Knott Thomas K, Marrero Héctor G, Fenton Richard A, Custer Edward E, Dobson James G, Lemos José R
Department of Physiology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts 01655, USA.
J Cell Physiol. 2007 Feb;210(2):309-14. doi: 10.1002/jcp.20827.
Bursts of action potentials (APs) are crucial for the release of neurotransmitters from dense core granules. This has been most definitively shown for neuropeptide release in the hypothalamic neurohypophysial system (HNS). Why such bursts are necessary, however, is not well understood. Thus far, biophysical characterization of channels involved in depolarization-secretion coupling cannot completely explain this phenomenon at HNS terminals, so purinergic feedback mechanisms have been proposed. We have previously shown that ATP, acting via P2X receptors, potentiates release from HNS terminals, but that its metabolite adenosine, via A(1) receptors acting on transient Ca(2+) currents, inhibit neuropeptide secretion. We now show that endogenous adenosine levels are sufficient to cause tonic inhibition of transient Ca(2+) currents and of stimulated exocytosis in HNS terminals. Initial non-detectable adenosine levels in the static bath increased to 2.9 microM after 40 min. These terminals exhibit an inhibition (39%) of their transient inward Ca(2+) current in a static bath when compared to a constant perfusion stream. CPT, an A(1) adenosine receptor antagonist, greatly reduced this tonic inhibition. An ecto-ATPase antagonist, ARL-67156, similarly reduced tonic inhibition, but CPT had no further effect, suggesting that endogenous adenosine is due to breakdown of released ATP. Finally, stimulated capacitance changes were greatly enhanced (600%) by adding CPT to the static bath. Thus, endogenous adenosine functions at terminals in a negative-feedback mechanism and, therefore, could help terminate peptide release by bursts of APs initiated in HNS cell bodies. This could be a general mechanism for controlling transmitter release in these and other CNS terminals.
动作电位爆发对于致密核心颗粒释放神经递质至关重要。这在丘脑下部神经垂体系统(HNS)的神经肽释放中得到了最明确的证实。然而,为何需要这种爆发尚未完全清楚。到目前为止,参与去极化-分泌偶联的通道的生物物理特性并不能完全解释HNS终末的这一现象,因此有人提出了嘌呤能反馈机制。我们之前已经表明,ATP通过P2X受体发挥作用,可增强HNS终末的释放,但它的代谢产物腺苷通过作用于瞬时Ca(2+)电流的A(1)受体,抑制神经肽分泌。我们现在表明,内源性腺苷水平足以对HNS终末的瞬时Ca(2+)电流和刺激后的胞吐作用产生持续性抑制。静态浴中最初不可检测的腺苷水平在40分钟后升至2.9微摩尔。与持续灌注流相比,这些终末在静态浴中其瞬时内向Ca(2+)电流受到抑制(39%)。A(1)腺苷受体拮抗剂CPT大大降低了这种持续性抑制。一种外切ATP酶拮抗剂ARL-67156同样降低了持续性抑制,但CPT没有进一步作用,这表明内源性腺苷是由释放的ATP分解产生的。最后,通过向静态浴中添加CPT,刺激后的电容变化大幅增强(600%)。因此,内源性腺苷在终末以负反馈机制发挥作用,所以可能有助于通过HNS细胞体中引发的动作电位爆发来终止肽的释放。这可能是控制这些及其他中枢神经系统终末递质释放的一种普遍机制。