Galeotti_2005_Behav.Brain.Res_164_165

Reference

Title : Ryanodine receptors are involved in muscarinic antinociception in mice - Galeotti_2005_Behav.Brain.Res_164_165
Author(s) : Galeotti N , Bartolini A , Ghelardini C
Ref : Behavioural Brain Research , 164 :165 , 2005
Abstract :

The role of ryanodine receptors (RyRs) in the induction of muscarinic antinociception was investigated in a condition of acute thermal pain by means of the mouse hot-plate test. I.c.v. administration of non-hyperalgesic doses of ryanodine (0.001-0.06 nmol per mouse i.c.v.), an antagonist of ryanodine receptors (RyRs), dose-dependently prevented the antinociception induced by both physostigmine (100-150 microgkg(-1) s.c.) and oxotremorine (40-70 microgkg(-1) s.c.). A shift to the right of the dose-response curve of both cholinomimetic compounds was observed. Pretreatment with non-analgesic doses of 4-chloro-m-cresol (4-Cmc; 0.003-0.3 nmol per mouse i.c.v.), an agonist of RyRs, reversed in a dose-dependent manner the antagonistic effect produced by ryanodine of muscarinic antinociception. The pharmacological treatments employed neither modified the animals' gross behavior nor produced any behavioral impairment of mice as revealed by the rota-rod and hole-board tests. These results indicate that a variation of intracellular calcium contents at the central nervous system level is involved in muscarinic antinociception. In particular, the stimulation of RyRs appears to play an important role in the increase of the pain threshold produced by physostigmine and oxotremorine in mice.

PubMedSearch : Galeotti_2005_Behav.Brain.Res_164_165
PubMedID: 16051378

Related information

Citations formats

Galeotti N, Bartolini A, Ghelardini C (2005)
Ryanodine receptors are involved in muscarinic antinociception in mice
Behavioural Brain Research 164 :165

Galeotti N, Bartolini A, Ghelardini C (2005)
Behavioural Brain Research 164 :165