Histamine suppresses A-type potassium current in myenteric neurons from guinea pig small intestine.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2000 Aug; 294(2):555-61.JP

Abstract

Perforated patch-clamp methods for recording ionic currents in the whole-cell configuration were used to test the hypothesis that the ionic mechanisms for the excitatory actions of histamine on enteric neurons include suppression of A-type K(+) current (I(A)). Histamine and the selective histamine H(2) receptor agonist, dimaprit, reduced the amplitude of I(A) without affecting the slope factor for I(A) steady-state inactivation curves. Suppression of I(A) was restricted to after hyperpolarization-type myenteric neurons that were immunoreactive for calbindin. The selective histamine H(2) receptor antagonist cimetidine suppressed the action of histamine and dimaprit. Elevation of intraneuronal cAMP by forskolin, a membrane-permeant analog of cAMP, and treatment with a phosphodiesterase inhibitor suppressed I(A.) The results are consistent with the hypothesis that suppression of I(A) is part of the ionic mechanism responsible for elevation of excitability during both slow synaptic excitation and slow synaptic excitation-like responses evoked by paracrine mediators, such as histamine, in after hyperpolarization-type myenteric neurons.

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Authors+Show Affiliations

Starodub AM
Department of Physiology and Cell Biology, College of Medicine and Public Health, The Ohio State University, Columbus 43211-1218, USA.
Wood JD
No affiliation info available

MeSH

AnimalsCimetidineCyclic AMPDimapritDrug InteractionsExcitatory Postsynaptic PotentialsGuinea PigsHistamineHistamine AgonistsHistamine AntagonistsIntestine, SmallMaleMembrane PotentialsMyenteric PlexusNeuronsPatch-Clamp TechniquesPotassium Channel BlockersPotassium ChannelsReceptors, Histamine H2

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

10900232