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Involvement of Ca2+-dependent PKCs in the adaptive changes of mu-opioid pathways to sympathetic denervation in the guinea pig colon
- Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- In the guinea pig colon, chronic sympathetic denervation entails supersensitivity to inhibitory mu-opioid agents modulating cholinergic neurons. The mechanism underlying such adaptive change has not yet been unravelled, although protein kinase C (PKC) may be involved. A previous study indirectly demonstrated that activation of mu-opioid receptors on myenteric neurons facilitates PKC activity. Such coupling may counteract the inhibitory action of mu-opioid agents on acetylcholine overflow, since PKC, per se, increases this parameter. After chronic sympathetic denervation such restraint abates, representing a possible mechanism for development of supersensitivity to mu-opioid agents. In the present study, this hypothesis was further investigated. After chronic sympathetic denervation, Ca(2+)-dependent PKC activity was reduced in colonic myenteric plexus synaptosomes. The mu-opioid agent, DAMGO, increased Ca(2+)-dependent PKC activity in synaptosomes obtained from normal, but not from denervated animals. In myenteric synaptosomes obtained from this experimental group, protein levels of Ca(2+)-dependent PKC isoforms betaI, betaII and gamma decreased, whereas alpha levels increased. In whole-mount preparations, the four Ca(2+)-dependent PKC isoforms co-localized with mu-opioid receptors on subpopulations of colonic myenteric neurons. The percentage of neurons staining for PKCbetaII, as well as the number of mu-opioid receptor-positive neurons staining for PKCbetaII, decreased in denervated preparations. The same parameters related to PKCalpha, betaI or gamma remained unchanged. Overall, the present data strengthen the concept that mu-opioid receptors located on myenteric neurons are coupled to Ca(2+)-dependent PKCs. After chronic sympathetic denervation, a reduced efficiency of this coupling may predominantly involve PKCbetaII, although also PKCbetaI and gamma, but not PKCalpha, may be implicated.
- Subjects :
- Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Sympathetic nervous system
Sympathetic Nervous System
Colon
medicine.drug_class
Blotting, Western
Guinea Pigs
Receptors, Opioid, mu
Biology
Biochemistry
Opioid receptor
Internal medicine
medicine
Animals
Receptor
Protein Kinase C
Myenteric plexus
Protein kinase C
Pharmacology
Denervation
Enkephalin, Ala(2)-MePhe(4)-Gly(5)
Immunohistochemistry
Endocrinology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Calcium
Enteric nervous system
Ca2+-dependent PKC m-Opioid receptor Sympathetic denervation Changes in sensitivity Myenteric plexus
Acetylcholine
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....3bc8ff74b44cedc6b18425b93d418ad5