Histamine H1 receptor activation blocks two classes of potassium current, IK(rest) and IAHP, to excite ferret vagal afferents.
AUTOR(ES)
Jafri, M S
RESUMO
1. Intracellular recordings were made in intact and acutely dissociated vagal afferent neurones (nodose ganglion cells) of the ferret to investigate the membrane effects of histamine. 2. In current-clamp or voltage-clamp recordings, histamine (10 microM) depolarized the membrane potential (10 +/- 0.8 mV; mean +/- S.E.M.; n = 27) or produced an inward current of 1.6 +/- 0.35 nA (n = 27) in approximately 80% of the neurones. 3. Histamine (10 microM) also blocked the post-spike slow after-hyperpolarization (AHP slow) present in 80% of these neurones (95 +/- 3.2%; n = 5). All neurones possessing AHPslow in ferret nodose were C fibre neurones; all AHPslow neurones had conduction velocities < or = 1 m s-1 (n = 7). 4. Both the histamine-induced inward current and the block of AHPslow were concentration dependent and each had an estimated EC50 value of 2 microM. These histamine-induced effects were mimicked by the histamine H1 receptor agonist 2-(2-aminoethyl) thiazole dihydrochloride (10 microM) and blocked by the H1 antagonists pyrilamine (100 nM) or diphenhydramine (100 nM). Schild plot analysis of the effect of pyrilamine on the histamine-induced inward current revealed a pA2 value of 9.7, consistent with that expected for an H1 receptor. Neither impromidine (10 microM) nor R(-)-alpha-methylhistamine (10 microM), selective H2 or H3 agonists, respectively, significantly affected the membrane potential, input resistance or AHPslow. 5. The reversal potential (Vrev) for the histamine-induced inward current was -84 +/- 2.1 mV (n = 4). The Vrev for the histamine response shifted in a Nernstian manner with changes in the extracellular potassium concentration. Alterations in the extracellular chloride concentration had no significant effect on the Vrev of the histamine response (n = 3). The Vrev for the AHPslow was -85 +/- 1.7 mV (n = 4). 6. These results indicate that histamine increases the excitability of ferret vagal afferent somata by interfering with two classes of potassium current: the resting or 'leak' potassium current (IK(rest)) and the potassium current underlying a post-spike slow after-hyperpolarization (IAHP). Both these effects can occur in the same neurone and involve activation of the same histamine receptor subtype, the histamine H1 receptor.
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
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