Abstract
The retina possesses cholinergic amacrine cells which release acetylcholine (ACh) in response to flickering light. Using an eye-cup preparation in anaesthetized rabbits we found that when the retina was exposed to nociceptin, the light-evoked release of ACh was reduced in a concentration-dependent manner (IC50 100 nM), the maximum effect being 60% inhibition. Opioid receptors were not involved in the inhibitory effect of nociceptin because its action was not blocked by naloxone (1 μM) and furthermore μ-opioids enhanced the light-evoked release of ACh. Using rabbit retina homogenates we found that the retina possessed a substantial number of high-affinity binding sites for [3H]-nociceptin indicating the presence of ORL(I)-receptors. Since [des-Phe1]-nociceptin, which has no affinity for the ORL(I)-receptor, had no effect on the light-evoked release of ACh it is unlikely that the action of nociceptin was simply non-specific. We conclude that the inhibitory effect of nociceptin on retinal ACh release involves activation of the ORL(I) receptors.
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Neal, M. J., Cunningham, J. R., Paterson, S. J., & McKnight, A. T. (1997). Inhibition by nociceptin of the light-evoked release of ACh from retinal cholinergic neurones. British Journal of Pharmacology, 120(8), 1399–1400. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjp.0701135
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