Abstract

We tested the effect of cholinergic drugs on the concentration of intracellular free calcium in rat melanotropes. Acetylcholine, muscarine, carbachol, and nicotine resulted in a significant rise in this parameter. Effect of acetylcholine was reduced by atropine (non-selective muscarinic antagonist), pirenzepine (M1 muscarinic antagonist), and 4-DAMP (M3 > M1 muscarinic antagonist), but exposure to the M1 muscarinic agonist McN-A 343 resulted in a significantly smaller calcium-response than that seen in response to acetylcholine or to muscarine. This suggests the involvement of both M1 and M3 muscarinic receptors in the acetylcholine-induced calcium-rise. On the other hand, in the presence of atropine the acetylcholine-induced calcium-rise was not eliminated: this fact indicates that nicotinic receptors are also involved in the acetylcholine-induced intracellular calcium-rise. The acetylcholine-, and nicotine-induced calcium-rise was significantly reduced in presence of the neuronal-type nicotinic antagonist, mecamylamine. This suggests the involvement of a neuronal-type nicotinic receptor in the acetylcholine-induced intracellular calcium-response. Moreover, because in a further experiment almost 80% of the cells investigated responded to muscarine as well as nicotine, we conclude that both functionally active muscarinic and nicotinic receptors are present on the same cell.

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