Modulation of Ca2+ channels by opioid receptor-like 1 receptors natively expressed in rat stellate ganglion neurons innervating cardiac muscle.
Journal
  The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics.
Citation
  J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 314(3):987-94
Publication date
  2005 Sep
Authors
  Ruiz-Velasco V
Puhl HL
Fuller BC
Sumner AD
Investigators
  Victor J. Ruiz-Velasco
Andrew D. Sumner
Grant agencies
  National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
Grants
  NHLBI HL-074311
MeSH headings
  Calcium Channels, N-Type
Heart
Myocardium
Receptors, Opioid
Stellate Ganglion
MeSH qualifiers
  physiology
innervation
metabolism
Abstract
  Postganglionic sympathetic nerve terminals innervate cardiac muscle and express opioid receptor-like 1 (ORL1) receptors, the most recently described member of the opioid receptor subclass. ORL1 receptors are stimulated by the endogenous heptadecapeptide nociceptin (Noc). To better understand how the signaling events by Noc regulate sympathetic neuron excitability, the goal of the present study was to determine whether sympathetic stellate ganglion (SG) neurons, innervating the heart, natively express ORL1 opioid receptors and couple to Ca(2+) channels. SG neurons in adult male rats were retrograde-labeled with a fluorescent tracer via injection of the ventricular muscle employing ultrasound imaging. Thereafter, N-type Ca(2+) channel modulation was investigated using the whole-cell variant of the patch-clamp technique. Exposure of labeled SG neurons to Noc resulted in a concentration-dependent inhibition of Ca(2+) currents (with an estimated EC(50) of 193 +/- 14 nM). Pre-exposure of SG neurons to the ORL1 receptor blocker, [Nphe(1),Arg(14),Lys(15)]N/OFQ-NH(2) (UFP-101), significantly decreased the Noc-mediated Ca(2+) current inhibition. The Ca(2+) current inhibition was also blocked by pertussis toxin pretreatment, indicating that signaling occurs via Galpha(i/o) G proteins. Finally, the full-length ORL1 receptor cDNA in SG neurons was cloned and sequenced. Of the two known alternatively spliced variants in rats, sequencing analysis showed that the ORL1 receptor expressed in SG neurons is the short form. Overall, these results suggest that stimulation of postsynaptic ORL1 receptors by Noc in SG neurons regulate cardiac sympathetic activity.