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Hypertension, Vol 7, 268-276, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
P Yarowsky and D Weinreich
Synaptic transmission and membrane properties of sympathetic neurons in
superior cervical ganglia of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR),
normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY), and Sprague-Dawley rats (SD) were
investigated in vitro by extracellular and intracellular recording. The
sympathetic neurons of SHR showed an atypical loss of spike accommodation.
The spike discharge was insensitive to the sodium channel blocker
tetrodotoxin, but it was reversibly blocked by a variety of calcium
antagonists. The loss of accommodation in the neurons of SHR was not due to
a loss of M-current, a potassium current involved in controlling spike
frequency adaptation in sympathetic neurons. Superfusion of ganglia of SHR
with muscarine (10 microM), which suppresses M-current and leads to a loss
of accommodation, potentiated the repetitive discharge. In the presence of
muscarine the current-voltage curves in neurons of SHR and SD were shifted
to similar extents. Resting membrane potentials of neurons of SHR and WKY
were consistently depolarized as compared with neurons of SD. Synaptic
efficacy through the ganglia of SHR, assessed by extracellular recordings
of presynaptic and postsynaptic compound action potentials at 0.25 Hz
stimulation, was elevated when compared with the ganglia of WKY, but was
similar to that of the ganglia of SD. These results indicate that strain
differences should be considered when attempting to attribute changes in
sympathetic neuron membrane properties to hypertension. The sympathetic
neurons of SHR appear to have lost their accommodative properties and might
possess an exaggerated calcium conductance. This calcium conductance may
explain the augmented calcium- dependent release of norepinephrine during
sympathetic nerve stimulation in the SHR.
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Loss of accommodation in sympathetic neurons from spontaneously hypertensive rats
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