Abstract
Various drugs have been applied electrophoretically to Renshaw cells and to unidentified spinal neurones in pentobarbitone anaesthetized or decerebrated rats. Responses to noradrenaline (NA) and 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) have not previously been described at this site and were of two types; either monophasic depression or biphasic depression-excitation. The effect of harmine on these responses was examined. Harmine and harmaline were also tested on the excitant responses to acetylcholine (ACh) and dl-homocysteate (DLH), and on the depressant responses to glycine and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA). On some cells harmaline antagonized ACh, but not DLH, and glycine, but not GABA, responses. Harmine caused only non-specific depression and spike configuration changes. The effects of harmine on NA and 5-HT responses were usually non-specific, and any antagonism was usually accompanied by, or soon followed by spike changes. LSD was also tested on the amine responses. LSD itself had a clear depressant effect on neuronal firing rates. It could either antagonize or potentiate NA and 5-HT depressant responses, but the antagonism in particular was closely followed by spike changes. Somewhat more specific antagonism of the late excitation was seen.
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