Abstract
Bicuculline methiodide (BIC-Mel) (10-100 microM) altered the kinetics of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) responses in single-channel and whole-cell recordings. The principal effect of BIC-Mel (10-100 microM) on NMDA channels was a dose-dependent decrease in mean channel open time (tau o), accompanied by the introduction of a new closed time (tau B) of 14.0 +/- 3.5 msec (mean +/- standard deviation; n = 14) in closed time distributions, which was independent of BIC-Mel concentration. BIC-Mel (10-100 microM) increased the frequency of NMDA channel opening in a dose-dependent manner, offsetting the decrease in tau o, such that the total time spent in the open state per minute was unchanged, and thus the total charge/min through NMDA channels was unchanged. Similarly, the amplitudes of NMDA whole-cell current responses were not noticeably affected by 10-80 microM BIC-Mel, even though power spectra density analysis of the whole-cell NMDA-stimulated noise revealed changes in the underlying channel kinetics in the presence of BIC-Mel. Taken together, the effects of 10-80 microM BIC-Mel on NMDA responses were consistent with the predictions of the sequential block model; however, the effects of BIC-Mel exhibited no obvious voltage dependence. In addition to the low-dose effects of BIC-Mel, 100 and 200 microM BIC-Mel inhibited whole-cell NMDA responses. The inhibition by 100 microM BIC-Mel was not large, but it was augmented from 15% to 30% by increasing the NMDA concentration from 10 microM NMDA to 20 microM NMDA, indicating that channel activation was necessary for BIC-Mel-mediated inhibition. Preliminary single-channel experiments performed under conditions conducive to trapping of an open channel blocker at its binding site indicated that the effect of BIC-Mel on tau o persisted after the removal of the blocker, consistent with use dependence of the dissociation of BIC-Mel from the NMDA receptor-channel complex.
MolPharm articles become freely available 12 months after publication, and remain freely available for 5 years.Non-open access articles that fall outside this five year window are available only to institutional subscribers and current ASPET members, or through the article purchase feature at the bottom of the page.
|