Abstract

The effects of blockade of electrical activity by tetrodotoxin in cultures of mouse spinal cord and dorsal root ganglion on immunohistochemically-identified neuronal sub-populations have been investigated. Some spinal cord neuronal types, such as those storing methionine-enkephalin, substance P or calcitonin gene-related peptide were almost totally depleted after inhibition of electrical activity for 4 days. By contrast, putative substance P- and calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive dorsal root ganglion neurones were not significantly affected by such treatment. Several other neuronal types were reduced by about 30-40% after exposure to tetrodotoxin. The decrement in methionine-enkephalin-, substance P- and calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive neurones caused by tetrodotoxin was reversible, and, in the case of methionine-enkephalin, could not be elicited after day 30 in culture. Radioimmunoassay of levels of methionine-enkephalin in cultures confirmed the immunohistochemical data. It is concluded, therefore, that exposure to tetrodotoxin selectively reduces peptide immunoreactivity in specific neuronal sub-populations, but that the selectivity is not based on a single known neuronal characteristic such as transmitter phenotype, or a particular structural protein. The action of tetrodotoxin on those cells most severely attenuated is an alteration in transmitter expression rather than a lethal effect. The diminution with time of the ability of tetrodotoxin to attenuate methionine-enkephalin levels may reflect a reduction in the activity-dependent regulation of peptide expression relative to other competing trophic influences.

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