Acevedo JeanMarie, Santana-Almansa Alexandra, Matos-Vergara Nikol, Marrero-Cordero Luis René, Cabezas-Bou Ernesto, Díaz-Ríos Manuel
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology and Institute of Neurobiology, University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus, San Juan, PR 00936, USA.
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology and Institute of Neurobiology, University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus, San Juan, PR 00936, USA.
Neuropharmacology. 2016 Feb;101:490-505. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2015.10.020. Epub 2015 Oct 19.
Caffeine is a potent psychostimulant that can have significant and widely variable effects on the activity of multiple neuronal pathways. The most pronounced caffeine-induced behavioral effect seen in rodents is to increase locomotor activity which has been linked to a dose-dependent inhibition of A1 and A(2A) receptors. The effects of caffeine at the level of the lumbar spinal central pattern generator (CPG) network for hindlimb locomotion are lacking. We assessed the effects of caffeine to the locomotor function of the spinal CPG network via extracellular ventral root recordings using the isolated neonatal mouse spinal cord preparation. Addition of caffeine and of an A1 receptor antagonist significantly decreased the cycle period accelerating the ongoing locomotor rhythm, while decreasing burst duration reversibly in most preparations suggesting the role of A1 receptors as the primary target of caffeine. Caffeine and an A1 receptor antagonist failed to stimulate ongoing locomotor activity in the absence of dopamine or in the presence of a D1 receptor antagonist supporting A1/D1 receptor-dependent mechanism of action. The use of caffeine or an A1 receptor blocker failed to stimulate an ongoing locomotor rhythm in the presence of a blocker of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) supporting the need of this intracellular pathway for the modulatory effects of caffeine to occur. These results support a stimulant effect of caffeine on the lumbar spinal network controlling hindlimb locomotion through the inhibition of A1 receptors and subsequent activation of D1 receptors via a PKA-dependent intracellular mechanism.
咖啡因是一种强效精神兴奋剂,可对多个神经元通路的活动产生显著且广泛可变的影响。在啮齿动物中观察到的最明显的咖啡因诱导行为效应是增加运动活动,这与A1和A(2A)受体的剂量依赖性抑制有关。目前尚缺乏咖啡因对腰段脊髓中央模式发生器(CPG)网络水平上后肢运动的影响的相关研究。我们使用离体新生小鼠脊髓标本,通过细胞外腹根记录评估了咖啡因对脊髓CPG网络运动功能的影响。添加咖啡因和A1受体拮抗剂可显著缩短周期,加速正在进行的运动节律,同时在大多数标本中可逆地缩短爆发持续时间,这表明A1受体作为咖啡因的主要作用靶点。在没有多巴胺或存在D1受体拮抗剂的情况下,咖啡因和A1受体拮抗剂未能刺激正在进行的运动活动,这支持了A1/D1受体依赖性作用机制。在存在环磷酸腺苷依赖性蛋白激酶(PKA)阻滞剂的情况下,使用咖啡因或A1受体阻滞剂未能刺激正在进行的运动节律,这支持了该细胞内途径对于咖啡因产生调节作用的必要性。这些结果支持了咖啡因通过抑制A1受体并随后通过PKA依赖性细胞内机制激活D1受体,从而对控制后肢运动的腰段脊髓网络产生刺激作用。