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Título
Differential stimulus coupling to dopamine and norepinephrine stores in rabbit carotid body type I cells
Año del Documento
1990
Editorial
Elsevier
Documento Fuente
Brain Research 525(1990) 160-164
Resumo
Recent studies suggest that preneural type I (glomus) cells in the arterial chemoreceptor tissue of the carotid body act as primary transducer
elements which respond to natural stimuli (low 02, pH or increased CO2) by releasing chemical transmitter agents capable of exciting the closely
apposed afferent nerve terminals. These type I cells contain multiple putative transmitters, but the identity of the natural excitatory agents
remains an unresolved problem in carotid body physiology. Characterization of putative transmitter involvement in the response to natural
and pharmacological stimuli has therefore become fundamental to further understanding of chemotransmission in this organ. The present study
demonstrates that a natural stimulus (hypoxia) evokes the release of dopamine (DA) and norepinephrine (NE) in approximate proportion to
their unequal stores in rabbit carotid body (DA release/NE release = 8.2). In contrast, nicotine (100/~M), a cholinornimetic agent thought
to act on the nicotinic receptors present on the type I cells, evokes the preferential release of NE (DA release/NE release = 0.17). These
findings suggest that distinct mechanisms are involved in a differential mobilization of these two cateeholamines from the rabbit carotid body.
Materias (normalizadas)
Neurofisiología
ISSN
0006-8993
Revisión por pares
SI
Idioma
eng
Derechos
openAccess
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