The opioid peptide dynorphin modulates AMPA and kainate responses in acutely isolated neurons from the dorsal horn

Brain Research
M KolajM Randić

Abstract

In freshly isolated spinal dorsal horn (DH) neurons (laminae I-IV) of the young rat, the effects of dynorphin A1-17, U-50,488H and U-69,593 on inward currents induced by alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) and kainate (KA) were studied under whole-cell voltage-clamp conditions. When the cells were clamped to a holding potential of -60 mV, co-application of dynorphin A1-17 (10(-6) M) and AMPA (2 x 10(-5) M) reversibly decreased the peak amplitude of the initial transient component of the AMPA-induced current in 72% of the examined cells. In addition, dynorphin (10 microM) in perforated patch-recordings consistently produced a decrease in the steady-state component of the AMPA response. The depressant effect was concentration-dependent (IC50 = 86 nM) and reversible. The dynorphin A1-17-induced depression of the AMPA response was associated with slowing of the response kinetics, including both a 10-90% rise-time and time constant of decay. The AMPA-induced currents were modulated by dynorphin not only during the co-administration but also after the removal of the peptide. Dynorphin increased the initial peak AMPA current in 42% of the examined cells. Similar as with dynorphin A1-17, the peak amplitude o...Continue Reading

References

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