Hinds Nicholas M, Ullrich Katja, Smid Scott D
School of Chemical & Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Arts Health & Sciences, Central Queensland University, Bruce Highway, Rockhampton, QLD 4702, Australia.
Br J Pharmacol. 2006 May;148(2):191-9. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0706710.
The effects of cannabinoid subtype 1 (CB(1)) receptor activation were determined on smooth muscle, inhibitory and excitatory motorneuronal function in strips of human colonic longitudinal muscle (LM) and circular muscle (CM) in vitro. Electrical field stimulation (EFS; 0.5-20 Hz, 50 V) evoked a relaxation in LM and CM precontracted with a neurokinin-2 (NK-2) selective receptor agonist (beta-ala(8)-neurokinin A; 10(-6) M) in the presence of atropine (10(-6) M); this was unaltered following pretreatment with the CB(1)-receptor selective agonist arachidonyl-2-chloroethylamide (ACEA; 10(-6) M). In the presence of nitric oxide synthase blockade with N-nitro-L-arginine (10(-4) M), EFS evoked a frequency-dependent 'on-contraction' during stimulation and an 'off-contraction' following stimulus cessation. On-contractions were significantly inhibited in CM strips by pretreatment with ACEA (10(-6) M). These inhibitory effects were reversed in the presence of the CB(1) receptor-selective antagonist N-(piperidine-1-yl)-5-(4-iodophenyl)-1-(2,4-dichlorophenyl)-4-methyl-1H-pyrazole-3-carboxamide (10(-7) M). ACEA did not alter LM or CM contractile responses to acetylcholine or NK-2 receptor-evoked contraction. Immunohistochemical studies revealed a colocalisation of CB(1) receptors to cholinergic neurones in the human colon based on colabelling with choline acetyltransferase, in addition to CB(1) receptor labelling in unidentified structures in the CM. In conclusion, activation of CB(1) receptors coupled to cholinergic motorneurones selectively and reversibly inhibits excitatory nerve transmission in colonic human colonic CM. These results provide evidence of a direct role for cannabinoids in the modulation of motor activity in the human colon by coupling to cholinergic motorneurones.
在体外对人结肠纵行肌(LM)和环行肌(CM)条带的平滑肌、抑制性和兴奋性运动神经元功能进行了大麻素1型(CB(1))受体激活作用的研究。电场刺激(EFS;0.5 - 20 Hz,50 V)在存在阿托品(10(-6) M)的情况下,可使预先用神经激肽-2(NK-2)选择性受体激动剂(β-丙氨酸(8)-神经激肽A;10(-6) M)预收缩的LM和CM产生舒张;在用CB(1)受体选择性激动剂花生四烯酸-2-氯乙酰胺(ACEA;10(-6) M)预处理后,这种舒张作用未改变。在存在用N-硝基-L-精氨酸(10(-4) M)阻断一氧化氮合酶的情况下,EFS在刺激期间诱发频率依赖性的“刺激时收缩”,并在刺激停止后诱发“刺激后收缩”。用ACEA(10(-6) M)预处理可显著抑制CM条带中的刺激时收缩。在存在CB(1)受体选择性拮抗剂N-(哌啶-1-基)-5-(4-碘苯基)-1-(2,4-二氯苯基)-4-甲基-1H-吡唑-3-甲酰胺(10(-7) M)时,这些抑制作用被逆转。ACEA未改变LM或CM对乙酰胆碱或NK-2受体诱发收缩的收缩反应。免疫组织化学研究显示,基于与胆碱乙酰转移酶的共标记,CB(1)受体与人结肠中胆碱能神经元共定位,此外在CM中未明确结构中也有CB(1)受体标记。总之,与胆碱能运动神经元偶联的CB(1)受体的激活选择性且可逆地抑制人结肠CM中的兴奋性神经传递。这些结果提供了大麻素通过与胆碱能运动神经元偶联在调节人结肠运动活动中直接作用的证据。