Skip to main content
British Journal of Pharmacology logoLink to British Journal of Pharmacology
. 1997 Mar;120(7):1390–1396. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0701064

Depression of A and C fibre-evoked segmental reflexes by morphine and clonidine in the in vitro spinal cord of the neonatal rat

E S L Faber *,*, J P Chambers *, F Brugger *, R H Evans *
PMCID: PMC1564612  PMID: 9105717

Abstract

  1. Population synaptic responses of motoneurones were recorded from a ventral root following electrical stimulation of the corresponding lumbar dorsal root in neonatal rat hemisected spinal cord preparations in vitro. Two levels of electrical stimulation were used to elicit dorsal root compound action potentials that contained either an A fibre component alone or both A and C fibre components. The effects of centrally acting analgesics and an N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist were tested on synaptic responses produced by these two levels of stimulation.

  2. At stimulus intensities below four times threshold (T) there was no C fibre component in the dorsal root compound action potential. Responses to a single pulse at 3T (the low intensity excitatory postsynaptic potential (e.p.s.p.)), a train of five pulses at 2T (the train e.p.s.p.) and a single supramaximal pulse (the high intensity e.p.s.p.) were used to compare the depressant actions of morphine, clonidine and the competitive NMDA antagonist CGP40116 (D-(E)-2-amino-4-methyl-5-phosphono-pentenoic acid). The train e.p.s.p. (mean half-time to decay 5±0.6 s, n=6) had a similar profile to the high intensity e.p.s.p. (mean half-time to decay 6.8±0.7, n=8).

  3. The monosynaptic compound action potential of motoneurones (MSR) was resistant to all three drugs irrespective of the intensity of dorsal root stimulation. The low intensity e.p.s.p., the train e.p.s.p. and the high intensity e.p.s.p. were depressed by all three drugs. The EC50 values for depression by morphine were 79±1 nM (n=8) for the high intensity e.p.s.p. and 99±1 nM (n=4) for the low intensity e.p.s.p. The corresponding values for clonidine were 25±1 nM (n=8) and 9±1 nM (n=4) and those for CGP40116 were 860±1.3 nM (n=4) and 76±1.1 nM (n=4).

  4. The depressant profile of the NMDA antagonist, having the least depressant activity on the C fibre-mediated response, was different from that of the two analgesics. CGP40116 (3 μM) depressed the high intensity e.p.s.p. to 62±8%, the low intensity e.p.s.p. to 22±4% and the train e.p.s.p. to 16±2% of control values.

  5. The depressant actions of morphine were fully reversed by naloxone (1 μM) and those of clonidine were fully reversed by atipamezole (1 μM).

  6. These results show that, in contrast to previous findings, activation of primary afferent C fibres in dorsal roots is not required for generation of morphine- or clonidine-sensitive synaptic responses in ventral roots of this in vitro preparation.

Keywords: Spinal cord, ventral root potentials, centrally acting analgesics, clonidine, morphine, CGP40116

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (328.9 KB).


Articles from British Journal of Pharmacology are provided here courtesy of The British Pharmacological Society

RESOURCES