Abstract
1 Electrical and mechanical responses to field (transmural) and extrinsic nerve stimulation were recorded simultaneously in the rat anococcygeus muscle. Membrane potential changes recorded intracellularly following either method of stimulation were indistinguishable. Single stimuli usually produced a slow depolarization; trains of pulses produced a fast excitatory junction potential (e.j.p.) initially, followed by a slow depolarization similar to that produced by single pulses. The fast e.j.ps, the slow depolarizations and the accompanying contractions were abolished by the alpha-adrenoceptor antagonists, phentolamine (1 X 10(-6)M) or prazosin (1 X 10(-7)M) and by tetrodotoxin (TTX, 1 X 10(-6)M) but unaffected by alpha, beta-methylene adenosine triphosphate (alpha, beta-MeATP, 1(-10) X 10(-6)M), an agent known to desensitize purinoceptors. 2 Application of noradrenaline (NA, 1 X 10(-8)-1 X 10(-6)M), by pressure ejection from a micropipette, depolarized the membrane and produced a localized contraction, both of which were abolished by phentolamine (1 X 10(-6)M) or prazosin (1 X 10(-7)M). 3 Application of adenosine-5'-triphosphate (ATP, 1 X 10(-4)-1 X 10(-3)M), by pressure ejection from a micropipette, produced a small membrane depolarization and localized contraction which were unaffected by phentolamine (1 X 10(-6)M) or prazosin (1 X 10(-7)M) but abolished by alpha, beta-MeATP (1 X 10(-6)M). 4 The results show that, in the rat annococcygeus muscle, (1) field or extrinsic nerve stimulation released only one excitatory transmitter, namely NA, although receptors for both NA and ATP were present on the muscle, (2) alpha, beta-MeATP was selective for purinoceptors and (3) there was no evidence for excitatory co-transmission in this tissue.
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