Alberola-Die_2013_Neurosci.Res_75_198

Reference

Title : Lidocaine effects on acetylcholine-elicited currents from mouse superior cervical ganglion neurons - Alberola-Die_2013_Neurosci.Res_75_198
Author(s) : Alberola-Die A , Reboreda A , Lamas JA , Morales A
Ref : Neurosci Res , 75 :198 , 2013
Abstract :

Lidocaine is a commonly used local anaesthetic that, besides blocking voltage-dependent Na(+) channels, has multiple inhibitory effects on muscle-type nicotinic acetylcholine (ACh) receptors (nAChRs). In the present study, we have investigated the effects of lidocaine on ACh-elicited currents (IAChs) from cultured mouse superior cervical ganglion (SCG) neurons, which mainly express heteromeric alpha3beta4 nAChRs. Neurons were voltage-clamped by using the perforated-patch method and IAChs were elicited by fast application of ACh (100-300muM), either alone or in presence of lidocaine at different concentrations. IAChs were reversibly blocked by lidocaine in a concentration-dependent way (IC50=41muM; nH close to 1) and the inhibition was, at least partially, voltage-dependent, indicating an open-channel blockade. Besides, lidocaine blocked resting (closed) nAChRs, as evidenced by the increased inhibition caused by a 12s lidocaine application just before its co-application with the agonist, and also enhanced IAChs desensitisation, at concentrations close to the IC50. These results indicate that lidocaine has diverse inhibitory actions on neuronal heteromeric nAChRs resembling those previously reported for Torpedo (muscle-type) nAChRs (Alberola-Die et al., 2011). The similarity of lidocaine actions on different subtypes of heteromeric nAChRs differs with the specific effects of other compounds, restricted to particular subtypes of nAChRs.

PubMedSearch : Alberola-Die_2013_Neurosci.Res_75_198
PubMedID: 23395628

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Citations formats

Alberola-Die A, Reboreda A, Lamas JA, Morales A (2013)
Lidocaine effects on acetylcholine-elicited currents from mouse superior cervical ganglion neurons
Neurosci Res 75 :198

Alberola-Die A, Reboreda A, Lamas JA, Morales A (2013)
Neurosci Res 75 :198