Abstract

Local neuronal circuits integrate synaptic information with different excitatory or inhibitory time windows. Here we report that activation of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) leads to biphasic effects on excitability in chick lateral spiriform (SPL) neurons during whole cell recordings in brain slices. Carbachol (100 μM in the presence of 1 μM atropine) produced an initial short-term increase in the firing rates of SPL neurons (125±14% of control) that was mediated by postsynaptic nAChRs. However, after 3 min exposure to nicotinic agonists, the firing rate measured during an 800 ms depolarizing pulse declined to 19±7% (100 μM carbachol) or 26±8% (10 μM nicotine) of the control rate and remained decreased for 10–20 min after washout of the agonists. Similarly, after 60 s of electrically-stimulated release of endogenous acetylcholine (ACh) from cholinergic afferent fibers, there was a marked reduction (45±5% of control) in firing rates in SPL neurons. All of these effects were blocked by the nAChR antagonist dihydro-β-erythroidine (30 μM). The inhibitory effect was not observed in Ca 2+-free buffer. The nAChR-mediated inhibition depended on active G-proteins in SPL neurons and was prevented by the GABA B receptor antagonist phaclofen (200 μM), while the GABA B receptor agonist baclofen (10 μM) decreased firing rate in SPL neurons to 13±1% of control. The inhibitory response thus appears to be due to a nAChR-mediated enhancement of presynaptic GABA release, which then activates postsynaptic GABA B receptors. In conclusion, activation of nAChRs in the SPL initiates a limited time window for an excitatory period, after which a prolonged inhibitory effect turns off this window. The prolonged inhibitory effect may serve to protect SPL neurons from excessive excitation.

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