Abstract
Thymopoietin is a 48 to 49 amino acid polypeptide hormone of the thymus, which regulates immune function. The present experiments show that the polypeptide can cause a complete block of transmission of the phrenic nerve diaphragm junction of the rat in vitro; contractile responses evoked by phrenic nerve stimulation were blocked by concentrations of thymopoietin as low as 10(-8) M. The thymopoietin-induced inhibition of indirectly evoked muscle contractions was dose- and time-dependent, with the polypeptide being only slightly less potent than alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BGT). Twitch responses to direct electrical stimulation of the muscle were not affected by thymopoietin, indicating that it did not inhibit muscle tension by an action on the muscle contractile mechanism per se. Furthermore, thymopoietin did not alter resting or stimulated release of acetylcholine from the phrenic nerve, suggesting that it did not interact at a presynaptic level. On the other hand, thymopoietin inhibited the binding of [125I]alpha-BGT to the nicotinic receptor of rat hemidiaphragm. In intact muscle tissue, the IC50 value for inhibition of [125I]alpha-BGT binding by thymopoietin was 2.1 x 10(-7) M, a value similar to the concentration of polypeptide required to inhibit phrenic nerve-induced muscle contraction (IC50 value, 0.75-1.6 x 10(-7) M). In a muscle membrane preparation, the potency of thymopoietin to affect [125I]alpha-BGT binding was increased (IC50 value, 0.35 nM); thus thymopoietin has the potential to interact at the nicotinic receptor in the nM range. To conclude, the present results show that thymopoietin inhibits neuromuscular activity by an effect that appears to be a specific interaction at the nicotinic receptor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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