Abstract

The present experiments measured the release of acetylcholine (ACh) by the cat superior cervical ganglia in the presence of, and after exposure to, 2-(4-phenylpiperidino)cyclohexanol (AH5183), a compound known to block the uptake of ACh by cholinergic synaptic vesicles. We confirmed that AH5183 blocks evoked ACh release during preganglionic nerve stimulation when approximately 13-14% of the initial ganglial ACh stores had been released; periods of rest in the presence of the drug did not promote recovery from the block, but ACh release recovered following the washout of AH5183. ACh was synthesized in AH5183-treated ganglia, as determined by the synthesis of [3H]ACh from [3H]choline, and this [3H]ACh could be released by stimulation following drug washout. The specific activity of the released ACh matched that of the tissue's ACh, and thus we conclude that ACh synthesized in the presence of AH5183 is a releasable as pre-existing ACh stores once the drug is removed. We tested the relative releasability of ACh synthesized during AH5183 exposure (perfusion with [3H]choline) and that synthesized during recovery from the drug's effects (perfusion with [14C]choline: the ratio of [3H]ACh to [14C]ACh released by stimulation was similar to the ratio in the tissue. These results suggest that the mobilization of ACh for release by ganglia during recovery from an AH5183-induced block is independent of the conditions under which the ACh was synthesized. Unlike nerve impulses, black widow spider venom (BWSV) induced the release of ACh from AH5183-blocked ganglia, even in the drug's continued presence. Venom-induced release of ACh from AH5183-treated ganglia was not less than the venom-induced release from tissues not exposed to AH5183. This effect of BWSV was attributed to the action of the protein, alpha-latrotoxin, because an anti-alpha-latrotoxin antiserum blocked the venom's action. ACh synthesized during AH5183 exposure was labelled from [3H]choline, and subsequent treatment with BWSV released [3H]ACh with the same temporal pattern as the release of total ACh. To exclude a nonexocytotic origin for the [3H]ACh released by BWSV, ganglia were preloaded with [3H]diethylhomocholine to form [3H]acetyldiethylhomocholine, an ACh analogue excluded from vesicles; the venom did not increase the rate of [3H]acetyldiethylhomocholine efflux. It is concluded that a vesicular ACh pool insensitive to the inhibitory action of AH5183 might exist and that this vesicular pool is not mobilized by electrical stimulation to exocytose in the presence of AH5183, but it is by BWSV.

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