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British Journal of Pharmacology logoLink to British Journal of Pharmacology
. 1998 Aug;124(7):1375–1384. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0701967

Roles of neuronal NK1 and NK3 receptors in synaptic transmission during motility reflexes in the guinea-pig ileum

P J Johnson 1,3,*, J C Bornstein 1, E Burcher 2
PMCID: PMC1565526  PMID: 9723948

Abstract

  1. The role of NK1 and NK3 receptors in synaptic transmission between myenteric neurons during motility reflexes in the guinea-pig ileum was investigated by recording intracellularly the reflex responses of the circular muscle to distension or compression of the mucosal villi. Experiments were performed in a three-chambered organ bath that enabled drugs to be selectively applied to different sites along the reflex pathways.

  2. When applied in the recording chamber, an NK1 receptor antagonist, SR140333 (100 nM), reduced by 40–50% the amplitudes of inhibitory junction potentials (i.j.ps) evoked in the circular muscle by activation of descending reflex pathways. This effect was abolished when synaptic transmission in the stimulus region was blocked with physiological saline containing 0.1 mM Ca2+ plus 10 mM Mg2+, leaving only the component of the descending reflex pathway conducted via long anally directed collaterals of intrinsic sensory neurons.

  3. SR140333 (100 nM) had no effect on descending reflex i.j.ps when applied to the stimulus region. Ascending reflexes were also unaffected by SR140333 in the stimulus region or between the stimulus and recording sites.

  4. Septide (10 nM), an NK1 receptor agonist, enhanced descending reflexes by 30–60% when in the recording chamber. [Sar9,Met(O2)11]substance P had no effect at 10 nM, but potentiated distension-evoked reflexes at 100 nM.

  5. A selective NK3 receptor antagonist, SR142801 (100 nM), when applied to the stimulus region, reduced the amplitude of descending reflex responses to compression by 40%, but had no effect on responses to distension. SR142801 (100 nM) had no effect when applied to other regions of the descending reflex pathways.

  6. SR142801 (100 nM) only inhibited ascending reflexes when applied at the recording site. However, after nicotinic transmission in the stimulus region was blocked, SR142801 (100 nM) at this site reduced responses to compression.

  7. Contractions of the circular muscle of isolated rings of ileum evoked by low concentrations of septide, but not [Sar9,Met(O2)11]substance P, were potentiated by tetrodotoxin (300 nM).

  8. Contractile responses evoked by an NK3 receptor agonist, senktide, were non-competitively inhibited by SR142801. After excitatory neuromuscular transmission was blocked, senktide produced inhibitory responses that were also antagonised by SR142801, but to a lesser extent and in an apparently competitive manner.

  9. These results indicate that tachykinins acting via NK1 receptors partly mediate transmission to inhibitory motor neurons. NK3 receptors play a role in transmission from intrinsic sensory neurons and from ascending interneurons to excitatory motor neurons during motility reflexes.

Keywords: Enteric nervous system, motility, enteric reflexes, tachykinins, NK1 receptors, NK3 receptors, neurokinin, substance P, septide, ileum

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