el-Etri M M, Ennis M, Jiang M, Shipley M T
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Ohio 45267-0521.
Exp Neurol. 1993 May;121(1):24-39. doi: 10.1006/exnr.1993.1068.
We recently reported that systemic administration of the anticholinesterase, soman, caused rapid depletion of forebrain norepinephrine (NE) in convulsive but not in nonconvulsive rats. As neurons in nucleus locus coeruleus (LC) provide the bulk of NE innervation to most of the forebrain and the sole source of NE input to the cortex and the olfactory bulb, soman-induced NE depletion was hypothesized to result from activation of LC neurons. This activation was thought to be due to inhibition of acetylcholinesterase by soman, leading to rapid, sustained accumulation of acetylcholine in LC, causing these cells to fire at a high sustained rate. Support for this hypothesis was provided by neurophysiological findings showing that: (i) Systemic administration of soman in anesthetized rats caused a sustained, fivefold increase in the mean firing rate of LC neurons and (ii) microinjections of soman directly into LC caused a similar increase in the firing rate of LC neurons. Soman-induced activation of LC occurred prior to and even in the absence of seizures. As systemic administration of the muscarinic receptor antagonist, scopolamine, rapidly and completely reversed soman-induced activation of LC, it was further hypothesized that activation of LC neurons following soman administration is due to muscarinic receptor stimulation. The rapid release of NE by cholinolytic agents, thus, may play an important role in the initiation and/or maintenance of convulsions. To further test the hypothesis that NE release in soman-intoxicated rats is due to muscarinic activation of LC, we have investigated the effects of the muscarinic receptor agonist, pilocarpine, on NE release and LC discharge. In one set of experiments, rats were injected with a periconvulsive dose of pilocarpine (300 mg/kg, ip); both convulsive and nonconvulsive rats were sacrificed between 1 and 96 h and monoamine levels in the rostral forebrain and olfactory bulb were determined by HPLC with electrochemical detection. NE levels declined substantially only in convulsive rats; forebrain NE levels in convulsive rats rapidly decreased to 50% of control levels at 1 h and to 37% of controls level between 2 and 4 h. The time course and magnitude of these changes were similar to those observed following soman administration in our previous study. Recovery of forebrain NE began at 8 h and was complete by 96 h following pilocarpine administration. Neither dopamine (DA) nor serotonin (5-HT) levels were changed in the forebrain and olfactory bulb of either convulsive or nonconvulsive rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
我们最近报道,全身性给予抗胆碱酯酶药物梭曼,可使惊厥大鼠前脑去甲肾上腺素(NE)迅速耗竭,但对非惊厥大鼠则无此作用。由于蓝斑核(LC)中的神经元为大部分前脑提供了大部分NE神经支配,且是皮质和嗅球NE输入的唯一来源,因此推测梭曼诱导的NE耗竭是由LC神经元激活所致。这种激活被认为是由于梭曼抑制了乙酰胆碱酯酶,导致LC中乙酰胆碱迅速、持续积累,使这些细胞以高持续频率放电。神经生理学研究结果支持了这一假设,即:(i)在麻醉大鼠中全身性给予梭曼可使LC神经元的平均放电频率持续增加五倍;(ii)将梭曼直接微量注射到LC中可使LC神经元的放电频率出现类似增加。梭曼诱导的LC激活发生在癫痫发作之前,甚至在无癫痫发作时也会出现。由于全身性给予毒蕈碱受体拮抗剂东莨菪碱可迅速、完全逆转梭曼诱导的LC激活,因此进一步推测梭曼给药后LC神经元的激活是由于毒蕈碱受体刺激所致。因此,胆碱分解剂导致的NE快速释放可能在惊厥的起始和/或维持中起重要作用。为了进一步验证梭曼中毒大鼠中NE释放是由于LC的毒蕈碱激活这一假设,我们研究了毒蕈碱受体激动剂毛果芸香碱对NE释放和LC放电的影响。在一组实验中,给大鼠腹腔注射惊厥剂量的毛果芸香碱(每千克体重300毫克);在1至96小时之间处死惊厥和非惊厥大鼠,采用高效液相色谱-电化学检测法测定前脑和嗅球中的单胺水平。仅惊厥大鼠的NE水平大幅下降;惊厥大鼠前脑NE水平在1小时迅速降至对照水平的50%,在2至4小时降至对照水平的37%。这些变化的时间进程和幅度与我们之前研究中梭曼给药后观察到的相似。毛果芸香碱给药后8小时前脑NE开始恢复,96小时时完全恢复。惊厥和非惊厥大鼠前脑和嗅球中的多巴胺(DA)和5-羟色胺(5-HT)水平均未改变。(摘要截选至400字)