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. 1988;72(3):535-42.
doi: 10.1007/BF00250599.

Selective depletion of the acetylcholine and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide of the guinea-pig myenteric plexus by differential mobilization of distinct transmitter pools

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Selective depletion of the acetylcholine and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide of the guinea-pig myenteric plexus by differential mobilization of distinct transmitter pools

D V Agoston et al. Exp Brain Res. 1988.

Abstract

The effect of electrical field stimulation on the release of acetylcholine (ACh) and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) from superfused strips of myenteric plexus-longitudinal muscle (MPLM) of guinea-pig ileum and on the transmitter content of the tissue was investigated at different frequencies and in the presence and absence of choline hemicholinium-3 and colchicine. Low frequency electrical field stimulation released ACh by more than 4 times the basal release; the simultaneously detected VIP secretion was increased only slightly above the resting level. During high frequency stimulation (50 Hz) the release of VIP was greatly increased (to 5 times the resting release) whereas the release of ACh increased to only 150% of the basal output. When choline was present, the ACh content of the tissue itself was not altered by electrical stimulation indicating a rate of synthesis sufficient to maintain release. It was reduced in a frequency-dependent manner in the absence of exogenous choline or in the presence of 10 microM hemicholinium-3 (an inhibitor of choline uptake) by up to 54% of the original content. A similar but even larger reduction took place in the amount of ACh released. Neither the secretion of VIP nor the tissue VIP content was altered by these treatments. Long-lasting (greater than 60 min) high-frequency (50 Hz) stimulation resulted in the depletion of the VIP pool (by 25%) while the ACh content remained unaltered.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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