goldberg, J. B. Acri, and L. P. Dwoskin Lobeline Inhibits the Neurochemical and Behavioral Effects of Amphetamine J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., March 1, 2001; 296(3): 1023 - 1034. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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