Abstract

Cultured bovine chromaffin cells cosecrete catecholamines and enkephalins following cholinergic nicotinic stimulation. Initial reports on the inhibitory effect of clonidine on catecholamine secretion raised the possibility of a modulation of chromaffin cell function through a presynaptic adrenergic mechanism. The purpose of this work was to investigate the pharmacological characteristics of this inhibitory effect of clonidine on the cosecretion of catecholamines and enkephalins in 4-day-old cultured chromaffin cells. We observed that clonidine completely inhibits nicotine-stimulated secretion of both leucine-enkephalin and catecholamines with an IC50 of 34 microM. Treatment of chromaffin cells for 3 days with 100 nM reserpine leads to a 67% increase in nicotine-stimulated secretion of leucine-enkephalin without any effect on the IC50 of clonidine. In reserpine-treated chromaffin cells, norepinephrine (100 microM) inhibits only by 27% nicotine-stimulated secretion of leucine-enkephalin with an IC50 of 50 microM. Neither the alpha 2-adrenergic antagonist yohimbine nor the alpha 1-adrenergic antagonist prazosin could fully reverse the inhibitory effect of clonidine on leucine-enkephalin secretion at 10 nM. These results tend to rule out the role of alpha-adrenergic receptors in the mediation of clonidine inhibition of cosecretion in chromaffin cells.

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