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Molecular Pharmacology, Vol 18, 159-166, Copyright © 1980 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
1 Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201
2 Department of Biochemical Pharmacology, School of Pharmacy, State University of
New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York 14260
The effects of phencyclidine (PCP) were studied on the electrical and chemosensitive
properties of the neuromuscular junction of skeletal muscles as well as on the binding of
ligands to acetyicholine (ACh) receptors in the electric organ membranes of the electric
ray. PCP potentiated both the directly and the indirectly elicited muscle twitch, an effect
which occurred with a simultaneous prolongation of the falling phase of the action
potential blockade of delayed rectification and only a slight decrease in the rate of rise of
spike activity. The prolongation of the action potential was also increased as a function
of the frequency of nerve stimulation. In contrast to the marked potentiation of directly
elicited muscle twitch, indirect muscle twitch was only transiently potentiated at concentrations lower than 60 µM and subsequently blocked. Indeed, at concentrations higher
than 60 µM, blockade of neuromuscular transmission occurred with little or no potentiation
of the indirectly elicited twitch. Resting membrane potential and passive electrical
properties were little affected by PCP. At high concentrations of PCP the miniature
endplate potentials were blocked, as were the ACh sensitivities of the junctional region
of innervated muscles as well as the extrajunctional region of chronically denervated
muscles. PCP decreased the sensitivity to repetitive microiontophoretic application of
ACh. PCP did not prevent the irreversible effects of
-bungarotoxin on ACh sensitivity
in junctional regions of the innervated and extrajunctional regions of chronically denervated muscles. At these effective concentrations (i.e., 1 to 100 µM) PCP caused negligible
inhibition of ACh-esterase. In addition, since PCP did not inhibit the binding of [3H]ACh
or [125I]
-bungarotoxin to the ACh receptors, it was suggested that the inhibition of ACh-receptor-regulated ionic conductances was not due to the inhibition of ACh-receptor
binding sites. Inhibition was possibly due to an interaction with the ionic channel of the
ACh receptor. Furthermore, the effect of PCP on the electrical excitability of muscle
membrane, shown by the marked prolongation of the action potential and inhibition of
delayed rectification, suggested that the agent caused significant blockade of potassium
conductance. This effect most likely could account for the potentiation of the muscle
twitch.
Note:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are grateful to Dr. John Daly of the National Institutes of Health
for kindly providing us with labeled and unlabeled perhydrohistrionicotoxin and to Ms. Mabel Alice Zelle for the computer analyses.