TY - JOUR T1 - Spontaneous output of acetylcholine from rat diaphragm preparations declines after treatment with botulinum toxin. JF - Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics JO - J Pharmacol Exp Ther SP - 265 LP - 268 VL - 224 IS - 2 AU - C B Gundersen AU - D J Jenden Y1 - 1983/02/01 UR - http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/224/2/265.abstract N2 - A gas chromatographic spectrometric assay was used to measure tissue and released acetylcholine and choline in diaphragm preparations of rats previously injected with botulinum toxin type A. Botulinum intoxication was found not to alter the acetylcholine content of rat diaphragms in vivo or in fully paralyzed muscles in vitro. This result provides direct support for the hypothesis that botulinum toxin blocks transmitter release without affecting acetylcholine synthesis. However, in diaphragm preparations in vitro, this toxin was found to inhibit not only the evoked release of acetylcholine but also the spontaneous "leakage" of acetylcholine that is measured at rest. Additional experiments were performed to characterize this action of the toxin. The magnitude of the decline in resting acetylcholine output appears to be too large to be accounted for solely by the known effect of botulinum toxin to reduce the frequency of miniature endplate potentials. The mechanism of this action of botulinum toxin remains an enigma. ER -