Abstract

A low-frequency stimulus train to the preganglionic input inhibits synaptic transmission in the superior cervical ganglion (SCG) of the cat. The inhibition is blocked by naloxone as well as by selective antagonists at mu and delta opiate receptors, which suggests that the mediator is an endogenous opioid [27, 29]. Exogenous opioid peptides, including methionine-enkephalin (Met-Enk), which is present in preganglionic axons of the SCG, inhibit ganglionic transmission by a naloxone-sensitive mechanism. In the present study we test, in the anesthetized cat, whether the naloxone-sensitive synaptic inhibition is mediated by a pre- and/or post-synaptic mechanism. As a test of presynaptic inhibition, we measured the acetylcholine (ACh) released by preganglionic stimulation into the venous effluent of the perfused SCG. As a test of post-synaptic inhibition, we measured the effect of a preganglionic conditioning train on the ganglion cell firing evoked by ganglion-stimulant drugs injected into the arterial supply of the ganglion. In presence of naloxone (3 μM), which blocked the synaptic inhibition, the amount of ACh released by stimulated preganglionic axons did not change. Thus, the endogenous opioid which mediates the naloxone-sensitive inhibition does not act by depressing ACh release. In contrast, the ganglion cell firing evoked by ganglion-stimulant drugs was markedly depressed by a conditioning train, and naloxone blocked the depression, which suggests that the endogenous mediator of the naloxone-sensitive inhibition acts postsynaptically to decrease the excitability of ganglion cells. Exogenous Met-Enk depressed both ACh release by preganglionic stimulation and the firing of ganglion cells evoked by ganglion-stimulant drugs. These findings suggest that although opiate receptors in the cat SCG are present at both pre- and post-synaptic sites, under the conditions of the present experiment the naloxone-sensitive, synaptically mediated inhibition is mediated exclusively by activation of post-synaptic opiate receptors.

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