Detection of basal and potassium‐evoked acetylcholine release from embryonic DRG explants

N Bernardini, GS Tomassy, AM Tata… - Journal of …, 2004 - Wiley Online Library
N Bernardini, GS Tomassy, AM Tata, G Augusti‐Tocco, S Biagioni
Journal of neurochemistry, 2004Wiley Online Library
Spontaneous and potassium‐induced acetylcholine release from embryonic (E12 and E18)
chick dorsal root ganglia explants at 3 and 7 days in culture was investigated using a
chemiluminescent procedure. A basal release ranging from 2.4 to 13.8 pm/ganglion/5 min
was detected. Potassium application always induced a significant increase over the basal
release. The acetylcholine levels measured in E12 explants were 6.3 and 38.4
pm/ganglion/5 min at 3 and 7 days in culture, respectively, while in E18 explant cultures they …
Abstract
Spontaneous and potassium‐induced acetylcholine release from embryonic (E12 and E18) chick dorsal root ganglia explants at 3 and 7 days in culture was investigated using a chemiluminescent procedure. A basal release ranging from 2.4 to 13.8 pm/ganglion/5 min was detected. Potassium application always induced a significant increase over the basal release. The acetylcholine levels measured in E12 explants were 6.3 and 38.4 pm/ganglion/5 min at 3 and 7 days in culture, respectively, while in E18 explant cultures they were 10.7 and 15.5 pm/ganglion/5 min. In experiments performed in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ ions, acetylcholine release, both basal and potassium‐induced, was abolished and it was reduced by cholinergic antagonists. A morphometric analysis of explant fibre length suggested that acetylcholine release was directly correlated to neurite extension. Moreover, treatment of E12 dorsal root ganglion‐dissociated cell cultures with carbachol as cholinergic receptor agonist was shown to induce a higher neurite outgrowth compared with untreated cultures. The concomitant treatment with carbachol and the antagonists at muscarinic receptors atropine and at nicotinic receptors mecamylamine counteracted the increase in fibre outgrowth. Although the present data have not established whether acetylcholine is released by neurones or glial cells, these observations provide the first evidence of a regulated release of acetylcholine in dorsal root ganglia.
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