RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Comparison of norepinephrine- and benzodiazepine-induced augmentation of Purkinje cell responses to gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). JF Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics JO J Pharmacol Exp Ther FD American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics SP 257 OP 267 VO 228 IS 2 A1 B D Waterhouse A1 H C Moises A1 H H Yeh A1 H M Geller A1 D J Woodward YR 1984 UL http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/228/2/257.abstract AB The hypothesis tested in the present study was that the benzodiazepines (i.e., flurazepam) and norepinephrine (NE) share a common mechanism to facilitate cerebellar Purkinje neuron responsiveness to iontophoretically applied gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). Extracellular activity was recorded from Purkinje neurons in halothane-anesthetized rats from each of the following groups: 1) naive, 2) acute or chronic flurazepam treated, 3) chronic desmethylimipramine treated and 4) injected with 6-hydroxydopamine. Single unit responses to pulsatile (10 sec duration at 45-sec intervals) iontophoretic administration of GABA were examined before, during and after NE or flurazepam microiontophoresis in all treatment groups. Drug response histograms were generated and used to quantitate NE and flurazepam effects on spontaneous activity and GABA-induced inhibitory responses. Doses of GABA sufficient to produce depression of Purkinje cell activity in naive rats (4-40 nA) suppressed firing rate in all Purkinje cells tested in drug-treated animals. In contrast to its consistent GABA facilitating action in naive controls, iontophoretically applied flurazepam was ineffective in augmenting GABA-induced suppression of Purkinje cell discharge in acute and chronic flurazepam-treated animals. Although GABA facilitation by NE was unaffected by acute systemic administration of a benzodiazepine, chronic treatment with flurazepam produced a subsensitivity to the noradrenergic GABA facilitating effects. Within 48 hr of withdrawal from chronic benzodiazepine treatment, both NE and flurazepam again enhanced GABA-induced suppression of Purkinje cell discharge routinely. Chronic desmethylimipramine treatment as well as iontophoresis of the blocking agents sotalol and fluphenazine which have been shown previously to block or reduce NE-mediated enhancement of GABA actions were ineffective in altering the facilitating effect of flurazepam on GABA. Likewise, 6-hydroxydopamine pretreatment had no effect on GABA augmentation by flurazepam. Thus, although flurazepam appears to act independently from the noradrenergic receptor system in augmenting GABA-induced depression of Purkinje cell discharge, a reversible subsensitivity to the GABA facilitating effects of both flurazepam and NE can be produced by chronic treatment with this benzodiazepine. On the basis of this "cross-subsensitivity" to NE and flurazepam actions, it seems reasonable to suggest that these two agents might enhance GABA inhibitory actions by a common biophysical mechanism subsequent to noradrenergic receptor activation.