Abstract
Pharmacological properties of excitatory synaptic transmission from mechanosensory afferents to an identifiable nonspiking interneuron of crayfish were studied by drug perfusion experiments using acetylcholine (ACh) agonists and antagonists. Application of carbachol, a general agonist of ACh, caused sustained depolarization of the interneuron and a decrease in the peak amplitude of its excitatory synaptic response to sensory stimulation on the soma side. Similar depolarization was observed during application of carbachol under the low-Ca2+, high-Mg2+ condition. The peak amplitude was also reduced by application of nicotine and tetramethylammonium, both of which also caused sustained depolarization of the inter-neuron. By contrast, perfusion of muscarinic agonists, muscarine, oxotremorine and pilocarpine, reduced the peak amplitude without affecting the membrane potential of the interneuron. Perfusion of nicotonic antagonists of ACh, d-tubocurarine and hexamethonium, caused reduction of the peak amplitude without any change in the membrane potential. A muscarinic antagonist atropine was also effective in blocking the synaptic transmission but at higher concentration than d-tubocurarine. The results suggest that the ACh receptors on the nonspiking interneuron belong to a previously characterized class of crustacean cholinergic receptors resembling the nicotinic subtype of vertebrates.
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Takashima, A., Niwa, M., Nakamura, H. et al. Cholinergic transmission from mechanosensory afferents to an identified nonspiking interneuron in the crayfish Procambarus clarkii girard. J Comp Physiol A 179, 447–454 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00192312
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00192312