α7-containing and non-α7-containing nicotinic receptors respond differently to spillover of acetylcholine

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Abstract

We explored whether nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) might participate in paracrine transmission by asking if they respond to spillover of ACh at a model synapse in the chick ciliary ganglion, where ACh activates diffusely distributed α7-and α3-containing nAChRs (α7-nAChRs andα3*-nAChRs). Elevating quantal content lengthened EPSC decay time and prolonged both the fast (α7-nAChRmediated) and slow (α3*-nAChR-mediated) components of decay, even in the presence of acetylcholinesterase. Increasing quantal content also prolonged decay times of pharmacologically isolatedα7-nAChR-andα3*-nAChR-EPSCs. The effect upon EPSC decay time of changing quantal content was 5-10 times more pronounced forα3*-nAChR-thanα7-nAChR-mediated currents and operated over a considerably longer time window: ~20 vs ~2 ms. Control experiments rule out a presynaptic source for the effect. We suggest that α3*-nAChR currents are prolonged at higher quantal content because of ACh spillover and postsynaptic potentiation (Hartzell et al., 1975), while α7-nAChR currents are prolonged probably for other reasons, e.g., increased occupancy of long channel open states. α3*-nAChRs report more spillover whenα7-nAChRs are competitively blocked than under native conditions; this could be explained if α7-nAChRs buffer ACh and regulate its availability to activate α3*-nAChRs. Our results suggest that non-α7-nAChRs such as α3*-nAChRs may be suitable for paracrine nicotinic signaling but that α7-nAChRs may not be suitable. Our results further suggest that α7-nAChRs may buffer ACh and regulate its bioavailability. © 2011 the authors.

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Stanchev, D., & Sargent, P. B. (2011). α7-containing and non-α7-containing nicotinic receptors respond differently to spillover of acetylcholine. Journal of Neuroscience, 31(42), 14920–14930. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3400-11.2011

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