Effects of [mu]-opioids on neurons of the medical geniculate nucleus
Immunohistochemical and hybridization studies have revealed the presence of μ-, but not k- and δ-opioid receptors in the medial geniculate body. Using whole-cell patch clamp techniques, I examined the effects of opioid agonists on gerbil MGB neurons (P9-P16) in vitro. The opioid effects were conc...
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ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-107382014-03-14T15:44:31Z Effects of [mu]-opioids on neurons of the medical geniculate nucleus Ota, Takayo Immunohistochemical and hybridization studies have revealed the presence of μ-, but not k- and δ-opioid receptors in the medial geniculate body. Using whole-cell patch clamp techniques, I examined the effects of opioid agonists on gerbil MGB neurons (P9-P16) in vitro. The opioid effects were concentration-dependent. Opioids produced different actions on the input conductance (G[sub i]) when applied in low, compared with high concentrations. The increase in G[sub i] might be due to increase in K⁺ conductance whereas the decrease in G[sub i] might be due to l[sub H] inactivation. When Gi was increased, the reversal potential was —65 mV; this implicates opioid actions on K+ , among other ion channels. In the case of decreased G[sub i], the opioid currents did not reverse from -100 mV to -50 mV, implying the involvement of cationic channels, other than K⁺ . DAMGO, a μ-selective opioid agonist, had a reversal potential that was similar to that observed when morphine increased G[sub i], implying that opioids activate u-opioid receptors in MGB neurons. Tetrodotoxin altered the concentration-dependent action of morphine. Here, the suggestion is morphine's actions involve neurons that presynaptic to the patch clamped neuron. Morphine application blocked spike-frequency adaptation and reduced firing rates in response to depolarizing current pulse injection. Morphine application may block Ca²⁺-mediated K⁺ channels that inhibited spike-frequency adaptation. Such blockade may be expected to increase the spike frequency. However, the increased conductance due to morphine would shunt the Na⁺ current, resulting in a lower spike frequency. The results of this study have revealed that opioids have both excitatory and inhibitory effects on MGB neurons. 2009-07-13T20:18:18Z 2009-07-13T20:18:18Z 2000 2009-07-13T20:18:18Z 2000-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/10738 eng UBC Retrospective Theses Digitization Project [http://www.library.ubc.ca/archives/retro_theses/] |
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NDLTD |
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English |
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NDLTD |
description |
Immunohistochemical and hybridization studies have revealed the presence of μ-,
but not k- and δ-opioid receptors in the medial geniculate body. Using whole-cell
patch clamp techniques, I examined the effects of opioid agonists on gerbil MGB
neurons (P9-P16) in vitro. The opioid effects were concentration-dependent.
Opioids produced different actions on the input conductance (G[sub i]) when applied in
low, compared with high concentrations. The increase in G[sub i] might be due to
increase in K⁺ conductance whereas the decrease in G[sub i] might be due to l[sub H]
inactivation. When Gi was increased, the reversal potential was —65 mV; this
implicates opioid actions on K+ , among other ion channels. In the case of decreased
G[sub i], the opioid currents did not reverse from -100 mV to -50 mV, implying the
involvement of cationic channels, other than K⁺ . DAMGO, a μ-selective opioid
agonist, had a reversal potential that was similar to that observed when morphine
increased G[sub i], implying that opioids activate u-opioid receptors in MGB neurons.
Tetrodotoxin altered the concentration-dependent action of morphine. Here, the
suggestion is morphine's actions involve neurons that presynaptic to the patch
clamped neuron. Morphine application blocked spike-frequency adaptation and
reduced firing rates in response to depolarizing current pulse injection. Morphine
application may block Ca²⁺-mediated K⁺ channels that inhibited spike-frequency
adaptation. Such blockade may be expected to increase the spike frequency.
However, the increased conductance due to morphine would shunt the Na⁺ current,
resulting in a lower spike frequency. The results of this study have revealed that
opioids have both excitatory and inhibitory effects on MGB neurons. |
author |
Ota, Takayo |
spellingShingle |
Ota, Takayo Effects of [mu]-opioids on neurons of the medical geniculate nucleus |
author_facet |
Ota, Takayo |
author_sort |
Ota, Takayo |
title |
Effects of [mu]-opioids on neurons of the medical geniculate nucleus |
title_short |
Effects of [mu]-opioids on neurons of the medical geniculate nucleus |
title_full |
Effects of [mu]-opioids on neurons of the medical geniculate nucleus |
title_fullStr |
Effects of [mu]-opioids on neurons of the medical geniculate nucleus |
title_full_unstemmed |
Effects of [mu]-opioids on neurons of the medical geniculate nucleus |
title_sort |
effects of [mu]-opioids on neurons of the medical geniculate nucleus |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/10738 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT otatakayo effectsofmuopioidsonneuronsofthemedicalgeniculatenucleus |
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1716652058839351296 |