Abstract

In vitro and in situ experiments were conducted to evaluate the hypothesis that the nonclassical opioid peptide nociceptin acting on sympathetic preganglionic neurons (SPNs) inhibits spinal sympathetic outflow. First, whole cell patch recordings were made from antidromically identified SPNs from immature (12-16 day old) rat spinal cord slices. Nociceptin (0.1, 0.3, and 1 microM) concentration dependently suppressed the excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) evoked by focal stimulation and hyperpolarized a population of SPNs; these effects were naloxone insensitive. L-Glutamate-induced depolarizations were not significantly changed by nociceptin. Results from this series of experiments indicate that nociceptin inhibits the activity of SPNs by either a presynaptic or postsynaptic site of action, whereby the peptide reduces, respectively, the amplitude of EPSPs or the excitability of SPNs. Second, intrathecal injection of nociceptin (3, 10, and 30 nmol) to urethan-anesthetized rats dose dependently reduced the mean arterial pressure and heart rate; these effects were not prevented by prior intravenous administration of naloxone (1 mg/kg). Physiological saline given intrathecally was without appreciable effects. These results, together with earlier observations of the detection of nociceptin-immunoreactive nerve fibers and nociceptin receptor immunoreactivity in the rat intermediolateral cell column, raise the possibility that the opioid peptide, which may be released endogenously, reduces spinal sympathetic outflow by depressing the activity of SPNs.

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