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. 1995 Dec;69(3):985-95.
doi: 10.1016/0306-4522(95)00316-b.

A nitric oxide synthase activity is involved in the modulation of acetylcholine release in Aplysia ganglion neurons: a histological, voltammetric and electrophysiological study

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A nitric oxide synthase activity is involved in the modulation of acetylcholine release in Aplysia ganglion neurons: a histological, voltammetric and electrophysiological study

A Meulemans et al. Neuroscience. 1995 Dec.

Abstract

The role of nitric oxide or related molecules as neuromodulators was investigated in the buccal and the abdominal ganglia of the mollusc Aplysia californica. In a first step we showed that reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-diaphorase histochemistry and specific nitric oxide synthase immunohistochemistry labelled the same neurons and fibres in both ganglia, pointing to the presence of a neuronal nitric oxide synthase. In a second step, we performed voltammetric detection of nitric oxide-related molecules using a microcarbon electrode in a reduction mode. A peak identified as N-nitroso-L-arginine was detected at -1.66 V in both ganglia. The identification of this compound as a product of endogenous nitric oxide synthase activity was reinforced by the fact that its peak amplitude was decreased in the presence of NG-monomethyl-L-arginine, an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase, and increased with its substrate, L-arginine. An additional proof of a nitric oxide synthase activity was the detection of nitrites and nitrates in high concentrations (millimolar range) by capillary electrophoresis. We also showed that these nitric oxide-related molecules modulated acetylcholine release at two identified synapses in these ganglia. L-Arginine decreased acetylcholine release at the inhibitory synapse (buccal ganglion), whereas it increased acetylcholine release at the excitatory synapse (abdominal ganglion). The nitric oxide synthase inhibitors, N omega-nitro-L-arginine and NG-monomethyl-L-arginine, had opposite effects. Moreover, the exogenous nitric oxide donor, 3-morpholinosydnonimine hydrochloride mimicked the effects of L-arginine on both inhibitory and excitatory cholinergic synapses. The identification of two cholinergic synapses where nitric oxide affects acetylcholine release in opposite ways provides a useful tool to study the cellular mechanisms through which nitric oxide-related molecules modulate transmitter release.

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